In the year 2000, the spaceship Hope One sets off to find new galaxies for colonization, but an encounter with an alien being and a swarm of meteorites sends the ship streaking off course in... Read allIn the year 2000, the spaceship Hope One sets off to find new galaxies for colonization, but an encounter with an alien being and a swarm of meteorites sends the ship streaking off course into a sea of monsters on an uncharted world.In the year 2000, the spaceship Hope One sets off to find new galaxies for colonization, but an encounter with an alien being and a swarm of meteorites sends the ship streaking off course into a sea of monsters on an uncharted world.
James Brown
- Col. Hank Stevens
- (as James B. Brown)
Baynes Barron
- Dr. John Andros
- (as Baynes Barrow)
Russ Bender
- Dr. Paul Martin
- (as Russ Fender)
Bob Legionaire
- Faith I Crewman
- (as Robert Legionaire)
James Macklin
- Gen. Mark Tilman
- (as Jim Maclin)
John Lomma
- Earth Control
- (as John Loma)
Jimmy Bracon
- Alien
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
By any standard, the greatest movie every made.
It's a WWII submarine movie, complete with sonar pinging.
Plus Sea Hunt, with underwater grappling with a monster.
The background music is in both major and minor keys.
The sets are comparable with those of Star Trek.
The dialog is minimal and nary a word is mispronounced.
The computers beep and boop obligingly.
There's a countdown scene, all the way from 10 to 1. The tension builds relentlessly.
The technology is comparable to that in any garage.
The Mystery Science Theater guys are not in any scene.
The captain is considerate enough to spell out the new planet, "Andros I," for the preliterate.
Best of all, the movie end reliably, each time it's shown.
All things considered, the synergy is stunning. Stunning, I say.
It's a WWII submarine movie, complete with sonar pinging.
Plus Sea Hunt, with underwater grappling with a monster.
The background music is in both major and minor keys.
The sets are comparable with those of Star Trek.
The dialog is minimal and nary a word is mispronounced.
The computers beep and boop obligingly.
There's a countdown scene, all the way from 10 to 1. The tension builds relentlessly.
The technology is comparable to that in any garage.
The Mystery Science Theater guys are not in any scene.
The captain is considerate enough to spell out the new planet, "Andros I," for the preliterate.
Best of all, the movie end reliably, each time it's shown.
All things considered, the synergy is stunning. Stunning, I say.
I first viewed this movie on Double Chiller Theatre, a Saturday night TV show seen in the Philadelphia area which ran in the mid 1960's. As a kid and a young teenager I loved almost all science fiction, even Teenagers from Outer Space. I found this movie dull, poorly improvised, and uneventful. It had a few cheap special effects which included a rubber alien, a giant crab which did little, and a humanistic frogman out for a swim. There were 4 typical principles in the movie: a by the book commander more suited for a cowboy movie; an attractive young lady who goes out of here way to prove she is as good as any man; a screw off who is aboard only to write a book; and a scientist who does not come off as being all that bright. This TV movie could have been made for the old Saturday matinée at the local theater. It was made with little imagination and probably just to earn a quick easy buck. The movie looked as though it was made in the early 1950's and had the feel of the old Space Cadet serial. And to think Star Trek would be only a few years away from our TV screens.
Even for 1965 B movie science fiction this is weak. Go to space, sort of crash land on a planet, fight alien, leave. The male crew all looked like senior citizens, while cozying up to 30 year female scientist. But it's easy to sit through if you're tired and if it's on a no commercials channel. Even for 1965 B movie science fiction this is weak. Go to space, sort of crash land on a planet, fight alien, leave. The male crew all looked like senior citizens, while cozying up to 30 year female scientist. But it's easy to sit through if you're tired and if it's on a no commercials channel. Even for 1965 B movie science fiction this is weak. Go to space, sort of crash land on a planet, fight alien, leave. The male crew all looked like senior citizens, while cozying up to 30 year female scientist. But it's easy to sit through if you're tired and if it's on a no commercials channel. How do you get 600 words in a review for a movie that probably had dialogue of less.
People are not 'getting' this one. They see cheap props, models, and crustaceans and they inwardly groan, but let me tell you, there is definitely something here that is worth your time. A spaceship with a crew of four who have good on screen chemistry (the always alluring Francine York plays a curvaceous lady scientist) more than adequate acting, a fine and evolving character development, decent dialogue, plus the spaceship is not too bad, possessing the right amount of claustrophobia, knobs, and buttons......The pace of this film, combined with the plot and action, keeps you engaged - you really will be wondering what will happen next. Here, simplicity is a form of complexity- less is more.
My one beef : I think the early encounter with the alien could have been expanded upon..
This film was made in B& W in 1965- the whole thing looks and feels like it was made in 1959 or 1960, I think this is why it has a bad reputation- people expect so much more razzle dazzle for 1965, they cant see that this is an overlooked gem born too late.
I did not know this little science fiction movie produced by American International Pictures, James Nicholson and Samuel Z Arkoff's movie company, who also produced Roger Corman's best horror B movies. I am not badly surprised by this cheap stuff, but that's not at the level of Edward L Cahn's IT THE TERROR FROM BEYOND SPACE, some kind of poverty row ALIEN first draft. It is definitely a space opera, but I repeat, very cheap. A "behind closed doors" of a spaceship intrigue, which is fun and agreeable to watch. I know Burt Topper as a director, nothing great, but nothing exceptional either. Here, he is only the producer and we can easily make the link between his own movies as a film maker in terms of - not screenplay, because he never made science fiction films - but an obviously lack of ambition without letting his own work become a garbage crap. Watch it, if you have time, it's worth seeing.
Did you know
- TriviaThe alien found on the derelict spaceship is identical to the Martian in The Wizard of Mars (1965).
- GoofsIn the credits, Russ Bender is called "Russ Fender".
- Quotes
Dr. Paul Martin: Well many people believe that the first Earth mammals were fish.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Space Monster (1969)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 21m(81 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content