Jump to content

The Love War

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by True Pagan Warrior (talk | contribs) at 16:56, 9 June 2023 (MOS:BOLD). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Love War
Directed byGeorge McCowan
Written byDavid Kidd
Guerdon Trueblood
Produced byAaron Spelling
StarringLloyd Bridges
Angie Dickinson
Release date
  • March 10, 1970 (1970-03-10)
Running time
74 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Love War (1970) is a science fiction ABC Movie of the Week starring Lloyd Bridges as an alien warrior and Angie Dickinson as the woman he befriends.[1]

It was originally advertised and broadcast under the title The Sixth Column.

Plot

Two warring planets choose to settle their conflict over which of them will take over the planet Earth, each sending a trio of soldiers to Earth to fight to the death. The combatants, disguised as human beings, can only identify each other by using special visors.

Kyle, one of the combatants, falls in love with Sandy, a woman he meets during his stay in a small town. In the end, despite cheating by the other side, Kyle is the sole survivor, but before he can signal his people he has won, Sandy shoots him with one of the alien weapons. A dying Kyle then learns that Sandy is also an alien; the other side has cheated twice. She chose duty to her people over her love for him. Weeping as she watches him die, she asks him what their half-breed children would have been. The film's closing shot shows Sandy through the visor as she really is — a hideously scarred humanoid. Earth faces an orgy of destruction and the extermination of humanity.

Setting

The setting is north-central California, as the final showdown is held in a small town described as being near the city of Fresno. Much of the action was filmed in and around the town of Piru near Los Angeles.

Reception

Moria gave the movie three stars finding it good for its time, although noting it is not "hard" sci fi.[2]

Cast

Home media

The movie was released on VHS cassette tape in the United Kingdom by Guild Home Video.

See also

References

  1. ^ Television This Week New York Times 30 Aug 1970: 83.
  2. ^ "The Love War (1970)". 17 December 2015.