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Invasion USA  + Rocket Attack U.S.A.

by Glenn Erickson Sep 02, 2025

This atom fear thriller grabbed audiences by the Conelrads. Albert Zugsmith spun Cold War hysteria into gold with this cheap but effective exploitation of nuclear war jitters. For once it really happens — ‘unnamed enemies’ overrun America with atom bombs, parachuting troops into cities even as the bombs fall. The absurd script sees excellent work from Peggie Castle & Dan O’Herlihy, with special guest victims Phyllis Coates, Noel Neill and William Schallert. Get ready for a full-on 50-megaton onslaught of vicious stock film footage. The paranoia is contagious: “Bombs Ay-Vey!”  Also included: the sub-awful 1960 stinker Rocket Attack U.S.A..


Invasion USA  + Rocket Attack U.S.A.
Blu-ray
Film Masters
1952 / B&W / 1:37 Academy / 74 min. / Street Date August 26, 2025 / Available from Film Masters / 31.99
Starring: Gerald Mohr, Peggie Castle, Dan O’Herlihy, Erik Blythe, Robert Bice, Tom Kennedy, Wade Crosby, Knox Manning, Phyllis Coates, Aram Katcher, Noel Neill, John Crawford, Richard Eyer, William Schallert.
Cinematography: John L. Russell
Art Director: James W. Sullivan
Costumes: Einar Bourman, De De Johnson
Special Photographic Effects: Jack Rabin
Film Editor: W. Donn Hayes
Composer: Albert Glasser
Written by Robert Smith, Franz Spencer
Produced by Joseph Justman, Robert Smith & Albert Zugsmith
Directed by
Alfred E. Green

In 1951 Harry Truman fired Douglas MacArthur over what Hollywood would call ‘creative differences’ — the word went out that the General wanted to use nuclear weapons in Korea. Even though neither side had a stockpile of atom bombs sufficent to mount a full-on nuclear war, the fear of attack increased the moment the Soviets started testing their weapons. And what was to prevent unscrupulous Hollywood producers from exploiting those fears?

While mainstream Hollywood supported the idea of an  aggressive nuclear deterrent, independent producers moved to fill the gap. Holding a special place in commercially notable Sci-fi money makers is Albert Zugsmith’s Invasion USA, an artless but extremely effective atom war scare picture that reached audiences early in 1953. It followed the first independent atom war thriller by a full 20 months, Arch Oboloer’s more poetic art film  Five. Both were released by Columbia Pictures.

Invasion. U.S.A. used to run constantly on television before disappearing in the early 1970s. The show is a bizarre call to arms against the communist threat: not some insidious subversion from within, but an all-out military onslaught. An orgy of military stock footage that depicts the Soviet juggernaut is ridiculous but effective, thanks to excellent editing and graphic, if crude, special effects. The strange framing story involves a Criswell-like mystery man who influences a group of bar patrons. The narrative conceit is very good, even if some of the characterizations and dialogue reach heights of camp hilarity. Like John Sayles said in Joe Dante’s  Matinee, this is a steaming pile of jaw-dropping sociology, right on our doorstep. It’s also great group viewing fun.

A cross-section of Americans comes together in a Manhattan bar: newscaster Vince Potter (Gerald Mohr), beautiful Carla Sanford (Peggie Castle), tractor factory industrialist George Sylvester (Robert Bice), Arizona rancher Ed Mulfory (Erik Blythe), and blustering congressman Arthur Harroway (Wade Crosby). They’re all entranced by the confident, mysterious Mr. Ohman (Dan O’Herlihy), a patron who identifies himself as a ‘forecaster.’   Ohman asks the patrons to think about their country. While they’re drinking, war breaks out in the form of a full-scale Soviet military invasion, using atomic bombs to knock out airstrips in the Northwest. The Navy resists well in the Pacific, but Alaska and Washington State are overrun. Sylvester and Mulfory catch one of the last flights to San Francisco but meet horrible fates at the hands of ruthless invaders who take out Boulder dam in a nuclear strike. New York City is nuked as well, with skyscrapers collapsing as enemy troops blast their way in. The newscaster tries to shield his new girlfriend Carla, but to no avail. All wish they had been a trifle more committed to their country’s defense …

