Directed by Paolo Heusch (with uncredited visual direction by Mario Bava), The Day the Sky Exploded (La morte viene dallo spazio) is widely regarded as Italy’s first science fiction film. Released in 1958, this Italo-French co-production blends documentary-style realism, Cold War anxiety, and space disaster spectacle, setting the stage for European genre cinema’s later boom.
Plot Summary
A malfunction during a manned rocket launch causes the spacecraft to explode in deep space, triggering a chain reaction among asteroids. The resulting cluster of meteors is now on a collision course with Earth, threatening global annihilation. Scientists race against time to develop a solution, while panic spreads across continents.
The film follows Dr. John McLaren (Paul Hubschmid), the astronaut who narrowly escaped the doomed launch, as he joins a team of international experts trying to divert the asteroid swarm. Their plan involves detonating nuclear warheads in space—a risky gambit that could either save the planet or accelerate its destruction.
Cast Highlights
- Paul Hubschmid as Dr. John McLaren
- Madeleine Fischer as Katy Dandridge
- Fiorella Mari as Mary McLaren
- Ivo Garrani, Dario Michaelis, and Peter Trent in supporting roles
Behind the Scenes Trivia
- Though credited to Paolo Heusch, much of the film’s visual style and effects were crafted by Mario Bava, who would later become a legend in Italian horror and fantasy cinema.
- The film uses stock footage extensively, including real military drills, natural disasters, and crowd scenes to simulate global panic.
- The screenplay was written by Marcello Coscia and Alessandro Continenza, based on a story by Virgilio Sabel, who envisioned a scientifically grounded apocalypse.
- The film’s tone is unusually sober and procedural, resembling a newsreel or civil defense documentary more than a traditional sci-fi thriller.
- Released in the UK as Death Comes from Outer Space, the film was marketed with lurid posters that belied its restrained narrative.
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