Saturday, October 28, 2017
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Publicity: June, July, October 1956
This miscellaneous collection of clippings spotlights producer Clarence Greene himself, along with snippets of movie reviews. Of special interest is a motion picture promotion involving silver (we assume tin foil) pie plates organized by a theater manager, exactly the kind of zany publicity maneuver United Artists invited in their quest to draw people to the box office.
Looking at Greene's 1956 picture of confidence, we are again reminded how fickle Hollywood success can be, as, it is alleged, he eventually died nearly penniless in a nursing home.
(Scan Credit: Barry Greenwood)
Looking at Greene's 1956 picture of confidence, we are again reminded how fickle Hollywood success can be, as, it is alleged, he eventually died nearly penniless in a nursing home.
(Scan Credit: Barry Greenwood)
Monday, October 23, 2017
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
News and Reviews, 1956 & 1963
Among movie-related articles from 1956 and 1963 shown here are a somewhat smarmy review, another piece regarding a thumbs-up for "U.F.O." from the Catholic Church's National League of Decency, and an important little mention about United Artists.
From Broadcasting magazine we learn that United Artists compiled a package of 60 films available to interested TV stations in May of 1963, which neatly explains why my first opportunity to see "U.F.O." as a teenager occurred in the mid-sixties via a local TV station, and this brief published comment indicates that the motion picture started to air on afternoon or late-late TV shows in locations large and small all over the USA between 1963-1965.
For the most part, unsuspecting TV viewers probably never even heard of the film, let alone realize or cherish any historical importance it conveyed. The "good stuff" for typical TV screen popcorn munchers would easily be lost, secondary to marginal acting and a documentary style devoid of high dramatic effect.
(Credit: Barry Greenwood)
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Foreign Cinema - December 23, 1958
We'll be posting several foreign reviews, but I will leave it up to readers properly equipped online or with time to meander through the text to translate. Today's entry is said to be written in Portugese, as are additional pages we will post here, in between reviews presented in English.
(Credit: Barry Greenwood)
(Credit: Barry Greenwood)
Wednesday, October 4, 2017
Box Office Roulette
For a motion picture said to be a loser at the box office, these glowing reports from the Motion Picture Herald during the summer of 1956, and apparently on into at least November suggest otherwise. Is there really any accounting for accounting in Hollywood?
(Document credit: Barry Greenwood)
Saturday, September 30, 2017
Certified by God

Researcher Barry Greenwood continues to unearth publicity information and other documentation relating to the movie. Today we're highlighting, more or less, the cinematic blessings bestowed upon "U.F.O." by the National League of Decency.
As you see, it's indeed fortunate that producers Clarence Greene and Russell Rouse intended neither to elicit sympathy for key personnel's "questionable ethics," nor to lend credence to "spiritistic practices," thereby granting the movie a comfortable rating of A-I, designated "suitable for all audiences."
The National League of Decency, well-described via Wikipedia and other sources, was basically the Catholic religion's attempt to rate motion pictures based upon its strict moral standards. We would like to believe this was intended only for followers of the Church, but, alas, those of other religions and belief systems were also targeted, the League having acted essentially as a government within a government.
Tuesday, January 3, 2017
Tom Towers Speaks
Researcher Barry Greenwood has unearthed two brief TV (audio) interviews with Tom Towers, recorded at least several years after the national release of "U.F.O." These clips, which I have transcribed below, come from KABC-TV in Los Angeles, and focus in large part upon Towers' opinion of the UFO phenomenon, the Kenneth Arnold sighting and the Senator Richard Russell UFO incident. Together, the clips barely last seven minutes, so yes, they truly are brief.
Towers' mention of the Arnold incident and the origin of the term, "flying saucers" is rather tangled here, but because the UFO subject wasn't really his focus, as he concentrated mainly on aviation and airport issues, and because he was being asked questions for which he may not have been fully prepared, his response regarding Arnold and "saucers" can be forgiven.
Transcripts of the two brief interviews are posted below. The interviewer was Baxter Ward, KABC-TV news director, and these portions were culled from a series entitled "Objects Unidentified," apparently concerned with a host of strange subjects in addition to UFOs.