Cheap, clever, outrageous, but attention-grabbing in the extreme, Invasion U.S.A. is a key cold war scare picture. Forget Sci-fi with pacifist sentiments: this show’s Soviet Union is so aggressive, Senator Joe McCarthy wouldn’t recognize it. Always keen to spot a good audience magnet, Daily Variety’s review of December 4, 1952 deemed Invasion U.S.A. to be ideally conducive to boffo box office. The question of good taste is not raised. Old Variety reviews can be depended on to rigorously divorce a movie’s content from its commercial appeal.

The neatly structured plot centers on a half-dozen stereotypes, broadly impersonated by capable actors. The rugged, dashing leading man is Gerald Mohr, who began by playing slick sharpies, like his quick bit as a ladies’ man in  Gilda. Mohr specialized in smooth-talking roles all the way to his starring role in the Sci-fi  The Angry Red Planet.

Did Mohr motivate Dan Rather to become a news anchor?  Cool TV news personality Vince Potter interrupts his TV duties only long enough to trawl the bars for dishes. In her low-cut evening gown, Peggie Castle is a welcome potential conquest. But a &$%#@*! nuclear war gets in the way, dammit.

 

“Last time I met a girl I liked, they bombed Pearl Harbor!”
 

Referred to as a ‘debutante’ for who knows what reason, Castle’s Carla is the consort of the tractor manufacturer, but falls for Mohr in what must be the most ridiculous courtship in a science fiction film. Mohr moves in like a Tex Avery wolf, practically diving down Carla’s dress at first sight. Castle has the bod but plenty of talent as well. She’s a lot of fun; the disc extras convince us that she deserved a better career than she got.

The other patrons are serviceable types that react stoically to the strident screenplay that deals them horrible fates. The congressman is cornered by commie troops right in the halls of congress. The fate of the rancher Mulfory is even stickier. When he pulls up to rescue his wife and kids in front of his painted-backdrop ranch, I always want to see the family from the television show Lassie leap into the car to race to safety. Mulfory’s son is none other than  future genie Richard Eyer, in his first movie appearance at age 7.

The film’s touch of casting genius is Dan O’Herlihy. The underused actor was an IRA killer in Carol Reed’s  Odd Man Out, Luis Buñuel’s celebrated  Robinson Crusoe and, much later, ‘The Old Man’ in the first two  RoboCop movies. O’Herlihy’s slightly eerie performance sets us on edge. His Mr. Ohman wears a woolen belt — is it an Irish ‘Crios’ belt?  He convinces as a prophet who claims to know the future, who could hypnotize a group of strangers just by jiggling a brandy snifter. His ‘forecast’ is a George Bailey- like glimpse at Things to Come, should loyal Americans not attend to the business of girding the loins of the United States defense machine.

The reality, of course, is that by 1952 American defense spending was not hog-tied as implied here, but growing by leaps and bounds. The exaggeration of enemy capability, and the claim that a weak America is risking a Pearl Harbor-style sneak attack, rates as irresponsible propaganda. In 1952 we had more military might than any nation in history. Commentator Jason A. Ney says that Invasion USA had government approval, but he might have just been referring to its access to prime-quality signal corps and Navy combat footage. The show calls for civilian production to be converted to military use. We have to think that the Pentagon would approve, even if they didn’t want their name mentioned on the final product.

 

“It’s the final game of the World Series – and we’re the Home Team!”
 

In Invasion U.S.A., war breaks out without the slightest hint or provocation. Then the show shifts into high gear, with outrageously re-purposed battle combat footage.

The invasion is represented almost 100% by stock film footage, from every can in the vault: WW2 and the Korean War, augmented by a few grainy shots of Soviet MIGS. After a while we don’t know what we’re looking at. The enemy bombers are all our own B29s and B36s. Judging by the evidence here, our war surplus must have gotten wa-ay out of hand.

