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Gordon Douglas (1907–1993)

Author of Them! [1954 film]

91+ Works 601 Members 19 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Gordon M. Douglas

Works by Gordon Douglas

Them! [1954 film] (1954) — Director — 74 copies, 4 reviews
Robin and the 7 Hoods [1964 film] (1964) — Director — 57 copies
In Like Flint [1967 film] (1967) 52 copies
Classic Features: 50 Movies: Mystery Classics (2008) — Director — 37 copies, 1 review
Young at Heart [1954 film] (1954) — Director — 34 copies, 1 review
Topper Returns [1941 film] (1941) — Screenwriter — 33 copies, 2 reviews
Follow That Dream [1962 film] (1962) — Director — 23 copies
The Detective [1968 film] (1968) 20 copies
Tony Rome [1967 film] (1967) 19 copies
Lady in Cement [1968 film] (1968) 17 copies
Dick Tracy vs. Cueball [1946 film] (1946) — Director — 13 copies, 2 reviews
Our Gang: Follies of 1938 (2004) — Director — 8 copies
Up Periscope [1959 film] (1959) 8 copies
Bombers B-52 [1957 film] (1957) 8 copies
The Frank Sinatra Film Collection [10 films] (2013) — Director — 7 copies
The Nevadan [1950 film] — Director — 6 copies
Slaughter's Big Rip-Off [1973 film] (1973) — Director — 5 copies
Only the Valiant [1951 film] (2017) — Director — 5 copies
Stagecoach [1966 film] (1966) — Director — 4 copies
Between Midnight and Dawn [1950 film] — Director — 4 copies, 1 review
Yellowstone Kelly [1959 film] — Director — 4 copies
Zombies on Broadway [1945 film] (1945) — Director — 4 copies
The Iron Mistress (2011) 3 copies
Mr. Soft Touch [1949 film] (2014) — Director — 3 copies, 1 review
Viva Knievel! [1977 film] (1977) — Director — 3 copies
Rogues of Sherwood Forest [1950 film] (1950) — Director — 3 copies
Rio Conchos [1964 film] (1964) — Director — 3 copies
Barquero [1970 film] (2017) — Director — 3 copies
Saps at Sea [1940 film] (1991) — Director — 3 copies
Quota periscopio 2 copies, 2 reviews
Zenobia [1939 film] — Director — 2 copies
The Sidney Poitier DVD Collection (2006) — Director — 2 copies
Chuka [1967 film] (1991) — Director — 2 copies
Way… Way Out [1966 film] — Director — 2 copies
The McConnell Story [1955 film] — Director — 2 copies, 1 review
I Was a Communist for the FBI [1951 film] (1951) — Director — 2 copies
The McConnell Story (2011) 1 copy, 1 review
Claudelle Inglish [1961 film] (1961) — Director — 1 copy
The Charge at Feather River [1953 film] (1953) — Director — 1 copy
TCM: Glenn Ford: Undercover Crimes (1940) — Director — 1 copy
Fort Dobbs 1 copy
The Big Land 1 copy
Walk a Crooked Mile [1948 film] (1948) — Director; Screenwriter — 1 copy
The Falcon in Hollywood [1944 film] (1944) — Director — 1 copy
Clambake / Follow that Dream / Frankie and Johnny (2014) — Director; Director — 1 copy
If You Knew Susie (2015) 1 copy
Mara Maru (2015) 1 copy
Niagara Falls 1 copy, 1 review
Sincerely Yours (2013) 1 copy
So This is Love [1953 film] — Director — 1 copy
The Devil with Hitler 🎥 1 copy, 1 review
Rushin' Ballet [1937 short film] (1937) — Director — 1 copy
Santiago (2011) 1 copy
Harlow [1965 film] (2010) — Director — 1 copy
A Night of Adventure [1944 film] — Director — 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1907-12-15
Date of death
1993-09-23
Gender
male
Occupations
film director
producer
screenwriter
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
Los Angeles, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

20 reviews
“We shall visit the desert now.” — Edmund Gwenn
“It's getting pretty late, Doctor.” — James Arness
“Later than you think.” — Edmund Gwenn

One of the few bright spots during the decline of quality films in American cinema after the 1940s was the sci-fi genre which developed in the 1950s. At its best it was both fun and entertaining, as well as thought-provoking. Them! does all that and more, and is loads of fun. Star Trek fans might even get a glimpse of a young Leonard Nimoy show more at a teletype machine if they look fast enough. Those who grew up watching Daniel Boone will enjoy Fess Parker minus his coonskin cap as a pilot who has seen THEM so is presumed bonkers.

