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Robot Monster (1953) was a science fiction film made on a low budget, that has since become a defining example of "bad" movies. This film often vies with Plan 9 from Outer Space in science fiction fandom for the title of "worst science fiction movie" (or any other film genre); it is known for being so unbelievably awful, and is seen by audiences as one of the funniest bad movies ever made.PlotThe plot centers on a group of six humans who are among the only eight survivors of a disaster that wipes out all other humans. These six humans include five members of a family and a scientist who is not related to the family members. The other two survivors, for a total of eight, are not shown, but are mentioned as being in a spacecraft. An evil, indestructible alien called "Ro-Man", whose costume: a gorilla suit with a sea-diving helmet, has become legendary in itself, used his "Calcinator" death ray to destroy humanity. Eight humans have survived because they have immunity to the death ray due to an unexpected benefit of the antibiotic serum developed by two of the survivors, who are scientists. Because eight humans have survived, Ro-Man's invasion of the world is not successful. He spends the entire movie wandering around the wilderness trying to find the last surviving humans, but he finds himself developing an attraction towards the nubile young woman, the eldest child of the family.The film is bookended by two sequences that suggest the bulk of the film may, or may not, be a dream sequence. In the opening, a small boy wearing a space helmet is playing with his sister when they come across two geologists studying a cave. They introduce the scientists to their mother and sister. After the boy returns to the cave, there is a lightning flash, and the movie begins, with the same actors playing the family members and the young scientist who is not related to them. At the conclusion of the film, the boy awakens, but as he leaves the cave, there is another lightning strike, and Ro-Man appears in the cave; this final sequence is repeated several times in the film, especially at the end. ProductionThe film's poor special effects include stock footage from the silent movie One Million B.C. spliced into the film. The famous "Billion Bubble Machine", used in the film as part of Ro-Man's communication device for reporting to his superior, is given prominent notice in the film's opening credits.Filmed on a low budget (estimated at $50,000), the film takes place in famous Bronson Canyon, the site of innumerable motion pictures and TV settings. The soundtrack was composed by none other than Elmer Bernstein. The poor quality of the movie gave rise to a long-lived rumor within the film industry that the poor reception from audiences caused director Phil Tucker to attempt suicide. According to Keep Watching The Skies! by Bill Warren, his attempted suicide was actually due to depression and a dispute with the film's distributor, who had alledgedly refused to pay Tucker his contracted percentage of the film's profits. Dissenting opinionsA small but vocal minority of film buffs and movie critics have suggested that rather than scorn and ridicule, films like Robot Monster are deserving of respect and sympathy. They note that in the case of this film, the director and producer honestly believed they were creating a terrifying tale of science fiction to entertain their audiences. At the time of the film's release, science fiction films had not yet been relegated to the status of "kiddie entertainment" (as was the case a decade later when Santa Claus Conquers the Martians was produced), and the production crew of Robot Monster did not abandon their project, even though they had to work with ultra-low budget props and effects. One sympathetic review of the film notes::"Ro-man's agonizing identity crisis is of course hilarious. 'I cannot, but I must' he wails. But it's also fairly unique among movie monsters. When he cries out to heaven, searching for the justice in his existence, he's not simply one modest monster expressing his angst. He represents all misunderstood movie monsters, the hated, hunted, and unreasonably feared. Ro-man is pretty much Monsterus Basicus, as basicus as they get — he fights the hero, carries off the girl, and packs a death ray. We viewers tend to project all kinds of motivations and attitudes onto our favorite uncommunicative monsters — the best, like Christopher Lee's Mummy reward us with expressive behavior we understand. When Ro-man moans his lot in life, he's pretty symbolic of his other monster brethren throughout the genre. If Antonioni can express the essences of human existence through minimalist anti-dramas, why can't Phil Tucker? Robot Monster is about as minimal as you can get. Perhaps this is why ol' Ro-man is such a beloved character." — Glenn Erickson, DVD Savant (Web-based magazine) article on Robot Monster [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Robot Monster ] Some related entries: Pretty Baby | Nome King | Palmetto | Yash Chopra | Boston Society of Film Critics Awards 2002 | Duel | The 400 Blows | Arna's Children | Army Daze | Commando Cody: Sky Marshal of the Universe | Curse of the Pink Panther This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Robot Monster; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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