‘Soviet’ planes are often standard American jets with USAF markings. Many shots are flopped, with writing on airplanes written backwards. Did viewers really think they were seeing Cyrillic writing?

Invasion U.S.A.‘s battle scenes play like an extended version of the war montage that opens The Road Warrior. Nervous news bulletins plant exposition like, “The enemy is wearing our uniforms to create confusion,” thus allowing stock footage of our troops to represent the Soviets. When broadcasting mass attacks ‘live from the scene,’ the newscasters talk about ‘remote control camera units’ and telephoto lenses. Their equipment is amazing: the live television feed is somehow beautifully edited, as well.

Augmented by Albert Glasser’s relentless score, the cumulative effect of the non-stop combat is a mounting feeling of hysteria. We do get a panicky idea of what it would be like to be invaded. News anchors invent fictitious air bases but report the conquest of actual cities, with deaths reaching into the thousands, a la Howard Koch’s famous radio broadcast of War of the Worlds.  The crude imagery works no matter how foolish individual cuts may be. Every so often the gag goes too far. Some wartime shots are too familiar. We see the carrier Yorktown being hit by kamikaze planes, only 9 or so years after the real event. Many American sailors are dying in those images … was nobody offended by this opportunistic repurposing?

The enemy is identified as Soviet in every way except verbally. The movie presents no recognizable Soviets at all, and the script takes great pains to avoid naming them. Other details appear to be skewed for budget reasons. A roomful of Russki generals all wear quasi-Nazi uniforms and speak with accents that sound Soviet, German, and Spanish, sometimes in the same sentence. The top general is addressed as, ‘Excellency.’ The most repeated enemy line is a spirited, “Bombs Ay-Vey!”

The invasion logistics are absurd. The Soviets can somehow airlift millions of men around the globe to pull off a massed sneak attack in the Pacific Northwest. Ignored is the elaborate U.S. warning system that would detect just such an ambush. The nervous newscaster William Schallert instead chronicles a clean Red sweep of the West Coast, knocking out airfields along the way with atomic weapons.

Much later, the invasion fantasy Red Dawn doubled down on comic book hysteria: the U.S.A. is overrun by Cuban Reds, backed by the Soviet Union. Around the same time, Cannon Films’ Chuck Norris actioner Invasion U.S.A. combined anti-commie sentiment with racist paranoia. Latin American Reds try to overthrow the U.S. as an army of drug-running criminals. It’s leftist radicals that bomb churches and kill schoolchildren, haven’t you heard?

But being sillier than this film isn’t easy. Every plausible situation is matched by two howlers. Just as the Soviet troops are bashing down an industrialist’s door, a meek window washer (Aram Katcher) reveals himself to be a deep-cover commie agent, who can’t wait to gloat over his new conquest.    Goddamn labor committees — all of these ‘organizers’ are pinko subversives.

 

The best thing about Nuclear War is that drinks will still be served.
 

The brief, under-produced scenes of civilian panic raise the concept of hokum to a wonderful new level. There’s a fine confusion among the barflies getting soused at Tim’s bar, cracking wise at the tube’s reports of doom. Our beloved Noel Neill, TV’s  Lois Lane, has a choice bit as a lowly airline counterperson.    She must have a direct conduit to the latest war info, because at one point she has to tell a frightened woman that there aren’t any tickets available to Montana … because it’s been nuked. The people in line behind the lady stare as she staggers away. We really expect to hear Noel Neill chirp, “Next!”

The East coast invasion is wonderfully silly. An enemy soldier fighting undercover in GI garb is outed when he doesn’t know that the Chicago Cubs are not “Leetle Bears.”  But his comrades blast their way into rear-projected Senate building interiors to machine-gun the congressmen … action identical to scenes in  Mars Attacks!, and our own January 6 debacle.