(Thanks, Barry)
TOM TOWERS, FROM INTERVIEW AIRED JUNE 15, YEAR UNKNOWN:
(Here, Towers recalls his interest in UFOs as a result of his motion picture role)
"I could refer back to some correspondence I had with the very eminent Georgia senator, Senator Richard Russell, and I was then working for the late and lamented Los Angeles Examiner as aviation editor. It was 1955 when Senator Russell went to Europe on a trip, and when he came back there were reports in the press that he had made some type of sighting or seen something in Europe that he could not explain. I corresponded with him, and I have here a letter that I should like to read, which I think further points up the great mystery behind the flying saucer phenomenon -- at least it does in my opinion.
"Dear Mr. Towers -- this letter is dated January 17, 1956 -- Permit me to acknowledge your letters relative to reports that have come to you regarding aerial objects seen in Europe last year. I have received your letter, but I have discussed this matter with the affected agencies of the government, and they are of the opinion that it is not wise to publicize this matter at this time. I regret very much that I am unable to be of assistance to you. With assurances of esteem, I remain, Sincerely, Richard B. Russell.
"Now, I guess many people can place many interpretations on Senator Russell's letter. But to me it only means that he did see something in Europe in 1955, he dutifully reported it to our government in Washington, and somebody back there said keep still, don't talk.
"As long as we have this sort of atmosphere existing, I think we will always then have a certain mysticism, a certain fascination with the entire phenomenon of the unidentified flying objects.
"I have also been asked my opinion of flying saucer reports, and the answer to this is that I've kept an open mind, very definitely, on this subject, and I lend a great deal of credence and veracity -- I should say I've never doubted the veracity of certain reports that have come in, namely from controllers of the Federal Aviation Agency, men who are very highly reliable, who work in the control towers 24 hours a day, and certainly of airline pilots such as Captain Willis Sperry, a jet captain for American Airlines, who has made a sighting and appeared in "U.F.O." And I would never, for one moment, doubt the honesty and the reliability and the veracity of men like Captain Willis Sperry and other airline pilots flying five million, six million dollar jet aircraft today. If we have to deny them and turn our back on some of the reports that they have offered, then I'm afraid they shouldn't be flying airplanes."
TOM TOWERS, FROM INTERVIEW AIRED A FEW DAYS LATER ON JUNE 23, YEAR UNKNOWN:
(Here, Towers responds to a question about the origin of the term, flying saucers)
"I've done a little research on this at the time we were making this picture, "U.F.O." and I found that it had its start back in the late forties, when a man named Kenneth Arnold, a (fixed?) base operator at the airport in Boise, Idaho made a sighting of some objects that he could not identify. He alerted a newspaper man, a friend of his, working for a Boise newspaper, and then took off in his airplane and flew as far as the Grand Cooley Dam in Washington, attempting to catch up to these objects, or make some accurate identification.
"The newspaper man that he alerted was a "stringer," or correspondent for United Press at that time in Boise, and he in turn contacted Roger Johnson, who was the Pacific Northwest news bureau manager for United Press, and told him of the sighting.
"After Arnold returned from his flight, Mr. Johnson, who is now a Beverly Hills public relations executive, questioned Mr. Arnold in great length on what he had seen and, as I recall, Mr. Arnold said that the objects that he saw in the sky on that particular Sunday, the afternoon, resembled an inverted dish, and they talked about it back and forth on the phone, and Mr. Johnson then drew from Mr. Arnold that possibly they resembled not so much of an inverted dish, but possibly some kind of a saucer. And Mr. Arnold agreed to that, and then Mr. Johnson reported all of this back to the New York office of the United Press, and the story was actually written from back there, and when it came out from New York, that it came out saying that Mr. Arnold in Boise, Idaho had spotted flying saucers."
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Comet Carries "U.F.O."
