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poster of The Night That Panicked America
Rating: 7.2/10 by 15 users

The Night That Panicked America (1975)

A dramatization of the Oct. 30, 1938 mass panic that Orson Welles' radio play, "The War of the Worlds" accidentally provoked.

Release Date: Fri, Oct 31, 1975

Rating: 7.2/10 by 15 users

Alternative Title:
La nuit qui terrifia l'Amérique - CA
Die Nacht als die Marsmenschen Amerika angriffen - DE
Yö jolloin Amerikka kauhistui - FI
La Nuit qui terrifia l'Amérique - FR
Amerika pánikban - HU
La notte in cui l'America ebbe paura - IT
La noche que aterrorizó a América - ES

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 32 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: based on true story, docudrama

Vic Morrow
Hank Muldoon
Cliff DeYoung
Stefan Grubowski
Walter McGinn
Paul Stewart
Tom Bosley
Norman Smith
Will Geer
Reverend Davis
Paul Shenar
Orson Welles
John Ritter
Walter Wingate
Joshua Bryant
Howard Koch
Walker Edmiston
Mercury Theatre Player
Marcus J. Grapes
Mercury Theatre Player
Casey Kasem
Mercury Theatre Player
Ron Rifkin
Mercury Theatre Player
Linda Dano
Secretary
Ed Bakey
Vanderhoff
Bob Harks
News Vendor (uncredited)
Michelle Stacy
Hank Muldoon's Daughter (uncredited)

Wuchak

**_The Martians are coming, the Martians are coming!!!_** On the night before Halloween, 1938, Orson Welles directs a radio adaptation of HG Wells' novel The War of the Worlds from forty years prior. The "breaking news" style of ominous storytelling convinced many listeners throughout America to take it seriously, causing a panic. The illusion of realism was reinforced by the lack of commercial interruptions, which meant that the first break didn’t come until after all of the alarming "news" had been given. A television production, “The Night that Panicked America” (1975) works well enough to help you see how Welles’ show could deceive those who failed to hear the opening announcement indicating that the show was a work of fiction. Paul Shenar does a good job playing Welles and there are several familiar faces, like Vic Morrow, Eileen Brennan, Meredith Baxter, Will Geer, Tom Bosley and John Ritter just before his success with Three’s Company. The ending fittingly mentions the town of Concrete, Washington, which is located 96 miles northeast of Seattle. During the midpoint of the broadcast a coincidental power failure plunged the town of (then) one thousand people into darkness. Needless to say, they were probably the most terrified listeners in America. It runs 1 hour, 32 minutes, and was shot in Los Angeles. GRADE: B


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