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| This Island Earth is a 1955 science fiction film directed by Joseph M. Newman. The film is also known as War of the Planets, and was filmed in Technicolor. It was the parodied film in Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie, the film based upon the Mystery Science Theater 3000 television series. This Island Earth stars Jeff Morrow as the alien Exeter, Faith Domergue as Dr. Ruth Adams, and Rex Reason as Dr. Cal Meacham. PlotDr. Cal Meacham, a noted scientist, receives an unusual substitute for electronic parts that he ordered. They are un-Earthly in their ability to carry overloads of electricity; he sends a letter to the company that supplied the parts, and receives a package which appears to be a catalog. He begins ordering parts from it, and eventually builds a communication device called an interocitor. He then receives a message on it: A mysterious man named Exeter tells him he has passed the test he was given. His ability to build the interocitor demonstrates that he is gifted enough to be part of the special research project Exeter is running.Intrigued, Meacham accepts an invitation to visit Exeter's facility, and finds an international group of top-flight scientists already present--including an old flame, Dr. Ruth Adams. But Cal is almost immediately suspicious of the odd-looking group of men leading the mission. Cal and Ruth decide to slip away from the facility, but as they take off in a small plane they watch as the facility and all its inhabitants are incinerated, and their plane is drawn up inside a flying saucer. It is then that Cal and Ruth learn that Exeter and his band are aliens from the planet Metaluna, come to Earth seeking scientists to help them defend their planet in the war against the evil Zagons. Though they protest, he informs them that he is taking them back to his war-torn planet, in the hope that they can do something to aid it. After a mind-bending journey, they arrive to find the planet under full bombardment and falling quickly to the enemy. Metalunan society is breaking down and there is little hope. Seeing that his trip has been useless, Exeter pleads with his overlords to be allowed to take Cal and Ruth home, but is overruled and told to take the pair to a brain-reprogramming facility. On the way, Cal overpowers the creature guarding them and the three make their escape and journey back to Earth. As they enter Earth's atmosphere, Exeter sends the two on their way in their small plane, but he himself is too wounded from his adventures to continue, and he allows the saucer to crash into the sea. Cal and Ruth return home. The special effects are gorgeous for the time, though decidedly eclipsed by modern effects, and the flying saucer, though relatively orthodox, is well-designed and detailed. TriviaThe scientists (and aliens) are deeply involved in what was the cutting-edge research of the day. Columbia Broadcasting System had released a form of color television which used one electron gun and one set of phosphors, rather than three. This worked by having a small television screen inside the larger television receiver. Between it and the larger screen (at which the viewers would look) was a disk divided into three transparent sectors, colored red, blue, and green. The disk was intended to turn synchonously to match the signals sent from the broadcasting station: first a whole red image, then a blue one, and then a green one. It is this to which the disk of the Metalunans' "Interocitor" refers. At the time only black-and-white television was available commercially.Another achievement of the period was the flying of a bomber across the Atlantic entirely automatically. This was touted as a triumph for robotics that would someday be used to enable passenger aircraft to fly without pilots. However, it really was used to try out early cruise missile technology, which was of very low capability. Similarly, jets were not yet proven for commercial travel, so the scenes of Jeff Morrow's character flying one made him appear exciting. The film strives to get some excitement in the plot, though the monster doesn't really do much. There is a scene of being trapped in a vertical, transparent cylinder whose purpose is to avoid the bends on reaching the planet; similar tubes appear in the Lost in Space television show. Even though the episodic nature of the film makes its script seem to have been slapped together by the studio, it comes from a novel written by Raymond F. Jones in 1952. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for This Island Earth ] Some related entries: Cote de Pablo | The Flintstones | Last surviving cast member | Aftershock: Earthquake in New York | Rat Pfink a Boo Boo | Bells Are Ringing | Primary | The World According to Sesame Street | Joe Palooka | Puss in Boots | Wheels on Meals This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article This Island Earth; 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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