Plan 9 From Outer Space

Plan 9 From Outer Space?

  • Seen it, hated it.
  • Seen it, loved it.
  • Haven’t seen it.
0 voters

I need this data!

There is a movie made in the spirit of the 1950s SF gnere called “the lost skeleton of cadavra” made a few years ago. Really good spoof.

Loved plan 9, but my fave is “From hell it came”!
http://www.jabootu.com/fhic.htm



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Loved it because it was so very, very bad… we have the ‘ultimate’ collection of ‘classic’ Si-Fi - something like 90, mostly low budget movies from the past that match Plan 9 quite well. :laughing:

http://tinyurl.com/njcjr

I’m afraid I’m the opposite. I know there are a lot of people who revel in the absolute cheesiness of very badly made films from the 1950s-60s, but personally I can’t get into it. The more the film makers believe in their subject and try to make it real on film, the better I tend to like it. That is why I would choose something like Star Wars (as dopey as it was) over the Star Trek tv series. SW was made to look real.

djm

Fallen asleep to it twice.
Have seen and enjoyed Ed Wood twice.

Dale, there just weren’t enough options in the poll.

I checked “hated it,” but, on retrospect, it’s given me many laughs over the years, and I still do the alien chest-slapping salute.

Are you a B Movie buff, Dale?

Well, not exactly. I’m a sort of a D movie fan. I don’t like merely bad movies. I do like TREMENDOUSLY egregiously bad movies.

Dale

Once upon a time I won a competition for which the prize was ten DVDs of famous Science Fiction Films. There was one hiccup that the DVD of Blade Runner was out of stock so they let me have my choice as an alternative (I chose “Closely Observed Trains” and got “Galaxy Quest” off my own bat.) I already had Blade Runner on Video.
It introduced me to the 1953 version of “War of the Worlds” which was pathetic. I got to have a copy of “The Day the Earth Stood Still” which is pretty good, and stands the test of time. I saw K-PAX for the first time, which I would recommend to anyone - even non-science-fiction lovers. “Solaris” was very strange. I’ve since read the book, and yes, the book is very strange too. I think “Solaris” failed because the music was too irritating. Some of the choices were just hokum. I haven’t even bothered to watch “The Matrix” over again. I did review “Terminator” and was interested to see Michael Beihn - the same actor who played Corporal Hicks in Aliens. He is one of those “second string” actors who I think are really better professionals than the first-string actors. And Sigourney Weaver in “Galaxy Quest” was just brilliant. Anyone who ever blinked at anything in Star Trek should love Galaxy Quest. And I got to show my son “2001” which was a real education for him. Oddly enough it explained a lot of jokes which he’s seen in films since - including the “Monolith” take-off scene in “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”. But he’s stolen the Star Wars DVDs and they are somewhere in the chaos of his room.
But sadly I’ve never seen “Plan 9”. I’ve seen clips of it, which I can’t remember, and I’ve read the review in Halliwell - he thought it was rubbish, but then he was reviewing strictly in terms of what would get a good family audience on TV. I think his brief would be a bit more complicated nowadays: there’s lots of scope for cult films.

So tell us, please Dale. Why do you want to know?

I suppose that after keeping the daughters in the style they are accustomed to, and then financing the Chiff, that he’s gotta be careful with his pocket money.

He can borrow my copy of “Delicatessen” any time he likes.

Slan,
D. :wink:

OH! I loved delicatessen!

“Aurore… AURORE…

I can only deal with brief clips of really cheesy movies. Any more, and I think I could be practicing whistle or something. I’d recommend a couple of fun sci-fi movies: ‘Earth Girls are Easy’ with Gina Davis and Jim Carey. Also, ‘The Brother from Another Planet,’ which also has a small part with Jim Carey. And, of course, the classic, Repo-Man.