The Comet TV network (comettv.com) shows primarily old movies and TV shows with a science fiction or horror theme. Apparently, Comet has also picked up U.F.O. for occasional airing. One wonders how many viewers will understand the movie's sober intent as a documentary, while some will behold only a sci-fi film devoid of terrifying rubber monsters and vampires. **
** I happened upon the last half of an airing a few days after posting this entry, and was disappointed to find that some cuts have been made (the scene where the Newhouse UFO film is first shown to military brass excludes the UFO films!). I assume the snip-snip occurs earlier in the movie as well. I think I understand why the cuts were performed -- assume more time to throw in TV commercials, and, after all, the Montana and Utah UFO films do turn up at the end of the movie for a brief analysis -- but regret very much the loss of continuity. Cuts were likewise made in past years as U.F.O. made the rounds on cable TV, so this is hardly a surprise. Nevertheless, it's a shame. If The Walking Dead reflected reality, the zombies would probably consist of deceased motion picture directors, returning to eat the brains of living TV movie editors -- if any such brains were to be found.
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Movie Trailer Available Online

https://archive.org/details/UnidentifiedFlyingObjects-Trailer
Thanks to researcher and author Barry Greenwood for alerting me to this additional link to an important piece of UFO history.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
The Best is the Oldest
"U.F.O." is an old motion picture, but one destined not to be forgotten by people interested in the subject and ongoing mystery of unidentified flying objects -- or, as they say in higher social circles, unidentified aerial objects (UAO) or unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP).


Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Dr. Hynek's Impression
It's a worthwhile observation that years after a highly skeptical Al Chop had radically changed his mind and decided that UFOs were something real and extraordinary, perhaps of a source extraterrestrial, the Air Force's chief UFO consultant, astronomer Dr. J. Allen Hynek, reached a similar conclusion.

"Activity
at ATIC* has picked up considerably
recently, what with the UFO film, which I had an opportunity of previewing
before it hit the public theaters, and with Jessup's** UFO Annual . . .well, all of these things are having
their repercussions."
Hynek also noted
that ATIC's "Saucer Division" had recently acquired Capt. Gregory, a
name familiar to historians, as its chief.
Though
frequently seeming to tow the Air Force line regarding UFOs in the fifties,
Hynek nevertheless confessed to Mebane, "The Air Force still believes that
my services are of some value to them, even though lately I have been quite
critical of a number of things."
Finally, zeroing
in on the motion picture, Hynek stated:
"I enjoyed
the UFO film immensely even though it was over-dramatized and terribly
slanted. I suppose it's some sort of a
commentary that I found the most dramatic part of the picture to be the
bringing in of a plane through fog by radar.
This part at least was factual."
This part at
least was factual. One gets the impression that Hynek was still
securely locked away in his skeptical box as apparently, in his view, all the
other contents and components of "U.F.O." were based upon thin
air. Whatever he meant, this was a
curious statement, probably quite telling of Hynek's fifties UFO approach.
Of course, by
the time the mid-sixties, the Socorro encounter, the Michigan sightings and
then abduction reports of the seventies started to evolve, Dr. J. Allen Hynek
was no longer a skeptic, and in the seventies his J. Allen Hynek Center for
UFO Studies set out to be a repository and investigative source for reports
by police officers and what were envisioned as other qualified UFO
observers. In other words -- the version
of Dr. Hynek observed briefly during his walk-on in the film, Close
Encounters of the Third Kind was by that time (1977) both what we saw and
what we got.
Indeed, what a
metamorphosis had occurred, since Hynek in 1956 declined Mebane's invitation to
make a public appearance in NY City because he felt he could do more by
remaining in the background as a "catalyst."
(Thanks to
author and veteran UFO researcher Barry Greenwood
for bringing the Hynek letter to our attention.)
(* Air Technical
Intelligence Center)
(** Morris K.
Jessup's UFO Annual, appearing in hardcover, was basically a collection
of newspaper stories about UFO activity, and I recall an addendum here and
there afterwards, but any possibility of a continuing "annual" book
of monumental proportions was dashed due to Jessup's death -- which is another
story in itself, recounted elsewhere.)
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Towers on the News Beat: Before and After the Movie

Knowing why Al
Chop suggested that producer Clarence Greene ask Tom Towers to play him in
"U.F.O." is easy. The two knew
one another, both had extensive experience as newspaper reporters, and each,
for different reasons, was convinced the UFO issue deserved to be taken
seriously, though in agreement that a delusional or fringe aspect also haunted
the subject.
