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The Stranger

  • TV Movie
  • 1973
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
3.7/10
720
YOUR RATING
The Stranger (1973)
Space Sci-FiSci-Fi

An astronaut finds himself on a planet that's (almost) exactly like Earth.An astronaut finds himself on a planet that's (almost) exactly like Earth.An astronaut finds himself on a planet that's (almost) exactly like Earth.

  • Director
    • Lee H. Katzin
  • Writer
    • Gerald Sanford
  • Stars
    • Glenn Corbett
    • Cameron Mitchell
    • Sharon Acker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.7/10
    720
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lee H. Katzin
    • Writer
      • Gerald Sanford
    • Stars
      • Glenn Corbett
      • Cameron Mitchell
      • Sharon Acker
    • 25User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos172

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Glenn Corbett
    Glenn Corbett
    • Neil Stryker
    Cameron Mitchell
    Cameron Mitchell
    • George Benedict
    Sharon Acker
    Sharon Acker
    • Dr. Bettina Cooke
    Lew Ayres
    Lew Ayres
    • Prof. Dylan MacAuley
    George Coulouris
    George Coulouris
    • Max Greene
    Steve Franken
    Steve Franken
    • Henry Maitland
    Dean Jagger
    Dean Jagger
    • Carl Webster
    Tim O'Connor
    Tim O'Connor
    • Dr. Revere
    Jerry Douglas
    Jerry Douglas
    • Steve Perry
    Arch Whiting
    Arch Whiting
    • Mike Frome
    H.M. Wynant
    H.M. Wynant
    • Eric Stoner
    William Bryant
    William Bryant
    • Truck Driver
    Virginia Gregg
    Virginia Gregg
    • Ward E Administrator
    Steven Marlo
    Steven Marlo
    • Guard
    Ben Wright
    Ben Wright
    • Doctor
    Buck Young
    Buck Young
    • Tom Nelson
    Jeanne Bates
    Jeanne Bates
    • Switchboard Operator
    • (uncredited)
    Jonathan Blake
      • Director
        • Lee H. Katzin
      • Writer
        • Gerald Sanford
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews25

      3.7720
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      Featured reviews

      5vonnoosh

      Good set up for a series but pretty dull as a movie

      If I feel tired and desirous to not think much before trying to dose off, I put movies like this on. They are slow moving but entertaining enough for me to lie down and watch before drifting off. This movie is great for that.

      The Stranger is a low budget TV pilot which ended up being just a made for TV movie. They do an excellent job of setting things up for a series. An astronaut believes he returns to earth but discovers he isn't on earth at all but imprisoned on an alien planet which happens to be Earth's twin orbiting on the opposite side of the sun. The government is an oppressive police state. The people are identical to humans except they are left handed. There is nearly no effort to make up for the limitations of the budget. The cars are all normal looking, offices, shops, the only thing that looks sci fi is Ward E which is like the Ministry of Love in 1984.

      The acting is fine. The movie itself is unremarkable but it doesn't try to be amazing either. I can sit through it but its not interesting enough to be considered a compelling thriller.
      3lemon_magic

      Hackwork TV remake of "Doppelganger" with none of the pathos or drama (or budget)

      This movie takes the plot behind the sci-fi flick "Doppelganger" (an astronaut from our Earth crashing on a 'counter-Earth' on the opposite side of the Sun, and the Cold War totalitarian vibes on that world) and tries to turn it into a pilot for a TV series. However, the whole thing sank without a trace, and TV is probably better off for it.

      Everyone here is perfectly adequate in a 'made for TV' way. Cameron Mitchell turns in his usual solid performance. So does Glenn Corbett (who seems to be a kind of poor man's John Saxon) who plays the rugged individualist whose very existence poses a threat to the foundation of the 'World Order' on counter Earth.

      But the low budget and low energy and inconsistent script and the lack of any real imagination in the set designs and cinematography keep this Sci-Fi adventure firmly tethered on the launch pad.

      I'll give one example: in the original template for this pilot, ("Doppleganger"), the astronauts lose control of their landing vehicle in a thunderstorm, and crash their ship in a truly appalling sequence (it was obvious that their ship was never going to fly again). Then the two astronauts stagger helplessly from the smoking remains of their vehicle in the middle of howling rains and winds, only to be smacked down and overcome by faceless men yelling through loudspeakers.

