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* [[Frankenstein Drag Queens From Planet 13]] have a song called "Plan 9 From Outer Space." [http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:pifibkg9aak0]
* [[Frankenstein Drag Queens From Planet 13]] have a song called "Plan 9 From Outer Space." [http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:pifibkg9aak0]
* [[Plan 10 From Outer Space]] is a movie which makes fun of Mormons and Mormon history.[http://deseretnews.com/movies/view/1,1257,1432,00.html]
* [[Plan 10 From Outer Space]] is a movie which makes fun of Mormons and Mormon history.[http://deseretnews.com/movies/view/1,1257,1432,00.html]
* The foot soldiers of the X-Naut aliens in [[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]] salute their superiors with a similar "X-salute" to the one given by the aliens in Plan 9 From Outer Space.


== Images ==
== Images ==

Revision as of 06:13, 2 September 2006

Plan 9 from Outer Space
File:Plan 9 poster.JPG
Plan 9 poster
Directed byEdward D. Wood, Jr.
Written byEdward D. Wood, Jr.
Produced byCharles Burg
J. Edward Reynolds
Hugh Thomas Jr.
Edward D. Wood, Jr.
Distributed byDistributors Corporation of America Inc.
Release dates
July, 1959 (USA)
Running time
79 min.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$60,000

Plan 9 from Outer Space is a 1959 science fiction/horror film written, produced and directed by Edward D. Wood, Jr.. The movie is widely regarded as a leading candidate for the title of "worst movie ever made", although this is subject to considerable debate amongst aficionados of bad cinema. It earned Edward D. Wood, Jr. (a devotee of Orson Welles) a posthumous Golden Turkey Award as the worst director ever.

Given its reputation as a bad film, it does not appear on the The Internet Movie Database's "Bottom 100" list of the 100 worst-reviewed films on the site. Reportedly, in his research for the film Ed Wood, Martin Landau watched all of Bela Lugosi's movies and said Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla "made the Ed Wood films look like Gone with the Wind."

History

Plan 9 was originally titled Grave Robbers from Outer Space, but it was changed to Plan 9 from Outer Space. The reason for the change is said to be because the original title was supposedly considered sacrilegious by the film's backers, the deacons of the Baptist Church of Beverly Hills (this story is documented in the film biography Ed Wood).

In reality, the Baptists who sponsored the film were not opposed to the title Grave Robbers from Outer Space. The exact circumstances are unknown, but the film, which took three years to release, was distributed as Plan 9 from Outer Space without any acknowledgement of the congregation. It is possible that Wood, or his distributor, were trying to avoid paying royalties.

To convince the church to bankroll the film, Wood had the entire cast baptized. However, since Tor Johnson, a professional wrestler, was such a huge man (well over 300 pounds) he couldn't fit into the church's baptismal. Thus the baptism was convened at a swimming pool.

Plot summary

Template:Spoiler

The film is introduced and narrated by television psychic The Amazing Criswell, and involves aliens who attempt to conquer the Earth by resurrecting corpses from a cemetery.

The aliens have divined that the human race will soon develop the ultimate weapon: a bomb made of solarbenite that can "explode the particles of sunlight" and ultimately destroy the universe. They have attempted eight times to persuade humanity not to build the bomb, but find themselves unable to even get humanity's attention. "Plan 9", their plan to resurrect the dead, is their final, desperate attempt. Unbelievably, this is all claimed to be based on sworn testimony, even though Criswell says it takes place in the future.

At the end of the film, the aliens are defeated, although according to the film's internal "logic" this is a Bad Thing because it will allow the humans to develop the solaranite bomb and destroy the universe.

In many respects, the film is a remake of the science-fiction classic The Day the Earth Stood Still albeit with horror elements attached.

