Scientists try to prevent a collision between Earth and a planet that is heading for it.Scientists try to prevent a collision between Earth and a planet that is heading for it.Scientists try to prevent a collision between Earth and a planet that is heading for it.
Giacomo Rossi Stuart
- Cmdr. Rod Jackson
- (as Jack Stuart)
Ombretta Colli
- Lt. Terry Sanchez
- (as Amber Collins)
Halina Zalewska
- Janet Norton
- (as Alina Zalewska)
Goffredo Unger
- Capt. Frank J. Perkinson
- (as Freddy Unger)
John Bartha
- Dr. Schmidt
- (as John Babtha)
Maria Pia Conte
- Female Officer at Conference
- (as Maria Pia Zambelli)
Calisto Calisti
- Control Room Supervisor
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Wow. If you're a psychotronics lover you've probably seen this one, but if not, check it out. Where a lot of psychotronics is Bad Cinema in an aggressive, assaultive way that makes your face hurt after 10 minutes (eg, Diabolik, Manos the Hands of Fate, et al), this one is B-A-D in that adorably, lovably, absurdly silly way that just makes you smile and think, "Wow, adults made this." For an old duffer like me, who grew up watching Rocky Jones and Diver Dan and Fireball XL5 and finally Star Trek, this is manna. Everything about it--the cars, the buildings, the toy rockets, the toy space station, the queeny Z-grade Italian actors and the visible wires holding them up when they go "weightless in space"--is wonderful. Lots of hipsters have worked very hard to make sci-fi and monster movies this miraculously cheesy, and failed utterly, because this kind of stoopit genius cannot be faked or imitated. It must simply be appreciated.
The plot summary is accurate. The film is titles 'PLanet on the Prowl' in the US, but also as 'War between the Planets'. What the first reviewer is describing is 'War of the Planets', a film of this "series", but with a different cast. The series is called (in the US) 'The Gamma I Quadrilogy', and they are *gems*. So bad, they are GREAT. My favourite is 'Wild, Wild Planet'. If you love old or campy Sci-Fi, you will fall in love with that charmer.
As far as 'Planet on the Prowl/War Between the Planets" goes, it is boring. Not bad enough to be good, and not good enough to watch it again.
Ken
As far as 'Planet on the Prowl/War Between the Planets" goes, it is boring. Not bad enough to be good, and not good enough to watch it again.
Ken
So Glad I finally caught this on the DVD double bill with Creation Of The Humanoids . I saw the trailer for this at a grindhouse in the seventies after the release of Star Wars. Obviously some cheap distributor dusted it off the shelf and reissued it with a Star Wars like title to pair up with another sci-fi. I remember the audience howling at the preview especially when the astronuts start hacking up the a.liens which are nothing more than plastic tubes filled with strawberry Jello. Ever since I've been trying to find it. As Space operas go it's not the best and it's not the worst. It's certainly a time capsule of everything sixties .AnTonio Marghetti seemed to be the go to guy for these psychedelic mash ups of James Bond and George Jetson starting in 1960 with Space Men and ending in the early seventies(I think) with The SNow Devils AKA The Blue Devils. My favorite in the series is Wild Wild Planet with it's four armed assassins and biosphere of blood. Most of these would grace the late night air waves when the insomniacs and users of contraband were up and wanting something different. If you like em cheap and Campy you could do worse, As for really boring cinema try The Dead Talk,The Incredible Petrified World, Treasure Of El Cortez, Or That Man From Harlem.
Remember that sci-fi skit you and your buddies made up and performed in front of your third grade class? Someone made it into a movie. Minus the good parts. This is one of those films you keep watching because you expect it to get better. It never does. If you go out for refreshment you may not want to come back.
Natural disasters on Earth herald the approach of a seemingly living planet in this, the third of Antonio Margheriti's 'Gamma One' space-opera tetralogy (so named because of the ubiquitous spinning space-station). Once again, the future seems to be a high-tech version of the groovy 1960s as Margheriti recycles or repurposes sets, props, and miniatures from the first two films (notably, the futuristic city, the 'Jetsons-esque' cars, and the space-bases from which the mighty 'Jupitar' rockets are launched). These scenes are colourful and well-done (for the budget) but no longer novel; whereas, the second half of the film, in which the heroic astronauts, led by Cmdr. Rod Jackson (Jack Stuart aka Giacomo Rossi Stuart) and equipped with anti-matter bombs, arrive on the errant planet, is a gaudy, over-the-top, cheesy delight. I especially like the scenes of the space-suited explorers carefully picking their way through a morass of gurgling, bright-red ooze with their rocketships floating in space above them (although the shots of them as stiff little dolls 'flying' like pendulums above the planet's surface undermine the illusion somewhat). Despite being made in the mid-1960s, the 'finned-spindle' design of the spaceships are reminiscent of the illustrations in the popular 50's 'space books' by Willy Ley or covers of pulp magazines from the same era. Visual splendor aside, the film is not particularly good. The 'rogue planet' premise is a retread of the tokusatsu adventures 'Warning From Space (1956) and 'Gorath' (1962) but makes even less sense. The script is artificial and contrived, and the acting wooden, bordering on amateurish at times (but some of the Italian actors may have been speaking English by rote). While the special-effects set-pieces are well-done (for the budget) and entertaining, Margheriti's direction in the 'human' scenes is pretty trite, with most reactions being accentuated by a sudden 'dramatic' close-up, and the last reel drags a bit as the demolition team trudges through the interior of the strange planet. New to this entry in the series, there is an annoying voice-over explaining events and what the characters are thinking; a cheap pretense that is often the sign of a rushed production or lack of faith in the actors, direction, or storyline (or a patch on an incoherent final product). For genre-fans, the colourful, eye-catching visuals will be remembered long after the film's myriad weakness are forgotten (non-genre fans are unlikely to stick around long enough to see the 'good bits'). Followed by the final installment in the heroic exploits of the Gamma One personnel, the strange abominable-snowman/space-alien hybrid 'The Snow Devils' (1967), which features the same leads although (oddly) not always playing the same characters.
Did you know
- TriviaThe third film in the Gamma One quadrilogy was titled Il pianeta errante (The Errant Planet) in its original Italian. The english dubbed release in America was retitled War Between the Planets (WBP). Director Magheriti's economizing continued. Sets, costumes and props were reused from the first two movies, but the cast was different.
- GoofsWhen they shut off the gravity in Gamma One, numerous things start to 'float' but Lt. Sanchez's long hair continues to hang down.
- Quotes
Cmdr. Rod Jackson: This thing is obviously determined to crash its way through the Universe.
Lt. Terry Sanchez: We won't let it.
- ConnectionsEdited into Dusk to Dawn Drive-in Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 9 (2002)
- How long is War Between the Planets?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Gamma I Quadrilogy Vol. 3
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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