
The Introverted Obelisk
The Introverted Obelisk is a sardonic stroll through the graveyard of classic horror cinema, where monsters are rubber, dialogue is stilted, and logic is optional. Join us as we unravel the plots (and seams) of horror films from the 1930s to the 1960s — the golden age of fog machines, mad scientists, and questionable acting choices. Each episode serves up a dry-witted recap, thematic commentary, and trivia morsels about the strange, charming, and sometimes laughably earnest world of vintage horror. It’s film history with a smirk — perfect for fans of cult classics, spooky nostalgia, and undead absurdity.
The Introverted Obelisk
Little Green Men and the Big Red Panic
In this episode of The Introverted Obelisk, we beam ourselves back to 1953 and dive into the uncanny, paranoid dreamscape that is Invaders from Mars. Told entirely through the eyes of a young boy named David, this early sci-fi thriller offers a Cold War allegory with a sandpit twist—and we’re here for every bizarre moment. We break down the film’s eerie aesthetic, unsettling alien design, and how it captures the surreal terror of not being believed.
Along the way, we talk about the film’s unusual structure, how the entire story may be just a dream (or a nightmare), and why that matters when you're filtering atomic-era anxiety through a child’s perspective. We also compare the dream-logic of this Martian invasion to Robot Monster—because nothing says “psychological collapse” like a space gorilla with a fishbowl helmet.
Plus, we dig into behind-the-scenes trivia: from the real UFO sightings referenced in the film, to how a Munchkin from The Wizard of Oz ended up scaring a generation of kids.
So tuck in your sheets, check under your bed for mutants, and press play. Just remember: if the sand starts bubbling, maybe don’t go investigate it alone.