Children of the Damned

Children of the Damned(1964)

NR
01/10/1964 (US)Drama, Horror, Mystery, Science Fiction1h 30m
6.1

"Beware the eyes that paralyze!!!"

Overview

Six children are found spread through out the world that not only have enormous intelligence, but identical intelligence and have a strange bond to each other.

Anton Leader

Director

John Briley

Screenplay

Where to Watch

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Part of the The Damned Collection

We have met the enemies, and they are the children. The offspring of aliens who secretly impregnated human women terrorize their parents or anyone who defies them. Armed with glowing eyes, these humanoids develop at an alarming rate and use astonishing powers of mind to assert their supremacy.

Media

Children of the Damned (1964) Original Trailer [FHD]

Children of the Damned (1964) Original Trailer [FHD]

Trailer

Joe Dante on CHILDREN OF THE DAMNED

Joe Dante on CHILDREN OF THE DAMNED

Featurette

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J
A review by John Chard
5.0

Written on April 13, 2020

We are here for the same reason you are.

"Warning: Spoilers"

Children Of The Damned is directed by Anton M. Leader and written by John Briley. It's a thematic sequel to Village Of The Damned from 1960 which was based on the novel written by John Wyndham. Plot finds 6 children identified by UNESCO to have special powers that if used in unison could have devastating consequences for mankind.

Interesting and atmospheric if ultimately lukewarm as a whole. Retreading the plot from the superior first film, it's amazing that this take actually has very little to do with the 1960 darling. Confused? Well you wont be watching this since it's very talky and the makers are intent on making us listen. Listen to some moral quandaries, Cold War politics and even a touch of existentialism. All nicely wrapped around 6 not very creepy kids who actually aren't very evil at all. The acting is fine, notably the taut turns from Ian Hendry and Alan Badel, while David Boulton's black & white photography carries a suitable bleakness to it.

Well made but all too often dull; where Briley's script isn't as clever as it wants to be, the film is mostly saved by some technical smarts and a boldly gloomy ending. 5/10