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Doomwatch (film)

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Doomwatch
Directed byPeter Sasdy
Written byClive Exton
Television series:
Gerry Davis
Kit Pedler
Produced byTony Tenser
Starring
CinematographyKenneth Talbot
Edited byKeith Palmer
Music byJohn Scott
Production
company
Distributed byTigon Film Distributors
Embassy Pictures (US)
Release date
March 1972
Running time
92 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Doomwatch is a 1972 British science fiction film directed by Peter Sasdy and starring Ian Bannen, Judy Geeson and John Paul. Described as both a thriller and a horror film, it is based on the BBC's science fiction television series Doomwatch which ran between 1970 and 1972. The screenplay was written by Clive Exton. In the United States it was released by Embassy Pictures with the alternative title Island of the Ghouls.

In the film, the waters surrounding an island become contaminated by chemical dumping, and people who eat fish caught in those waters become deformed and violent.

Plot

An outsider visits a remote isolated village that has seemingly shunned modern life. Doctor Del Shaw, an investigator from the British ecological watchdog group nicknamed Doomwatch, is sent to the island of Balfe, to file a report on the effects of a recent oil tanker spillage. He becomes fascinated with the mysterious behavioural disorders of the locals who display rudeness and random aggression and a strange genetic prevalence of thick lips and sloping brows. Investigation shows that the villagers have been suffering over a prolonged period from hormonal disorders, which are being caused by leaking drums of growth stimulants that have been dumped offshore. The islanders have been eating contaminated fish and develop a disorder of excessive hormonal growth, which produces aggression and eventually madness, attributed to a form of acromegaly. Rather than seek help from the mainland, they hide those who are deformed from any newcomers.

Cast

Production

The sets were designed by the art director Colin Grimes.

Filming

The film was made at Pinewood Studios and location shooting took place around Polkerris, Mevagissey and Polperro and Chapel Porth in Cornwall, as well as the London Heliport in Battersea.

Critical reception

For Radio Times, Tom Hutchinson awarded the film two stars out of five, writing "this mystery thriller crash-landed unhappily in the swamp of horror instead of on the firmer ground of science fact or fiction [...] It's risibly alarmist, certainly, but the environmental dangers it pinpoints are only too topical."[1] Halliwell's Film Guide described it as "an unsatisfactory horror film".[2]

References

  1. ^ Hutchinson, Tom. "Doomwatch". Radio Times. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  2. ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1997). Halliwell's Film and Video Guide (paperback) (13 ed.). HarperCollins. p. 222. ISBN 978-0-00-638868-5.