The film is infamous for "almost starring" (as modern releases invariably phrase it) Bela Lugosi. The scenes featuring Lugosi were not shot with this film in mind at all. They likely were test shots from a proposed Wood film "The Ghoul Goes West"; when Lugosi was released from rehab, he told an interviewer he was about to begin work on that said film. Wood essentially wrote it into the Plan 9 screenplay after Lugosi died in 1956 and re-wrote it so that his "character" returns from the dead as a vampire. However, this role was filled by the late Dr. Tom Mason, his wife Kathy O'Hara's chiropractor. Dr. Mason, in reality, looked nothing like Lugosi and was far taller. Reportedly Wood was amazed by how Mason's nose and eyes were Lugosi-like. Wood attempted (unsuccessfully) to hide the subterfuge by having Mason perform all his scenes while holding his cape in front of his face. However, in another Wood film shot later that year, Night of the Ghouls, Mason was allowed to show his face. These were his first and last films.

Cast

Mistakes

Plan 9 From Outer Space is widely noted for having a plethora of obvious goofs. Some of the most glaring include:

  • "Night" and "day" shots are interspersed constantly within the same scene (for example, Paula Trent runs in darkness through the cemetery, while the old man's corpse chases her in daylight). One porthole on the alien spaceship shows a cloudy day (shown during a scene set at night), while the others show only blackness.
  • Mason's attempts to hide the fact that he is not Lugosi are wildly unsuccessful. As an early version of Leonard Maltin's movie guidebook put it, "Lugosi died during production, and it shows." (Lugosi actually died before production ever started.)
  • Criswell's opening narration redundantly informs the viewer how "future events such as these will affect you in the future", and then immediately switches to saying that the story has already "happened on that fateful day".
  • In the numerous graveyard scenes, as characters brush against tombstones, the stones wobble and, in one case, fall over.
  • During a scene in an airplane cockpit, a flash of light from a flying saucer reveals the shadow of the boom mike. Also in this scene, the actress playing the flight attendant bumps into the curtain several times while waiting for her cue.
  • The flying saucers (visibly wobbling on strings) cast shadows over the "space" backdrop.
  • When Tor Johnson drops the girl in the cemetery, a pillow is clearly visible beneath her.
  • Most notably in the first scenes, string is clearly visible from the top of the wobbly saucer to the top of the screen.

Documenting the film

The movie is the subject of a documentary entitled Flying Saucers Over Hollywood: The Plan 9 Companion, which is notable for being 30 minutes longer than the movie itself. The documentary is included on many DVD releases of the movie.

Rudolph Grey's book Nightmare of Ecstasy: The Life and Art of Edward D. Wood Jr. contains anecdotes regarding the making of this film. Grey notes that participants in the original events sometimes contradict one another, but he relates each person's information for posterity regardless.

In 1994, Tim Burton directed a fictionalized biopic, Ed Wood, which climaxes with the making and release of this film, starring Johnny Depp in the title role, Martin Landau as Bela Lugosi, and Bill Murray as Bunny Breckinridge (who played the alien "Ruler" in Plan 9). Ed Wood also featured frequent Wood cohorts Conrad Brooks and Gregory Walcott, both of whom appeared in Plan 9.

The colorized version

File:Plan 9 Alien Fresh.jpg
As an ode to Plan 9 being famously known as "the worst film of all time," prerelease copies of the colorized DVD release included this limited edition air freshener.

In 2005, Legend Films announced the release of a colorized DVD version of Plan 9 from Outer Space, and autographed pre-release pressings of the DVD were made available through the company's website, and on their eBay store. The DVD featured an audio commentary track by comedian Michael J. Nelson of Mystery Science Theater 3000 fame. (The producers of the series at one point actually screened the film for Mystery Science Theater 3000, but found it to have too much dialogue to fit the show's format. Instead, the series' cast mocked an earlier Wood film, Bride of the Monster, which also starred Bela Lugosi and Tor Johnson.) The DVD also featured a restored black and white version of Plan 9 as well as a home movie of Edward D. Wood in drag performing a striptease (Wood, in real life, was a cross-dresser) and the "lost" Plans 1-8. Fans of the film affectionately said of the colorized version that it made "Ed Wood's incredibly cheap sets look even worse." [1] The autographed edition also came with a limited edition air freshener. [2] The colorized version was also shown at the Castro Theatre on March 11, 2006. [3]

Images

See also

References

Sloan, Will. (April 2005). "Can Your Heart Stand the Shocking Facts About Kelton the Cop A/K/A Paul Marco?" Filmfax, p.88-89