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IMDbPro

Barbarella

  • 1968
  • PG
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
40K
YOUR RATING
Jane Fonda and John Phillip Law in Barbarella (1968)
lbx
Play trailer3:15
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Dystopian Sci-FiSpace Sci-FiActionAdventureFantasySci-Fi

In the 41st century, an astronaut seeks to stop an evil scientist who threatens to unleash a powerful weapon upon the galaxy.In the 41st century, an astronaut seeks to stop an evil scientist who threatens to unleash a powerful weapon upon the galaxy.In the 41st century, an astronaut seeks to stop an evil scientist who threatens to unleash a powerful weapon upon the galaxy.

  • Director
    • Roger Vadim
  • Writers
    • Jean-Claude Forest
    • Terry Southern
    • Roger Vadim
  • Stars
    • Jane Fonda
    • John Phillip Law
    • Anita Pallenberg
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    40K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roger Vadim
    • Writers
      • Jean-Claude Forest
      • Terry Southern
      • Roger Vadim
    • Stars
      • Jane Fonda
      • John Phillip Law
      • Anita Pallenberg
    • 270User reviews
    • 142Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    Barbarella
    Trailer 3:15
    Barbarella
    Barbarella 50th Anniversary Mashup
    Video 1:41
    Barbarella 50th Anniversary Mashup
    Barbarella 50th Anniversary Mashup
    Video 1:41
    Barbarella 50th Anniversary Mashup

    Photos312

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    Top cast60

    Edit
    Jane Fonda
    Jane Fonda
    • Barbarella
    John Phillip Law
    John Phillip Law
    • Pygar
    Anita Pallenberg
    Anita Pallenberg
    • The Great Tyrant
    Milo O'Shea
    Milo O'Shea
    • Concierge…
    Marcel Marceau
    Marcel Marceau
    • Professor Ping
    Claude Dauphin
    Claude Dauphin
    • President of Earth
    Véronique Vendell
    Véronique Vendell
    • Captain Moon
    • (as Veronique Vendell)
    Giancarlo Cobelli
    • The Revolutionary
    Serge Marquand
    • Captain Sun
    Nino Musco
    • The General
    Franco Gulà
    • The Suicide
    • (scenes deleted)
    • (as Franco Gula)
    Catherine Chevallier
    • Stomoxys
    Marie Therese Chevallier
    • Glossina
    Umberto Di Grazia
    • Sogo Citizen
    David Hemmings
    David Hemmings
    • Dildano
    Ugo Tognazzi
    Ugo Tognazzi
    • Mark Hand
    Honey Autumn
    • Bald Handmaiden at Sogovian Court
    • (uncredited)
    Silvana Bacci
    • Girl in Sogo
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Roger Vadim
    • Writers
      • Jean-Claude Forest
      • Terry Southern
      • Roger Vadim
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews270

    5.939.8K
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Fonda is the Best Thing

    Barbarella (1968)

    ** (out of 4)

    Campy sci-fi based on the French comics has Jane Fonda playing the title role, a futuristic superhero who is asked by the President of Earth to travel to a distant planet and rescue a doctor. I can understand why this film has gained a cult following over the past few decades but to me this thing is still a pretty big mess and it's somewhat shocking watching the film to day and looking back and wondering what the original producers were thinking. I mean, if you look at the "story" of this thing, it's a complete mess and it's all over the place. I'm not exactly sure what they were trying to do in regards to the story but it's a complete misfire. Not for a single second do you care about Barbarella's adventure nor do you care about anything she's doing in the film. The reason the film remains entertaining is because it's simply so strange and surreal. Visually the film is quite impressive as a bunch of pulp. The set design and costumes are certainly memorable and the now laughable special effects have a mild charm to them. What really keeps the film moving is seeing someone like Fonda doing a role like this. She's very good in the role, there's no doubt about it, as she can handle the campy moments as well as deliver on the sexuality of the character. Her nude striptease that starts the film is certainly the highlight but they needed more of these throughout. John Phillip Law isn't all that "good" in the film but there's no question that his angel character is quite memorable. Director Roger Vadim doesn't bring enough life, energy or fire to any of the scenes to really make them work and that's certainly not good when you're dealing with a film like this one. BARBARELLA certainly deserves its label as a camp classic but it's just not entertaining enough to be fully rewarding.
    6ma-cortes

