

That evening, Miles and Becky are urgently called to the home of Bennell's friend, Jack Belicec, who has found what appears to be a dead body in his home. Becky's cousin Wilma expresses the same fear about her Uncle Ira, with whom she lives. Returning from a trip, he meets his former girlfriend, Becky Driscoll, who has recently come back to town after a divorce. Miles Bennell sees a number of patients apparently suffering from Capgras delusion, the belief that their relatives have been replaced with identical-looking impostors. The man identifies himself as a doctor, and recounts, in flashback, the events leading up to his arrest and arrival at the hospital. Hill, is called to the emergency room of a Los Angeles hospital, where a highly agitated man is being held in custody. Invasion of the Body Snatchers was selected in 1994 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." Ī psychiatrist, Dr. culture refers to the emotionless duplicates seen in the film.

The slang expression " pod people" that arose in late 20th-century U.S. Little by little, a local doctor uncovers this "quiet" invasion and attempts to stop it. As each pod reaches full development, it assimilates the physical traits, memories, and personalities of each sleeping person placed near it until only the replacement is left these duplicates, however, are devoid of all human emotion. Alien plant spores have fallen from space and grown into large seed pods, each one capable of producing a visually identical copy of a human.


The film's storyline concerns an extraterrestrial invasion that begins in the fictional California town of Santa Mira. The film was released by Allied Artists Pictures as a double feature with the British science-fiction film The Atomic Man (and in some markets with Indestructible Man). Daniel Mainwaring adapted the screenplay from Jack Finney's 1954 science-fiction novel The Body Snatchers. The black-and-white film was shot in 2.00:1 Superscope and in the film noir style. Invasion of the Body Snatchers is a 1956 American science-fiction horror film produced by Walter Wanger, directed by Don Siegel, and starring Kevin McCarthy and Dana Wynter.