      In "Stranded in Space", the astronauts are sitting in their seats when buzzers sound, things start shaking, and the camera blurs into a blackout (and as a friend pointed out, it was pretty obvious that the actors were simply shaking themselves on their seats, the director wasn't even shaking the camera or the set). I've seen episodes of "The Twilight Zone" and "The Outer Limits" that took more effort to establish mood and setting than this made-for-TV mediocrity.

      And that, in essence, is what's wrong with "Stranded In Space". No budget, no time, no imagination...just making the token gestures and hoping the sci-fi Fan Boys' imagination and enthusiasm will fill in the rest. Sorry, guys, it didn't work.

      I'm sure that everyone here just finished their work on this one and walked away, and never thought of it again, except as a listing on their C.V. And that's what you, the viewer will do. You'll remember, if pressed, that you once watched a TV movie called "Stranded In Space", but it made no lasting impression on you, and you can't recall too much about it.
      6zillabob

      Of it's time...

      Typical ABC Movie-of-The-Week circa 1973 when some cheesy and some interesting Sci Fi films were produced rather prolifically. They are still way better than the crap that Sci-Fi Channel makes seemingly weekly for "Premieres".

      This one was more or less a rip-off/remake of the much better Journey to The Far Side of The Sun(1969) which was made in England and Europe by Gerry Anderson. That film benefited from incredible FX work from Derek Meddings, a great score from Barry Gray and a good cast and had a haunting ending.

      The Stranger doesn't have any of that. The plot-an astronaut Glenn Corbett-blown up in space-finds himself on a parallel earth, we learn it is called Terra(one assumes the play on the word "terror" as well as Terra meaning Earth) with three moons. He wakes up-a prisoner in what turns out is a mental hospital-to a very paranoid and not-giving-much-info hospital staff. Managing to escape he finds out he's on this creepy, alternate version of earth but ruled by a totalitarian government called The Perfect Order and is pursued by Cameron Mitchell, a ruthless agent of the secret police for this government. The agents drive around in ominous looking Plymouths(that do not sound like Earth cars) and wear these strange knit jackets with wide lapels and they've cautioned everyone that a dangerous mental patient has escaped and that he must be found. Our astronaut manages to evade capture by dressing like the inhabitants-who dress unfashionably drab sort of like old 60's Communist Russia. When he starts asking questions-such as a scene in a bookstore when he asks "What came before the Perfect Order?" suspicion is aroused and up pops Mitchell and his thugs who threaten the already paranoid citizens with "Ward E" a sinister mental asylum. They'll do anything to cooperate and earn "citizen points" rather than face the ominous Ward E so Corbett is off again in The Fugitive-style escapes. The evils of Ward E are illustrated when another administrator (Tim O' Connor) confides to Mitchell that he wonders if this visitor has something to say and maybe this "Perfect Order" is wrong. Later we see him sitting in the middle of a weird surrealistic room, in hospital clothing, completely docile and vegetative and Mitchell warns him over his shoulder how he has paid the price for doubting. Meanwhile our astronaut befriends a young doctor(Sharon Acker) who not only believes his story of coming from-and wanting to go back to-another earth-but seems to have feelings for him. Eventually she is captured and hooks up with him later saying she escaped. He wants to use this society's slightly better space technology (which is hinted at, by Perfect Order elders that they'll eventually use to invade Earth) to escape this madness. When they get to the launch facility, she implores him not to go(he's already put on a space suit) and in the struggle, she reveals she was in fact taken for "treatments" at Ward E and has been brainwashed to lead him back to the authorities. He sets off an alarm which incapacitates Acker(revealing the nature of the Ward E treatments)who crumbles, grasping her head and he attempts to get aboard the spaceship. She's recaptured and the last we see is Mitchell telling her she's failed and it's back to Ward E-forever-as she screams. The launch fails and he winds up, staring wistfully at the three moons, all set up for a TV series that never happened.