I got tired of Battlestar Galactica after a couple of episodes back in the '70’s because of the focus on dumb characters. I vaguely remember a kid with a mechanical dog. However, I totally recommend the remade series with Edward Olmos as the commander. Great stuff! The first 2 seasons are available on dvd. Start with the pilot film. The music background is interesting. Some cool drumming during the space battle scenes, kind of like Taiko. I even heard some whistle/uilleann pipe stuff during a weepy scene.

Plan 9 was voted “the worst film ever” and got a golden turkey, or something like that. Yes, it’s bad. Ed Wood spliced footage he had shot of Bela Legosi (for a movie called “the Ghoul Goes West”) with sound stage scenes. The weird jump between daylight and nighttime, the badly designed sets, the awful dialogue, and the garbled message behind this film. His other films are passable(well, with the exception of Glen or Glenda) but this one . . . ugh.
My dad claimed to have seen it as a kid. I guess there were no movie reviews. He said it was the worst film he saw. Everyone in the theater was yelling and booing and throwing stuff at the screen in protest. Theaters had balconies back then . . . so you got a clear shot. He claims a Milk Dud has the right size and weight to cause a whistle as it shoots through the air. I don’t know if my dad(as a kid) threw those milk duds . . . but I suspect he did. It might have not even been his first time.

There are plenty of bad movies . . . but you have to see the right one. And if you can see the MST3K verson, you’ll be safer. Check out these.

“Manos the Hand of Fate” - yes, this is the worst film ever made. Trust me, several thousand Mysties can’t be wrong.
“Santa Claus Conquers the Martians” - joy has left mars . . . and only Santa can restore it. Check out Pia Sadora! And if that’s not enough for you, get an extra dose of nausea with the mexican film “Santa Claus”. Lots of nightmare fuel and weird theology.
“Teenagers from Outer Space” - really old teenagers from outer space. TOHTCHA!

And if you ever get to see any MST3K short, please watch “Mr. B Natural”. Woman dresses up as man, aka the Spirit of Music. Pops into the bedroom of Bud, an unpopular middle age school kid. There, Mr. B Natural(dressed in tights and sporting a Peter Pan outfit) convinces Bud to take up the trombone and let the spirit of music in. Yep, Bud takes up the trombone and get friends(I’m not buying this whole ‘band is cool’ line), plays “Flight of the Bumblebee” in one of his preformances(on the trombone . . . Flight of the Bumblebee). The 15 minute short was used as an advertisement for band instruments in schools during the fifties. It must have backfired miserably.

I wouldn’t say that a movie needs to be bad enough to be good – I think good-bad is a different type from bad-bad, rather than a different degree.
Similar to mamakash above, my criterion for a good-bad movie is whether it would make a good Mystery Science Theater episode. Manos is a classic, but I think my all-time favorite is one of Bert I Gordon’s early movies (I want to say the Amazing Colossal Man, but I don’t think so). There was absolutely NO dialogue on-camera. Everybody who was talking was shot from the back. At one point Tomservo says something to the effect, Bert I Gordon didn’t master syncing the audio track to the lips till his next movie. Every time there was dialogue after (there really wasn’t much, not much action either) that I just about lost it laughing my ass off. THAT’s a great crappy movie.

I was really bummed when Joel left MST3k. It was never the same after that.

I dind’t know it was a real movie. I thought it was just something they made up on Seinfled.

I’ve seen Plan 9 a dozen times or more. I love it with all my heart. A great double feature is Plan 9 and then Ed Wood. You can’t go wrong.

Plan 9 was poor Bela Lugosi’s last movie. He died halfway through the filming and rather than reshoot his scenes with a different actor they got some guy to slink around in pseudo-vampire garb with his caped arm draped sinisterly across his face for the rest of the movie.
Vampires or zombies come and go from crypts which look like cardboard boxes from a refrigerator spray painted.
In one scene of an airplane cockpit, the pilot and co-pilot are sitting in front of the door to the cabin which is covered by what looks like a plastic shower curtain. They are supposedly flying the plane, but they have no control stick or yoke..
You HAVE to love a movie that bad!

Yes, absolutely; another good one is whether Joe Bob Briggs reviewed it.

:wink: