The tranquil life of a lighthouse keeper and his family is disrupted when a flying saucer and its alien inhabitants invade.The tranquil life of a lighthouse keeper and his family is disrupted when a flying saucer and its alien inhabitants invade.The tranquil life of a lighthouse keeper and his family is disrupted when a flying saucer and its alien inhabitants invade.
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- TriviaBarely released anywhere outside of a minor British run from Satan's Slave distributor Brent Walker and U.S. TV airings, Foes got the special edition Blu-ray treatment in June 2019 from Garagehouse Pictures. It includes two versions of the film; both never before available in the United States. One is an original Director's Cut, which is approximately 73 minutes long (01.12:47), and the other is the Theatrical Version, which is approximately 91 minutes long (01.30.18). It also includes a new commentary where John Coats shares plenty of stories about the shooting of Foes. It was recorded exclusively for Garagehouse Pictures.
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Even The Aliens Were Bored
I give this film six stars. Two of those stars are for the temerity of the producers. I have heard that the National Sleep Institute is recommending this movie for various forms of therapy. Don't quote me on that.
Young couple in love, in charge of a lighthouse somewhere of the coast of an English speaking country. A flying saucer appears, straddles their island ominously. They look at it. They stare. They glance at each other. They say, "Hmm," a fair amount, saunter from building to building. There is no sense of urgency. The woman is burned badly. They move like mud. The communications equipment goes awry. No one opens a panel and looks in. If they stopped and made a nice lunch, I would not have been surprised. Anyway, someone went to the trouble of making the movie, the only one for the writer and director, Coates, I believe. He had a dream. He followed it. I watched it. Heck, I'm kicking in another star.
Young couple in love, in charge of a lighthouse somewhere of the coast of an English speaking country. A flying saucer appears, straddles their island ominously. They look at it. They stare. They glance at each other. They say, "Hmm," a fair amount, saunter from building to building. There is no sense of urgency. The woman is burned badly. They move like mud. The communications equipment goes awry. No one opens a panel and looks in. If they stopped and made a nice lunch, I would not have been surprised. Anyway, someone went to the trouble of making the movie, the only one for the writer and director, Coates, I believe. He had a dream. He followed it. I watched it. Heck, I'm kicking in another star.
- jack-63651
- Sep 30, 2022
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