      The biggest thing this film had working against it was lack of a budget. The FX are non-existent, space stuff is all stock and a shot of the Terra launch facility simply looks like Cape Kennedy/Vandenberg AFB footage at night. The three moons are nothing more than three balls just hung on string in front of a star field-very cheesy. It has the claustrophobic-shot-in-an-old-office building feel that many of those Made-for-TV'ers suffered from. Also, everything seems very convenient. He appears to have escaped into a regular New England-looking back lot town-that seems very near the space facility. It has a creepy moment when he takes the scarf off Sharon Acker's head to see her temple areas disfigured horribly from shock treatments, though I saw this coming a mile away, the fact she shows up inexplicably and with a head scarf on.

      It was a film, very much of it's time that Gerry Anderson did much better earlier, but downplayed the political angle of it.
      4ddc300

      Mediocre TV SF flick deserves a second-look

      The storyline of "The Stranger" mirrors somewhat the 1969 film "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" (made by Gerry & Sylvia Anderson of 'Thunderbirds' and 'Space: 1999' fame). A parallel-universe Earth is the premise of both films. But there is a difference. Where the world in "The Stranger" features a totalitarian regime out to squash the freedom of the citizenry, "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" merely showed a true mirror world where handwriting, roads, houses, machinery of every kind, and of course internal organs were all in reverse (or mirrored) order. So, the similarity of parallel Earths is the only connection of both films.

      Similarly, the TV series "Land of the Giants" came before both of those films, having run from 1968 to 1970. It featured a world that was nearly parallel to the Earth with the exception that the planet was populated by giants 12 times the size of the humans who crash-landed there. The idea of a totalitarian government out to capture and contain the 'little people' was similar to the premise of "The Stranger" more-so than the premise of "JTTFSOTS". Perhaps because of the similarly to "LOTG", a series to "The Stranger" was shelved. Had it turned into a TV series it would have been a sci-fi version of "The Fugitive," with star Glenn Corbett being chased by the baddies from week to week, hiding out in different locations, etc. BTW, a stronger script could have helped this film along.
      6planktonrules

      An Orwellian reworking of "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" that isn't as bad (to me) as the other reviews would indicate.

      The other reviews for "The Stranger" were all very negative. Well, for some reason, I didn't hate this one and enjoyed watching it. Am I saying it was great? Nah...but it's worth seeing.

      The story is a bit like the movie "Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" combined with "1984" and was intended as a pilot for a potential series. Back during the run of the "ABC Movie of the Week" it wasn't uncommon for the network to show pilots--either to see if the public liked them or to recoup their losses when they knew they weren't going to do the series. This one ultimately was not bought by the network--which was usually the case for these films. One exception that comes off the top of my head was the "Nightstalker" series...and I am sure a few more were first shown here and then became TV shows. Considering others didn't seem to like it, I guess the network did well by not approving the series!

      An astronaut (Glenn Corbett) is in space one moment and the next he wakes up in a hospital. This was pretty sloppy and showed that the budget wasn't very high for this project. Anyway, the hospital folks are trying to act like everything is normal but they are actually watching him closely, as they know he's an alien and comes from a planet called 'Earth'. These Terrans look like humans and act much like them but they also live in a parallel world that isn't quite the same. The biggest difference is that the government is very repressive and their way of dealing with problems is violent and nasty...and after he escapes (?) they pull out all the stops to kill him. Can the astronaut manage to survive and even get help from these Terrans?

      Okay...there were a few plot problems I mentioned above. Additionally, Corbett didn't have the best screen presence I've ever seen. But the story is interesting and kept me watching. In fact, I might have enjoyed a TV series like this one.

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      Related interests

      Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner in Star Trek (1966)
      Space Sci-Fi
      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
        Was shown on Mystery Science Treater 3000 as Stranded In Space.
      • Goofs
        In the radio alert, they say that Stryker was 6' 1" tall, but at that time (assuming this is not set in Earth's future), the height limit for astronauts was 5' 11", assumedly so they would fit into the confined spaces. This has subsequently been changed to 6' 4".
      • Quotes

        Prof. Dylan MacAuley: I wasn't always a toothless warrior, Neil. Once I was young, and brave.

      • Alternate versions
        The MST3K version replaces the original opening and ending titles with new titles played over clips from the movie "Prisoners of the Lost Universe."
      • Connections
        Edited from In Like Flint (1967)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • February 26, 1973 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • El extraño
      • Production companies
        • Bing Crosby Productions
        • Fenady Associates
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 40m(100 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1

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