Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Spaceways 4K (1953)


“Quite Possibly Not What You Might Be Expecting”


The next lesser known Hammer film to get the 4K treatment on UHD and Blu-ray from the studio is Terence Fisher’s SPACEWAYS. As David Flint notes on one of the commentary tracks on here, SPACEWAYS is one of those early 1950s pictures that never seemed to be on television in the 1970s and 1980s and was consequently missed by a generation of young Hammer fans keen to see everything from the studio.


As a result, from the title and the poster art, you might imagine SPACEWAYS to be a rollicking science fiction adventure set in space, but it isn’t. In fact, while getting into space forms part of the plot, it’s by no means a large part of it.


The film kicks off with Dr Stephen Mitchell (Howard Duff, best known to 1980s viewers as the villain in soap opera Flamingo Road) and his experiments to establish the first orbiting British satellite. He has also been launching mice into space as a presumed side project but we don’t hear much more about that .


His wife Vanessa (Cecile Chevreau) is having an affair with Mitchell’s colleague Dr Crenshaw (Andrew Osborn) while his other colleague Dr Lisa Frank (Eva Bartok) keeps giving Stephen adoring looks at cocktail parties. In fact the whole first act feels a bit like if Jackie Collins (or Jacqueline Susann) wrote Quatermass but thankfully things take a turn towards a murder mystery when Vanessa and Crenshaw disappear. Has Stephen killed them and put them in the rocket he’s sent up? Or are there other espionage shenanigans going on?


SPACEWAYS is extremely light on the ‘Space’ bit and is far more concerned with being a low budget espionage thriller. It’s nice to see Michael Medwin and Marianne Stone pop up, especially as the leads aren’t exactly electrifying. Considering the film is adapted from a story by the excellent British SF writer Charles Eric Maine it’s all rather disappointingly low-key. Some of the extras contributor on here do state that the film has acquired a somewhat poor reputation over the years and it’s easy to see why.


Hammer’s extras do set about doing their best to correct that, though. We get the UK and US versions of the film, both of which are exactly the same length and there are very few difference. Commentary duties on the UK version are by Sarah Morgan and Heidi Honeycutt while David Flint talks us through the US cut. Neil Sinyard and Melanie Williams have a 32 minute sit down conversation about the careers of Duff and Bartok, while Wayne Kinsey and Ted Bohus take us through an entertaining 20 minutes comparing the UK and US SF output for the 1950s. I especially liked Wayne Kinsey’s comparative table that he draws up for us. 


Tim Lucas and Stephen R Bissette discuss the film (and the Maine source) for a whopping 67 minutes, while Gavin Collinson and Richard Hollis have a sit down discussion about the career of star Alan Wheatley (27 minutes). There’s also the UK censor card, trailer and a still gallery. As usual with these deluxe editions you also get a book with new essays and a slipcase to keep it all in.



Terence Fisher’s SPACEWAYS is out in 4K from Hammer in a limited edition two disc UHD and Blu-ray set on Monday 23rd March 2026  

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