Saturday, November 4, 2017
About Movie Industry Comments
The very media industry assembled to promote the entertainment aspect of motion pictures consistently demonstrated a lukewarm or puzzled response to "U.F.O." because its low key, documentary style couldn't find a perfect fit in Hollywood's world of fifties glitter, not even if one stretched the truth and looked upon the film as something akin to a product of science fiction. It WASN'T sci-fi, but it wasn't all that entertaining, either.
In one entertainment news clipping shown here, we find a source placing blame on director Winston Jones for the movie's slow, often lackluster pace -- hardly surprising, since Jones had no firm resume' as a director and had actually escalated his status following a career working with Hollywood props. Nevertheless, knowing how close co-producer Clarence Greene remained to the project, Jones likely reflected the production and vision pretty much the way Greene desired. Ditto the script writer, Francis Martin.
Note, too, that throughout our several-year journey on this blog, there was nary a word about the film relating to Greene's partner on this and other films, producer Russell Rouse. Like a child in a single parent family, "U.F.O." was dependent, I would suggest overwhelmingly, upon one daddy: Greene himself.
(Visual Credit: Barry Greenwood)