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Zombies of the Stratosphere

  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 2h 47m
IMDb RATING
5.0/10
526
YOUR RATING
Leonard Nimoy, Lane Bradford, and Judd Holdren in Zombies of the Stratosphere (1952)
Trailer for Zombies Of The Stratosphere
Play trailer1:56
1 Video
15 Photos
ActionAdventureSci-Fi

The invaders come to Earth to create an H-bomb to blast Earth out of orbit so that Mars can take its place.The invaders come to Earth to create an H-bomb to blast Earth out of orbit so that Mars can take its place.The invaders come to Earth to create an H-bomb to blast Earth out of orbit so that Mars can take its place.

  • Director
    • Fred C. Brannon
  • Writer
    • Ronald Davidson
  • Stars
    • Judd Holdren
    • Aline Towne
    • Wilson Wood
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.0/10
    526
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fred C. Brannon
    • Writer
      • Ronald Davidson
    • Stars
      • Judd Holdren
      • Aline Towne
      • Wilson Wood
    • 15User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Zombies of the Stratosphere
    Trailer 1:56
    Zombies of the Stratosphere

    Photos15

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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Judd Holdren
    Judd Holdren
    • Larry Martin
    Aline Towne
    Aline Towne
    • Sue Davis
    Wilson Wood
    • Bob Wilson
    Lane Bradford
    Lane Bradford
    • Marex
    Stanley Waxman
    Stanley Waxman
    • Dr. Harding
    John Crawford
    John Crawford
    • Roth
    Craig Kelly
    • Mr. Steele
    Leonard Nimoy
    Leonard Nimoy
    • Narab
    Tom Steele
    Tom Steele
    • Walker [Ch. 3]…
    Dale Van Sickel
    Dale Van Sickel
    • Telegrapher [Chs. 1, 10]
    Roy Engel
    Roy Engel
    • Lawson - Boat Charter Operator [Ch. 3]
    Jack Harden
    • Kerr
    Paul Stader
    • Fisherman [Ch. 7]
    Gayle Kellogg
    • Dick - Rocketship Pilot
    Jack Shea
    • Rocketship Guard [Ch. 2]
    Robert Garabedian
    • Elah - Zombie Pilot
    Frank Alten
    • Second Train Heavy [Ch. 1]
    • (uncredited)
    Roy Barcroft
    Roy Barcroft
    • Central Control Radio Operator [Chs. 1, 11]
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    • Director
      • Fred C. Brannon
    • Writer
      • Ronald Davidson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    5.0526
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    Featured reviews

    StuOz

    Despite The Terrible Robot, This Is A Knockout

    50s Republic Studios serial that very much resembles other 50s Republic work like Commander Cody and Radar Men From The Moon.

    Firstly, I was not a child of the 50s, I was a child of the 70s, so perhaps I have a different take on old time B&W movie serials than older viewers? My take is this...I turn to Columbia serials for Batman, I turn to Universal serials for Buck Rogers and I turn to Republic serials for this kind of frantic spacey action with spaceships and rocket men flying around the place! So basically, I love Zombies Of The Statosphere! Mainly the first four chapters...

    The first few chapters will put a smile on your face. You will not be looking at Leonard Nimoy (and this is coming from a Trekker like me) but rather you will get totally sucked into the style-over-substance look of this production. From the alien costume to the Lydecker miniature flying effects, to the full scale ship model, to the outstanding vintage cars, and the train rooftop fights. This has the works.

    I know a few of these old time serials had fights on train rooftops but I found such footage most pleasing in Columbia's Batman And Robin (1949)...so you might wish to see that as well.

    Now onto the bad news. Because the first four chapters put me on such a high, I was not ready for what was to come in chapters five and six when the painfully dated tin-can robot appears! Yes, I know, with the exception of Robby The Robot (Forbidden Planet, The Invisible Boy), 50s robots just looked like this. Even the odd 60s robot looked much like this (see that first season Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea episode with a robot). But the sight of a walking garbage bin put a damper on what was a knockout start.

    On top of this, the extensive underwater footage did not look so good on my faded print of the serial. Maybe you had a better print and could make out what was going on underwater?

    In a nutshell, this is well worth watching as the flying effects and general look of the production is outstanding. Lydecker would go on to do more "real-daylight-filmed-flying-scenes" with TV's Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964) and Lost In Space (1965). Some viewers (like me) will struggle with things once tin-man enters the scene but he does not get much screen time and he does only very limited damage to the 12 chapters as a whole. Enjoy!
    5ctomvelu1

    Two-fisted

    Solid followup to RADAR MEN, this fast-paced Republic serial pits federal agent Larry Martin against Martians hell-bent n blowing the Earth out of the solar system and into oblivion. Larry often dons the rocket suit to fight them, so we get lots of shots of him flying, and these scenes are quite realistic. The special effects team rigged a dummy on a wire and flew the thing several feet above the ground. The only catch is, Larry's not exactly a superhero and manages to get beat up and knocked out several times by his much tougher opponents. Also, he's a lousy shot with a handgun. So's everyone else, for that matter. No one ever gets shot. Also, everyone -- good guys and bad guys -- wear the same suits and fedoras, and they're all thin as rails, so at times it is hard to tell who's who. When they fight, they almost never lose their hats, the better to hide the stuntmen. Only the Martians are dressed differently. They wear what appear to be costumes from some old King Arthur movie. And they're green, of course. The amazing physical stunt work was handled by three of Hollywood's best stuntmen. It's wise not to watch this all in one sitting, by the way. Too much repetition of the flying scenes. There is a condensed, non-serial version from 1958, if you prefer. Regardless of what you're heard about colorization, make sure to watch this in computerized color. And watch for a young Leonard Nimoy as Martian No. 2.
    8harper_blue

    Cheeze to Pleeze -- It's a Whiz!

