A 20th Century pilot named Buck Rogers and his young friend Buddy Wade awake from 500 years in suspended animation to find that the world has been taken over by the outlaw army of Killer Kan... Read allA 20th Century pilot named Buck Rogers and his young friend Buddy Wade awake from 500 years in suspended animation to find that the world has been taken over by the outlaw army of Killer Kane.A 20th Century pilot named Buck Rogers and his young friend Buddy Wade awake from 500 years in suspended animation to find that the world has been taken over by the outlaw army of Killer Kane.
- Buck Rogers
- (archive footage)
- (as Larry 'Buster' Crabbe)
- Wilma Deering
- (archive footage)
- 'Buddy' Wade
- (archive footage)
- Capt. Rankin
- (archive footage)
- Killer Kane
- (archive footage)
- Prince Tallen
- (archive footage)
- Dr. Huer
- (archive footage)
- (as Montague Shaw)
- Air Marshal Kragg
- (archive footage)
- Capt. Lasca
- (archive footage)
- Lt. Lacy
- (archive footage)
- Capt. Roberts
- (archive footage)
- Lieutenant Patten
- (archive footage)
- Scott
- (archive footage)
- Kane Officer
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Professor Wade
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Dynamo Room Guard
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Dynamo Room Guard
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This re-produced feature-length version of the fondly remembered 12-part serial "Buck Rogers" (1939) must have held up well for 1950s Saturday matinée and television audiences, due to its futuristic plot and imaginatively recycled sets. Apparently, the original chapters were edited down, with (brief) new work done on the opening and closing segments. "The planet Saturn" isn't as peculiar a setting as it might seem, if you consider they may be referring to "Saturn's planet Titan." No comment on the suggestion the place is populated with helpful Asians. The end brings Buck Rogers into the then popular anti-Communist fold.
**** Planet Outlaws (1953) Ford Beebe ~ Buster Crabbe, Jackie Moran, Constance Moore, Anthony Warde
This was originally a 1939 Buck Rogers Serial. In 1953, it was re-edited and put together to create this short feature film. I have not seen the original serial, so I'm unsure just how much was cut out for this movie but I'm sure it was all the unnecessary extra stuff.
Buck Rogers fans the film should delight, Sci-Fi fans might enjoy it while others might want to pass on this one.
3.5/10
Absolutely absurd, yet tons of fun to watch, PLANET OUTLAWS is the 1950's feature length, condensed version of the original serial from the 1930's.
Contains wobbly, acrobatic aerial dogfights, big-big ray guns, "advanced" solid state / analog technology, gravity belts, life on Saturn, amazing hats, lots of capes, and dubious underground fortresses.
Sit back and enjoy the irony of an ancient film about the still-distant future...
The original serial had the notion that a 20th century dirigible pilot and junior sidekick Buster Crabbe and Jackie Moran crash near the North Pole and their bodies are cryogenically frozen and thawed out by those who found them 500 years later which is about the same time that the Starship Enterprise was doing its thing. But this is not a Star Trek world that they've come back to. Although in the original Star Trek series in one of the comic episodes a humanoid people did take on the gangster culture from 20th century earth.
In this film because we did not deal with the Al Capones and Lucky Lucianos back in the day as we should have, they're on top now and the boss of all bosses is a guy named Killer Kane played by Anthony Warde. Fortunately Crabbe and Moran fall into the hands of the Resistance who have holed up in a Hidden City. There are some other humans on Saturn and most of the film is devoted to making an alliance with them.
Science Fiction as a film form does have a half life. Jules Verne, Ray Bradbury, Isaac Asimov can write about the wonders of the future, but you can read it and use your imagination and a hundred, a thousand years from now it will adjust depending on how far humans advance. But once it's on film it stays.
The Buck Rogers films are pretty laughable and campy for today, but I wonder what Gene Roddenberry's vision will look like a hundred years from now, just how much will he have gotten right?
Tacked on is a prologue and epilogue of narration where a Cold War era message is hammered home. That too is a relic of the times.
Did you know
- TriviaThis is an edited version of the 1939 serial Buck Rogers (1939).
- GoofsWhen Buck introduces Prince Tallen to Dr Huer, Buck is dressed in the dark uniform of one of Kane's patrol-ship pilots. Seconds later when they all walk into the laboratory, Buck is dressed in the light-coloured rebel uniform.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, it is possible that this continuity error could be a consequence of the original four-hour serial being reduced to to a seventy minute feature film.
- Quotes
Dr. Huer, Scientist General: By means of a gas discovered by Professor Morgan, these two people have remained in suspended animation for five hundred years.
Col. Buck Rogers: Five hundred years?
George 'Buddy' Wade: That makes me old enough to be my own great grandfather.
- Crazy creditsRevised version based on cartoon strip "Buck Rogers" by HARRY JAQUES REVIER
- ConnectionsEdited from Buck Rogers (1939)
Details
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Planet Outlaws, Hey?
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 9m(69 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1