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5.4/10
IMDb1983 | Louis
Worst Supporting Actress | 1984 | Diana
1984 | Michael
Best Special Effects | 1984 | Chuck
Best MakeUp | 1984
Best Writing | 1984 | Bill
Best Science Fiction Film | 1984
Box Office Collection 1,362,303 USD
Second part of a planned trilogy, known as the "Strange Trilogy", by writer-director Michael Laughlin. The first part had been Strange Behavior (1981). A third was planned, but due to a lack of funding, it was never made.
The movie is a homage to the the golden age of science fiction films of the 1950s particularly Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and I Married a Monster from Outer Space (1958).
The picture was cast with two 1950s era stalwarts in supporting roles. They were June Lockhart from the sci-fi TV series Lost in Space (1965) and Kenneth Tobey from The Thing from Another World (1951).
The film was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actress for Diana Scarwid for playing Margaret but she did not win with the Razzie going to Sybil Danning for Hercules (1983) and Chained Heat (1983).
A photograph of Steven Spielberg, famous at the time this film was released for E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) and Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), is seen in a file of photos of aliens at the Center for UFO Studies.
"Betty Walker: Well, now that we're past this awkward 'getting to know you' phase, let me buy you a drink. Well, come back tomorrow - maybe we can find this photograph."
"Betty Walker: Look, Earl, I, I know this is gonna sound ridiculous but I think a strange woman's locked herself in my bathroom. Earl: Well, Betty, how'd she get in there? Betty Walker: Earl, I let her in. Earl: [pause] Well, I'll have a look."