Fliegende Untertassen greifen an
Originaltitel: Earth vs. the Flying Saucers
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,3/10
9425
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Außerirdische, die in fliegenden High-Tech-Untertassen reisen, kontaktieren einen Wissenschaftler als Teil eines Plans zur Versklavung der Erdbewohner.Außerirdische, die in fliegenden High-Tech-Untertassen reisen, kontaktieren einen Wissenschaftler als Teil eines Plans zur Versklavung der Erdbewohner.Außerirdische, die in fliegenden High-Tech-Untertassen reisen, kontaktieren einen Wissenschaftler als Teil eines Plans zur Versklavung der Erdbewohner.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 wins
Thomas Browne Henry
- Vice Adm. Enright
- (as Tom Browne Henry)
Larry J. Blake
- Motorcycle Cop
- (as Larry Blake)
Fred Aldrich
- Airplane Passenger
- (Nicht genannt)
- …
Nicky Blair
- Military Officer at Experiment
- (Nicht genannt)
Jimmy Cross
- Military Messenger
- (Nicht genannt)
Jack Deery
- Military Officer
- (Nicht genannt)
Charles Evans
- Dr. Alberts
- (Nicht genannt)
Raoul Freeman
- Military Official
- (Nicht genannt)
Paul Frees
- Alien
- (Synchronisation)
- (Nicht genannt)
James Gonzalez
- Military Official
- (Nicht genannt)
Duke Green
- Minor Role
- (Nicht genannt)
Ed Haskett
- Military Official
- (Nicht genannt)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesThis science-fiction movie was "suggested" by the 1953 non-fiction book "Flying Saucers From Outer Space" by retired U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Donald E. Keyhoe, who believed that certain aerial phenomena were interplanetary in origin.
- PatzerAbout 19 minutes into the film, when the three soldiers behind their mortar get disintegrated by the alien ray, a "giant" house fly can be seen for one single frame right above the head of the rightmost soldier. It must have landed on the plate during composition of the effects shot.
- Zitate
Gen. Edmunds: When an armed and threatening power lands uninvited in our capitol, we don't meet him with tea and cookies!
- Alternative VersionenA colorized version is available on the DVD release.
- VerbindungenEdited into Angriff der Riesenkralle (1957)
Ausgewählte Rezension
As has been pointed out by most reviewers on IMDb, this film has all the perceived elements of cold war-period American cinema. However, what also should be considered is the influence it has had on contemporary SF movies and TV.
Hugh Marlowe, Joan Taylor and, especially, Morris Ankrum are well-known B-movie actors: they appeared in everything from Westerns to SF, with lots of stops in between. Thus, this film (complete with all the other stalwarts of '50s and '60s "Bs" who appear therein) can be seen as a progenitor of later low-budget productions which rely on a cheap yet capable cast.
At the time it was released (1956), Ray Harryhausen was proving his expertise with stop-motion special effects, later to be given much larger budgets in '60s colour productions. "Gumby" and similar TV items owe much to this man, as does Aardman Productions and, possibly, Dreamworks.
It has already been indicated (by others) that "Mars Attacks" owes its saucers to this film. So, too, "ID4" has a debt, as does "Dr Who"! (Specifically the outfits worn by the aliens - that leaden 'dome' on top of their environment suits belongs to a famous adversary of the good doctor - check out a couple of Tom Baker serials!) Be that as it may, Fred F. Sears does an acceptable job as director; Curt Siodmak supplies a clever screenplay based on Don Keyhoe's book (Keyhoe also wrote 'non-fiction' accounts of UFOs); and some of the dialogue is definitely quotable! IMDb has some ripper examples.
Watch it and enjoy it. Strip some of our contemporary SF of CGI and they really do lack substance in comparison with this entertaining and funny movie. OK. You won't gasp and ooooh. If you have a love of '50s B-movies however, this one is a 'corker'!
Hugh Marlowe, Joan Taylor and, especially, Morris Ankrum are well-known B-movie actors: they appeared in everything from Westerns to SF, with lots of stops in between. Thus, this film (complete with all the other stalwarts of '50s and '60s "Bs" who appear therein) can be seen as a progenitor of later low-budget productions which rely on a cheap yet capable cast.
At the time it was released (1956), Ray Harryhausen was proving his expertise with stop-motion special effects, later to be given much larger budgets in '60s colour productions. "Gumby" and similar TV items owe much to this man, as does Aardman Productions and, possibly, Dreamworks.
It has already been indicated (by others) that "Mars Attacks" owes its saucers to this film. So, too, "ID4" has a debt, as does "Dr Who"! (Specifically the outfits worn by the aliens - that leaden 'dome' on top of their environment suits belongs to a famous adversary of the good doctor - check out a couple of Tom Baker serials!) Be that as it may, Fred F. Sears does an acceptable job as director; Curt Siodmak supplies a clever screenplay based on Don Keyhoe's book (Keyhoe also wrote 'non-fiction' accounts of UFOs); and some of the dialogue is definitely quotable! IMDb has some ripper examples.
Watch it and enjoy it. Strip some of our contemporary SF of CGI and they really do lack substance in comparison with this entertaining and funny movie. OK. You won't gasp and ooooh. If you have a love of '50s B-movies however, this one is a 'corker'!
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Earth vs. the Flying Saucers
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 23 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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What is the Spanish language plot outline for Fliegende Untertassen greifen an (1956)?
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