Vince bravely continues his broadcast under direct attack, just as did Joel McCrea in the Hitchcock classic  Foreign Correspondent.  But he can’t shield Carla from the fat Soviet slob who crashes into her apartment, eager for whiskey and some blonde companionship: “You MY woman now!”  The goon rips her dress neatly across the shoulder, in the censor-approved manner afforded all dream girls in science fiction movies. We’re surprised that this ‘ravaged look’ — carefully ripped blouses and neat dirt smudges on the cheek — didn’t at some point turn into a fashion statement. Poor Carla’s’ fate mirrors that of the ‘Broadway Baby’ of  Gold Diggers of 1935.  This time, no kitty cat is left behind to mourn over an empty saucer of milk.  *

The effects in Invasion U.S.A. are impoverished, but so outrageously ambitious that they work. Optical specialist Jack Rabin depicts the nuclear strikes by superimposing a nighttime bomb blast over various targets, in quick cuts that would be ridiculous were it not for the iconic power of the mushroom cloud.    In the hyped-up context, firecrackers and cigarette smoke superimposed over cityscapes are more effective than they have any right to be. The sight of a taxi fleeing a massive flash flood is a fall-down hoot. Boulder Dam has been nuked. With a mountain of gurgly, grossly out-of-scale water visible through the rear window, the rancher pleads with the taxi driver to go faster!

When NYC is nuked, our lovers are buried alive under a cascade of bricks and masonry, but of course escape unharmed. One solitary break-apart model skyscraper is shown to collapse in flames. The fact that it’s a solitary tower makes it a disturbing sight, no matter how crudely visualized. It’s one of only a couple of models constructed for the film. In the disc extras we see Misses Castle and Neill in bathing suits, posing next to it for cheesecake publicity stills.

Recommended alternate takes on Invasion, USA:   Movies ala Mark,   Scifist.
 

 

“War or no war, people have to eat and drink, and make love!”
 

Film Masters’  Blu-ray of  Invasion USA is a very good rendering of a picture deserving of preservation. The 2002 Synapse DVD served us well but can’t compare to the 4K scan seen here. The new encoding, said to be from a ’35mm archival element’ has been stabilized and cleared of all kinds of dirt and minor surface damage. The image itself is sharper and with better contrast. This even helps with the endless stock footage, most of which is of very good quality.

We once found that most of the film plays rather well scanned for wide-screen. As its vintage is 1952, the flat Academy ratio is correct.

The source print begins rather abruptly; a Columbia logo may have been jettisoned. Columbia didn’t put their logo on some independent pickup titles, but also a series of in-house cheapies produced by Sam Katzman later in the decade. Arch Oboler’s  Five didn’t have a Columbia logo, but its first title card proclaimed ‘Columbia Pictures Presents.’  The opening music cue for Invasion fades up en medias res, convincing us that the beginning was hacked off, logo or no logo.

Film Masters’ release is two Blu-ray discs. Present on its own disc is the awful Barry Mahon atom scare picture from 1960  Rocket Attack U.S.A (64 minutes). Albert Zugsmith’s earlier effort is a stone classic when compared to Mahon’s 60 minutes of tedium. People talk in offices, interrupted by stock footage of Redstone rockets being assembled, etc. A quarter of the film’s running time elapses before an agent is dispatched to Moscow to see what Ivan has cookin’ on the launch pad. Clearly inspired by the Sputnik launch, Rocket Attack asserts that the only aim of the Soviet missile program is to perfect a weapon to strike Freedom-loving America. Somebody constructed a kind-of-rocket for one scene,    but every other effects scene is lifted from an informational film. Views of a missile descending on New Jersey are cel animation. Film Masters presents the Barry Mahon film in two aspect ratios, flat and 1:85. The source is 16mm, and with that in mind the encoding is very good.

Invasion USA is given the disc’s worthiest extra, an authoritative audio commentary by Jason A. Ney. Normally tapped for films noir and studio classics, Ney also lends an intelligent, well-researched track to Film Masters’ previous disc of  The Killer Shrews. Besides his filmic analysis Ney gathers plenty of production detail from trade magazines, and describes the picture’s exploitation ballyhoo. He’s also sensitive to the its occasional extreme bad taste — the images of combatants dying in WW2 combat; the use of a shot of the Nagasaki bomb to represent a nuke strike here in the United States.

Ney’s other revelatory observation is that the national fixes recommended by Invasion USA’s Dr. Ohman are communistic. Given the Soviet threat, we really ought to be under a form of Martial Law. Private industry should be under the control of the government, to produce weapons. Anything else is suicide or treason, handing over the country to horrible commie barbarians.

Also on the first disc are two professionally edited featurette-docus. An informative piece on actor Gerald Mohr benefits from interview material with his son Anthony J. Mohr. A longer piece on the Blacklist, anti-Commie period uses a grab bag approach to visuals. The history it presents is good, but a little disorganized — the real engine driving the 40-minute piece are scores of mini-reviews for red-scare movies of the 1950s.

The second Rocket Attack U.S.A. disc has an understandably light and conversational commentary by C. Courtney Joyner and Mark Jordan Legan, who frequently laughs out loud. Also present is a Mystery Science Theater 3000 sendup. By robot roll-call standards it is not bad, although it’s hard to work up anything fun about the picture.

We’ve always liked the vintage informational – public service short subjects included on ‘atom era’ features; our favorite is the selection on the old  Atomic War Bride / This is Not a Test combo disc from Something Weird. Film Masters has a fresh new selection of good choices.

The short subjects offered here vary from info-tainment animated ‘explain the atom’ lectures, to the more traditional how-to pieces showing citizens doing the right thing when the bomb falls. All of the films give the impression that atomic science is a good thing. An atomic attack is survivable, even if one’s city is reduced to flaming debris. Aid and civil defense personnel can somehow function when all human activity has been crippled. One would think that the entire land-line phone system and radio-hookup infrastructure touted in GE’s show would be obliterated. Maybe the idea is that areas surrounding bomb strikes will be the ones to benefit from these preparedness efforts. The first short subject is separately billboarded.

•  And A Voice Shall Be Heard is an expensive institutional piece by General Electric, touting the way their advanced communications systems will support Civil Defense programs in case of an atomic attack.

The other eight short subjects are divided between the two discs.

•  A Is for Atom (1952, General Electric. 15 min.) is fully animated. It works hard to stress that atom energy is good for us. The metaphor of as a genie from a bottle is used to represent atom power.
•  A New Look at the H Bomb (19??, ‘Federal Civil Defense Administration’; 10 min.) is a stand-up lecture about bomb shelters and evacuation plans, all of which seem pretty feeble.
•  About Fallout (19??, Department of Defense, Office of Civil Defense; 24 min.) A not-bad primer on radioactive peril, that starts out basic: radioactivity is like a bad sunburn, ya see?
•  Stay Safe, Stay Strong (19?? U.S. Air Force; 23 min.) Has good aerial footage to convince viewers that our nuclear deterrent is vigorous and that nuclear accidents can’t happen. Animation explains nuclear fission, and nuke blasts are compared to conventional explosives. The main impetus must have been to counter concerns that our nukes on planes might detonate over America.
•  Atomic Alert (Elementary Version) (1951, Encyclopedia Britannica; 11 min.) Hey kids, don’t worry about being fried by a bomb, ’cause you’re part of a TEAM of civil defense preparedness. But if you’re caught out in the open, you might be dropping into a ditch. If you survive the first blast, run for better cover, shedding those outer garments crawling with radioactivity!  A brother and sister do well simply by pulling the shades and camping out in the basement.
•  Fallout (19??, Creative Arts Studio, Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization; 14 min.) starts on a creepy note, with a stock music cue we remember from  Carnival of Souls. This one gives some real facts about radiation effects, and is thus both honest and scary.
•  Our Cities Must Fight (19??, Archer Productions; 9 min.) This one is pretty evil … it tells us not to evacuate in case of attack, that a mob fleeing a city will only produce chaos, and clog the civil defense effort. It of course ignores the fact that cities would be incinerated, non-functioning, uninhabitable!  Have Americans got the guts to do the right thing, i.e., be obliterated?
•  Warning Red (1956, Norwood Studios/Webster-Martin; 14 min.) This one is good — a family is separated when an attack turns their city into a blazing inferno. But mom has the sense to get her boy to a safe place and the father helps strangers on his way home. It’s very well done — if you think an atom war will be like the London Blitz.

An excellent photo gallery from Tom Weaver begins with silly cheesecake pictures with Noel Neill and Peggie Castle on the effects stage for the skyscraper miniatures. In addition to choice scene stills, there is some good photo coverage of eye-catching theater displays. A co-feature for Invasion at one theater is UA’s  Red Planet Mars … a different kind of political hysteria from the pacifist-religioso end of the paranoid spectrum.

A 22-page insert pamphlet has a Toby Roan biographical piece on Gerald Mohr, plus an attempt by Don Stradley to make the case for Rocket Attack as worthy of attention. The film does tell us how weak a commercial film could be, if it had an exploitable title. This is the kind of show that theater managers utilized to ‘clear house’ — to empty seats to receive more paying customers. At the drive-in, it might be the last of four features. If every car left, the drive-in might be able to close an hour early!

Reviewed by Glenn Erickson


Invasion USA  + Rocket Attack U.S.A.
Blu-ray rates:
Movies:  Invasion Very Good   Rocket Attack Poor
Video:  Invasion Very Good ++   Rocket Attack Good

Sound: Very Good
Supplements:
Invasion USA
Commentary by Jason A. Ney
Featurette Better Dead Than Red: Hollywood vs. Communism in the 1950s (36 min.)
Interview featurette on actor Gerald Mohr, with his son Anthony J. Mohr (18 min.)
Short subject And A Voice Shall Be Heard (1951; 22 min.) originally shown with Invasion USA
Six additional ‘atomic’ short subjects (see above)
Rocket Attack, U.S.A.
Commentary by C. Courtney Joyner and Mark Jordan Legan.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode of Rocket Attack U.S.A.
Two additional ‘atomic’ short subjects (see above)
Re-cut trailers for both features.
Illustrated booklet with essays by Toby Roan and Don Stradley.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: One Blu-ray in Keep case
Reviewed:
August 30, 2025
(7366inva)

*  But we don’t get it: Why does Vince lead the slimy invaders to Carla’s apartment in the first place?  Why does she so trustingly answer the door?  She should have whispered, “Nobody is home, comrade. Go Ay-Vey.”CINESAVANT

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Text © Copyright 2025 Glenn Erickson

About Glenn Erickson

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 6.51.08 PM

Glenn Erickson left a small town for UCLA film school, where his spooky student movie about a haunted window landed him a job on the CLOSE ENCOUNTERS effects crew. He’s a writer and a film editor experienced in features, TV commercials, Cannon movie trailers, special montages and disc docus. But he’s most proud of finding the lost ending for a famous film noir, that few people knew was missing. Glenn is grateful for Trailers From Hell’s generous offer of a guest reviewing haven for CineSavant.

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Barry Lane

Anything with Gerald Mohr would at least attract my attention.

Clever Name

As you mention, this ant-masterpiece brings to mind ‘Mars Attacks!’ (the notorious card set), though it makes those look subtle. 🙂

David Faltskog

I’ve always thought if you cut all the stock footage out of ‘Invasion USA’ the film would end up being 30 minutes or less long.

Katherine M Turney

Both movies are lots of fun in their MST3K editions. Don’t know if I want to sit through the actual full films. Question: how come the MST3K edition on Rocket Attack is included in this set, but not Invasion? I’m bummed.

Last edited 5 months ago by Katherine M Turney
Jenny Agutter fan

Dan O’Herlihy’s son Gavin played Chuck on Happy Days. You may remember Chuck as Richie’s older brother on the first two seasons but got discontinued after that. In fact, they didn’t just discontinue his character: all mention of him vanished, as if he had never existed.

Imagine going into the Happy Days world and asking the Cunningham family about Chuck. I’d give anything to know their answer.

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