Regarding
today's scans: A 1954 Towers column from
the Los Angeles Examiner recounts a meeting at Giant Rock in California,
famous for "contactee" gatherings and lucrative book sales by and
about folks who claimed generally friendly contact and excursions with flying
saucer occupants. In my correspondence
with Towers, he never denied his negative impression of the contactee realm,
and in fact his closing paragraph (as shown) about Venus and the like clearly
illustrates this. Incidentally, if you
think we may have mentioned Giant Rock previously, you're correct. When I put up my e-mail months ago from the
late recording artist Andrew Gold, whose father Ernest Gold wrote the music
score for the motion picture, the younger Gold had mentioned that his
grandparents used to go to the Giant Rock affairs. I'm betting they were in attendance while
Towers was there -- too bad he didn't get an interview with them. Anyway, in 1954 plans for the Greene-Rouse
production were well underway, though Towers may not have known at this point
that he would be requested for the movie role.
The June, 1956
photo from the Boston Sunday Advertiser shows Tom Towers looking over
film in a projector in conjunction with publicity for "U.F.O." A major "selling point" for the
movie was the inclusion of two actual films of assumed UFOs, and that fact was
extensively circulated via studio PR activities.
The 1957 Boston Sunday Advertiser column, originating from Towers' home base at the L.A. Examiner, saw print long after "U.F.O." was released, and temporary movie star Tom Towers was back at the newspaper, this time writing about a terrible air collision between an airplane and a jet over the densely populated San Fernando Valley in California, which killed five people in the air and two high school students on the ground -- with 73 more serious injuries inflicted upon students at the school over which the chaos occurred and flaming aircraft fragments rained. Towers remained very keen about social issues related to aircraft in his position as aviation editor and, as we've indicated previously, noise abatement at airports near residential areas concerned him much of the time.
(Thanks to
author and historian Barry Greenwood for
the scans in today's entry. Click on my
main blog in the link list, and once there click on Barry's name noted at the
top of that page's link list to access free copies of his former UFO history
newsletters and other material via his Web site.)
Friday, April 18, 2014
Physicist Disturbed by Movie
Somewhere along
this very long cinematic journey, we mentioned that a rare copy of the Great
Britain press book for "U.F.O." dropped into our hands (well, that
is, after I paid handsomely for it many years ago), and its appearance
surpassed the more readily available American version. In fact, we were able to extract and scan a
considerable amount of information for this blog from the English press book.
Because the two
press books evidenced subtle differences, maybe audience reactions reported by
the press in each country could be expected to differ as well -- and, at least
in this instance, one did. Having had an
opportunity to read numerous reviews, particularly from the USA, regarding the
film's 1956 premiere, I noticed that some were polite, others relentlessly
negative and still others showered praise upon the new movie in town.
However, I don't
recall an American review quite like that offered by England's New Scientist
of November 22, 1956, in which a staff physicist for the publication admits
being (with my apologies to James Bond fans) shaken more than stirred
following a session at a London movie theater.
Like every good skeptical scientist, the unnamed physicist found reasons to attack the film's uninspiring "blah" aspect (read as: the acting and progression sucked) in depth
-- but then, as imparted by the writer quoting his impression: "And yet it is
uncomfortably convincing."
Apparently
drawing upon press book material, as the review briefly spreads out details
about the famous 1952 Washington, D.C. UFO pursuit and the Montana and Utah UFO
films, the New Scientist article also manages to throw in a little
commentary disparaging the British Air Ministry's negative attitude about the
UFO phenomenon. The B.A.M. may not
be impressed publicly with UFOs in the fifties, "however," states
the writer, "Unidentified Flying Objects revives doubts."
The very
existence of this little piece from a scientific publication which dares to
admit a staff physicist's mental shape-shift regarding UFOs -- in the 1950s
yet, when the mere thought of a scientist taking "flying saucers"
seriously could elicit potential career-killing ridicule -- causes us to wonder
how many other scientists throughout the world were impressed by Clarence
Greene and Russell Rouse's movie -- though remaining so in utter silence. Forever.