    Colorful Sci-Fi with psychedelic photography , bemusing situations and fun scenes

    Comic Strip brought appropriately to life . Tremendous fun, amusing scenes , psychedelic frames and many other things . In the far future, the year is 40,000. The protagonist is a highly sexual woman named Barbarella (Jane Fonda , Sophia Loren turned down the title role) is tasked with finding and stopping the evil Durand-Durand (character famously inspired the band name of 1980s pop stars Duran Duran), a missing scientist (Milo O'Shea). Along the quite sexy way she encounters various unusual people . As Barbarella (whose costume was inspired by designer Paco Rabanne) travels to the evil city called SoGo, it is a reference to Biblical cities Sodom and Gomorrah. On her dangerous trip she teams with blind angel Pygar (John Philip Law), and fights the Great Tyrant (Anita Pallenberg) along with numerous sexual torture devices , but she has to save the world .

    Naif Sci-Fi plenty of colors , thrills , brilliant cinematography by Claude Renoir and fantastic images ; surprisingly, for such a diverse melange, it actually works. Knowingly Camp version of comic-book sci-Fi classic written by Jean Claude Forest . In the original comic, Barbarella was not a secret agent but an outlaw, and the movie omits some of the adventures she had on Lythion, including an encounter with an earlier villainess called the Gorgon, whose face changed into a duplicate of the face of anyone who looked at her. Unlike the other space movies of the time, this film emphasized sets and costumes rather than visual effects, and as a result its overall look dates less than many space operas of the late seventies/early eighties .Jane Fonda is simply unbelievable as gorgeous heroine , she plays a feisty Barbarella , a futuristic girl from Earth . The scenes during the opening credits where Barbarella seems to float around her spaceship were filmed by having Jane Fonda lie on a huge piece of plexiglas with a picture of the spaceship underneath her. It was then filmed from above, creating the illusion that she is in zero gravity. Performance-wise, everyone seems to be camping it up like an end-of-term pantomime, though Milo O'Shea somehow seems to give his villain a deliciously style . Barbarella was the first science fiction hero from the comics to be adapted into a feature film as opposed to a serial , Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers, her male predecessors, had only appeared in serials up to this point. A bit later on , there was realized by Mike Hodges ¨Flash Gordon¨ (1980) in similar aesthetic and a TV series titled ¨Buck Rogers¨ . Jolly and catching musical score , including commercial songs , by Charles Fox, who co-wrote the songs for this film, also wrote the theme song for another Sci/Fi flick of 1968, The Green Slime, and future Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour was one of the session musicians who performed the film's original score. The motion picture was originally directed by Roger Vadim who married Brigitte Bardot , in fact , the original author Jean-Claude Forest based the character of Barbarella on Brigitte Bardot - who ironically was director Roger Vadim's previous wife ; Vadim subsequently married Jane Fonda . However this film is listed among The 100 Most Amusingly Bad Movies Ever Made in Golden Raspberry Award .
    Bucs1960

    Pop Art

    I'm not sure if I liked this film or hated it!! It reminds me of "Danger:Diabolik", that flash trash movie also with John Phillip Law. It is bright and loud and trashy with a little soft porn thrown in for good measure. It does tend to hold your interest throughout, maybe because you can't wait to see what outrageous scene will assault your senses next. And oh, all that phallic symbolism! Roger Vadim certainly exploited Jane Fonda in this one and she would probably like to forget the whole thing....but you've got to admit she doesn't look too bad in that plastic see-through bustier. John Phillip Law, who is a handsome devil(oops, angel), plays the part of the blind angel, Pygar, without emotion or feeling....but he played every character he ever portrayed exactly the same way. He wasn't much of an actor but it works here. This film screams the 60's, so turn on, tune out, plug in your lava lamp and take a look at it. You'll love it or hate it but you are guaranteed to have fun with it. It's the epitome of pop art!
    Raptor in Black

    All the plot of a high-budget porn...

