| David Bowie, Candy Clark, Rip Torn,
Buck Henry , Bernie Casey, Jackson D. Kane
Based on a novel by Walter Tevis, The Man Who Fell to Earth achieved
cult film status for David Bowie's performance as Thomas Jerome
Newton, aka "Mr. Sussex," and the imagery of director
Nicholas Roeg, a former cinematographer. In this deeply allegorical
science-fiction drama, Newton is an alien from a planet that is
dying for lack of water, and he has been sent to earth to find a
way to ship some of the earth's plentiful supply to his home planet.
He arrives with a human-looking disguise, his knowledge of unusual
technologies, his despair, and little else. Using his knowledge,
he takes out patents on "his" inventions, aided by patent
lawyer Oliver Farnsworth (Buck Henry). He skillfully parlays the
money from these inventions and becomes a financial/industrial tycoon.
These inventions, and others like them, along with his political
and financial power, should make possible the transfer of water
to his planet. But instead of pressing forward with plans to save
his home planet, he becomes enamored of Earth's low-down ways and
of his strange, passive relationship with his elevator-operator
girlfriend, Mary Lou (Candy Clark). Meanwhile, his phenomenal rise
from anonymity to power, and his eccentric behavior, spark the government's
interest. Chemistry professor Nathan Bryce (Rip Torn) also comes
calling, fascinated by the alien's history. As gin and despair slowly
cripple him, he becomes consumed by memories of life on his doomed
planet. The longer (140 minutes) and sexier British version of this
film was toned down for its American release. Roeg, whose work has
received polarized responses, also directed such distinctively stylized
movies as Walkabout (1971) and Don't Look Now (1973). |