It all begins in White Sands, New Mexico, as cop Ben Peterson (James Whitmore) patrols the unending desert with air support above. They find a young, traumatized girl wandering nowhere, in shock and unable to speak. Following her trail to discover what has transpired, a ravaged trailer and a general store in shambles are just the beginning. Bob Graham (James Arness) is called in from the FBI. When a strange acid is found in a body, both men realize they are in over their heads. What neither can understand is why, once those results are sent to the government, the response is to send two scientists and the Army.

Edmund Gwenn and Joan Weldon are father and daughter, and he has a theory he doesn’t want to reveal until he’s absolutely sure. Bob and Patricia (Weldon) hit it off as that strange and eerie sound in the desert wind is revealed to be a product of atomic testing by man; ants have mutated and grown so gigantic they have no choice but to find the only source of food available. They prove hard to destroy, and the heroes must follow escaping queens all over the US, culminating in an exciting battle in the storm drains of Los Angeles with the lives of two frightened children and an anxious mother hanging in the balance.

Ted Sherdeman’s screenplay adaptation of George Worthing Yates’s story has a message about man’s interfering in the natural course of nature while director Gordon Douglas never forgets this is supposed to be a fun sci-fi/horror movie. Good clean fun for a dark and stormy night.
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To say that "Them" is the best 50s giant bug movie doesn't do it justice. It's exceptionally well made SF with fine acting, a crackerjack story, and a pervasively creepy atmosphere thanks to superb use of location and sound. The ants are puppet-like, but it doesn't matter because everything else in the movie works. First rate all around.
There's some good singing and other music, and quite an interesting story to this film. But the acting is overdone, 1950s style and we didn't think there was much chemistry between any of the actors, particularly those who ended up married.

The story involves three sisters who live with their musician father and their delightful Aunt Jessie, who was my favourite character. There's some mild humour here and there; I may have missed some due to strong American accents and rapid dialogue in show more places.

Some traumatic scenes near the end, and a lot of smoking (though typical for the 1950s) means I'm surprised it's rated U. I'd have thought PG more appropriate, and wouldn't show it to anyone under the age of at least 12.

Longer review here: https://suesdvdreviews.blogspot.com/2024/10/young-at-heart-doris-day.html
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At only 43 minutes long, this short feature's ridiculous plot is somewhat offset by its likable cast, particularly the exasperated hotel desk clerk. Pitts is wasted for the most part, however, as an oblivious Summerville, at a Niagara Falls hotel for his honeymoon with Pitts, sets out to bring together a pair of young people he wrongly assumes are married--but who are in fact desperately trying to get away from one another.
½

Lists

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Associated Authors

John Rawlins Director
William Berke Director
Ted Sherdeman Screenwriter
Hal Fimberg Screenwriter
Arthur Lubin Director
William Nigh Director
Roy Del Ruth Director
Byron Haskin Director
John Cromwell Director
Rudolph Maté Director
Graham Cutts Director
Phil Karlson Director
Roy Del Ruth Director
Edgar Ulmer Director
James V. Kern Director
Lynn Shores Director
Irving Pichel Director
Fritz Lang Director
Orson Welles Director
Lewis Allen Director
Norman Foster Director
Julius J. Epstein Screenwriter
Herman Raucher Screenwriter
Charles Lederer Screenwriter
Alan Trustman Screenwriter
Abby Mann Screenwriter
Marvin H. Albert Screenwriter
Irving Wallace Screenwriter
Walter Lang Director
Delmer Daves Director
Frank Capra Director
Mark Robson Director
Edward Bernds Director
Paul Dickson Director
Delbert Mann Director
Joseph Landon Screenwriter
Robert Rossen Director
Alfred Werker Director
Dudley Nichols Based on a screenplay by
Charley Rogers Screenwriter
Don Medford Director
Ralph Nelson Director
Raoul Walsh Director
Leo McCarey Director
Jack Starrett Director
Leonard Freeman Screenwriter
Ralph Murphy Director
Mark Hanna Writer
Stanley Donen Director
Sidney Hickox Cinematographer
David R. Schwartz Screenwriter
Jack Pearl Original book
Thorne Smith Original characters
Jim Brown Actor
Leo Tover Cinematographer
Anne Helm Actor
Sam H. Rolfe Original story
Edmund H. North Screenwriter
Alex Cord Actor
Erskine Caldwell Original novel
Ralph Woolsey Cinematographer
whytockgrant Producer
Bertram Millhauser Screenwriter
Guy Madison Actor principal
Rip Torn Actor

Statistics

Works
91
Also by
4
Members
601
Popularity
#41,821
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
19
ISBNs
43

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