    Really and truly, this could be the plot of one of the more "high-brow" types of porn. I watched this with a bunch of other girls for a class, and we could not stop laughing the entire time.

    See Jane Fonda meet men from around the galaxy, and have sex with them! Dare your friends to count how many times she changes her costume!! Sparks deep philosophical discussion, like what exactly the writers were on when they wrote this. Great fun, not to be missed!
    7gftbiloxi

    Sexed-Up and Super-Silly

    If you're looking for a cult classic, they don't come much stranger than sexed-up and super-silly BARBARELLA, the peculiar tale of an intergalactic secret agent (Jane Fonda) sent to a rebel planet to find a mad scientist named Duran Duran (Milo O'Shea.) Directed by Fonda's then-husband Roger Vadim, the film is less concerned with creating a coherent storyline than it is in finding inventive ways to strip Fonda of her already skimpy outfits.

    In this it is remarkably successful, and Fonda actually has both enough sex appeal and round-eyed innocence to carry the thing off, emerging as something like a Barbie doll; John Philip Law strikes a similar note as the sexy but equally innocent "angel" Pygar. The designs are 1960s psychedelic with as many Freudian twists as the film's makers can come up with, and when all is said and done you can't help but roll your eyes in amusement.

    True enough, BARBARELLA was probably much more entertaining back in the days LSD, and indeed one might read the entire thing as an acid trip time machine. No one in the cast takes the film very seriously, and neither should you; when all is said and done it has all the depth of a pancake, not so much funny as merely amusing and appealing to a very high-camp sensibility. But as cult movies go, it ranks right up at the top. Give a party and show it on a double bill with FLESH GORDON! Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer

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    Related interests

    Clive Owen and Clare-Hope Ashitey in Children of Men (2006)
    Dystopian Sci-Fi
    Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner in Star Trek (1966)
    Space Sci-Fi
    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    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
      The scenes during the opening credits where Barbarella seems to float around her spaceship were filmed by having Jane Fonda lie on a huge piece of Plexiglas with a picture of the spaceship underneath her. It was filmed from above, creating the illusion that she is in zero gravity.
    • Goofs
      It is established that Barbarella needs a Tongue Box, a device attached to the bracelet she wears on her left wrist, to understand the spoken language of Sogo. Barbarella loses the bracelet after the Excessive Machine scene, but she still understands the Great Tyrant, Pygar, and the Sogoites speaking through the Tyrant's monitor.
    • Quotes

      Barbarella: What's that screaming? A good many dramatic situations begin with screaming...

    • Crazy credits
      In the opening credits, the letters in the words move around in an attempt to obscure Barbarella's nudity.
    • Alternate versions
      Barbarella was released in the USA before the MPAA introduced the motion picture rating system on November 1, 1968. It was consequently released with a tag "Suggested For Mature Audiences". A re-release in 1977 (to cash in on the success of Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977)) was edited to obtain a "PG" rating and was called "Barbarella: Queen Of The Galaxy". The video version is of the original uncut version and not the "PG" version (despite the subtitle "Queen of the Galaxy" and the "PG" rating on the cover).
    • Connections
      Edited into Duran Duran: Burning the Ground (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Barbarella
      Written by Bob Crewe & Charles Fox

      Performed by The Glitterhouse

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 10, 1968 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Barbarella: Queen of the Galaxy
    • Filming locations
      • Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Marianne Productions
      • Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $9,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,622
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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