(Author Barry Greenwood, recent contributor to the
monumentally documented and impressive volume, UFOs and Government: A Historical Inquiry, kindly passed
the New Scientist gem along for today's entry.)
Friday, March 7, 2014
On Their Own
A reader (whom
I'll be happy to identify by name in this space, should he wish to grant
permission) recently questioned me about something indirectly related to a substantial
issue -- the use of stock film footage in motion pictures. Stock films and photos are generally in the
public domain or available to a production staff from some source for a fee, or
simply for a mention in the end credits.
The inclusion of stock images can greatly enhance a motion picture's
message when alternative sources are just not available or beyond the
director's reach for legal reasons, or merely because the ownership contact at
a location where one wishes to film refuses to cooperate for any variety of
reasons.
Of course, the
use of stock music in movies is also well known. The creepy background music for the original
George Romero film, Night of the Living Dead, depended greatly upon
stock music as a mood enhancer and scare tactic, and the implementation of
stock music is noted in the original soundtrack (LP)album.
As the motion
picture, U.F.O." was being developed and eventually produced between 1954
and 1956, a major obstacle became clear:
There would be no official government cooperation for producers Clarence
Greene or Russell Rouse.
To the current
day, it's widely common for U.S. government officials to go "all out"
to provide locations and in-your-face production values for movies intended to
put the government or military in a "good light" -- but woe, unspoken
brickbats and denials to scripts taking an opposite view. In fact, this acknowledged practice has been
and is still being discussed by Robbie Graham (of the Web site Silver Screen
Saucers) and his colleagues in the film industry.
But -- a major
motion picture about UFOs and recognition that in the early fifties some
higher-ups believed the U.S. government should be on the verge of 'fessing up
about "saucers" representing an extraterrestrial source? Government cooperation? Fat chance!
Indeed, the
reader's query sent me back to my old faded and submarginal (especially for
handwritten notes) photocopy of Tom Towers' script, and as I flipped through
more than 100 pages from beginning to end, every spot where fresh filming
would have been ideal was sacrificed instead for the use of stock film
footage. This was no accident or
oversight.
Long after the
movie's release, Air Force documents surfaced indicating official fears about
"U.F.O." and the negative publicity it was expected to generate
regarding the government's position on the phenomenon. As it turned out, Clarence Greene's
documentary pretty much bombed at the box office and any potential public
uproar of consequence did not materialize -- as the government continued to
dismiss and deny, as per Robertson Panel (1953) protocol, by the time
the early fifties' frank official honesty had all but disappeared.
Greene realized
from the outset, even after enlisting the help of notables Edward Ruppelt,
Dewey Fournet, Al Chop and others with previous government UFO investigation
experience, that official cooperation would not be forthcoming. As a result,, other than the weekend that Tom
Towers spent filming exterior "walking around" scenes in Washington,
D.C., stock film footage fills a lot of production nooks and crannies. Such file footage in "U.F.O."
includes exterior Pentagon scenes, Wright-Patterson AFB, runway shots, Air
Materiel Command, miscellaneous Washington scenes, F-51 aircraft and other
military planes, views of military pilots (!), plus a laboratory and work
table. In addition, scenes involving a
darkroom (I'm not sure that some of these made it into the movie's final cut),
projection room, Washington Airport and the White House were file footage, as
were scenes showing a busy Pentagon switchboard.
Topping off this
mosaic of old footage was obvious newsreel material of General John A. Samford
and others.
The funny thing
is, were Clarence Greene alive today (and it is my understanding that he died
in a nursing home years ago, virtually broke financially, and perhaps a broken
man in other Hollywood ways), attempting to remake "U.F.O." nearly 60
years later -- this time, armed with awesome computerized special effects and
digital cinematography unimaginable in the fifties -- the government would
still slam the door of cooperation.
What's changed since 1956? Well,
with the addition of the TSA, DARPA, NSA steroid-level spy abilities and all
manner of who-knows-what -- I think you can guess.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)