    This one (so to speak) is for lovers of the old Republic Serials, those incredibly silly (by modern standards) episodic films that kept our parents or grandparents coming back to the Saturday matinée week after week. Produced on budgets not much larger than Ed Wood ever had, and on sets sometimes recycled from film to film, they still offered a weekly dose of action and adventure in the days when those terms were not synonymous with earth-splitting explosions, computerized special effects, and "I'll be back." The plots were straightforward; of course, most a/a genre films are simple of plot even today, but there is something about these old cans of cheeze that satisfies more than constant viewings of "Terminatorsaur" and "Predatalienator". The goods guys wear white hats (so to speak) and smell good; the bad guys wear black hats and stink of cigarette smoke; and the simplicity of the 'fex are lovely in themselves. Yeah, things still blow up and burn down, but that is still a function of a/a films, I guess. The logic is, bigger isn't always better, and the serials prove the point.

    In this Saturday-morning peanut-gallery special, the plan is for the aliens to blow up Earth, so that Mars can take its orbital place and get warm. Out to foil them is Larry, a "security agent," armed only with a .45 and a miraculous suit that lets him fly through the air just by twisting knobs (and jumping on a hidden trampoline for the initial takeoff). Can he stop the terrible zombies from completing their dastardly scheme before the train runs off the track, he gets burned in a raging inferno, or the movie runs out of reels? Return to the theater next week for the next exciting chapter...or just keep playing the tape. Get plenty of popcorn, settle in for a Saturday with the kids to introduce them to what film really was like, and keep your eyes open for Leonard Nimoy, sans ears and "Live Long and Prosper", in an early film appearance!

    One of the best-remembered of the serials, as well as one of the last ones (Republic stopped producing them in the mid-Fifties or so; check a specialist film-history Web site). Warmly recommended to all, unless you have no tolerance for cheesy sci-fi. I only hope it comes out on DVD eventually, and with Nimoy to comment on it or do a special feature!
    jbone-4

    Colourised feature also

    Around 1990 Television NZ screened a colourised feature of this serial. I've never seen any reference to it elsewhere. It ran about 100 minutes. Considering how bad some colourisations can be this one was quite good, being very similar to Eastmancolour in the tones but without the saturation.
    5Travis_Moran

    I'm missing the zombies!

    Okay, so this is corny to the max. But I get a kick out of this stuff anyway.

    I can't figure out why they called this "Zombies" as there aren't any zombies (except maybe the robot built by the guys from Mars). Zombies aren't even mentioned except in the last episode.

    I do know most everybody in the cast had to get wet at some time or other in this production. They had the entrance to the bad guys hideout go thru an underwater tunnel. Sorta goofy eh!. Speaking of goofy---Larry Martin's rocket pack never fired (although he flew in it a lot---maybe it's invisible rocket blast).

    The story is really simple: Guys from Mars want to set off a big H-bomb to deflect Earth out of its orbit so they can put Mars where the Earth was---to warm it up more I guess. They go thru all sorts of contortions to get materials for this project with Larry Martin foiling them at every stage. Lots of cars, boats, trains get wrecked in the process too---Usually at the end of each chapter. Many gunfights occur, along with the usual hokey fist fights in which everyone involved gets up and walks off with no bruises, blood, or even rumpled clothing.

    Oh yeah. Mr. Spock was in this, but he didn't do much of anything except say "Yes, sir" to the big shot Martian goon. I think he attacked Larry Martin a couple of times in the underwater passage. Or maybe it was the other goon. It was sorta hard to tell with the goofy, sparkly costumes on that covered most of their heads.

    Luckily I didn't have to buy this as I downloaded it from that www.archive.org site (I think all their movies are copyright expired or something so it's legal to download from there). Actually a friend referred me to that site saying "This stuff is your style." I think I'm getting a bad rep here! But I do watch a lot of this old, corny stuff. It amuses me and that's what I watch movies for.

    Don't dis this too bad as it's good for a laugh or two. Outlandish costumes and goofy electronic gear will make you chuckle.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
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    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut (as "Narab", a Martian invader) of Leonard Nimoy.
    • Alternate versions
      Also available in a colorized version.
    • Connections
      Edited from Mysterious Doctor Satan (1940)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 16, 1952 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Des Satans Satellit
    • Filming locations
      • Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park - 10700 W. Escondido Canyon Rd., Agua Dulce, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Republic Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $176,357 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 47m(167 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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