IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,8/10
4456
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nach einer Bruchlandung in der Nähe einer Wüstenstadt bittet ein Außerirdischer eine einheimische Kellnerin um Hilfe, um ein Monster wieder einzufangen, das aus dem Wrack seines Raumschiffs ... Alles lesenNach einer Bruchlandung in der Nähe einer Wüstenstadt bittet ein Außerirdischer eine einheimische Kellnerin um Hilfe, um ein Monster wieder einzufangen, das aus dem Wrack seines Raumschiffs entkommen ist.Nach einer Bruchlandung in der Nähe einer Wüstenstadt bittet ein Außerirdischer eine einheimische Kellnerin um Hilfe, um ein Monster wieder einzufangen, das aus dem Wrack seines Raumschiffs entkommen ist.
- Auszeichnungen
- 7 Nominierungen insgesamt
Jonathon Young
- Lloyd
- (as Jonathan Young)
Laura Carswell
- Laura
- (as Laura Konechny)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
If you love sci-fi films from the 1950's -especially IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE or THE BLOB- and / or homages to or parodies thereof, then ALIEN TRESPASS should hit the spot!
It's a tribute to those alien invasion movies, usually involving a misunderstood E. T., or some hideous monster causing mayhem.
When a UFO crashes into a mountainside releasing a deadly creature, the otherworldly pilot of the craft must track it down. Eric McCormack is dead-on as both the intrepid scientist investigating the situation and the alien. Robert Patrick co-stars as the jaded, mean cop.
This movie is a delightful diversion...
It's a tribute to those alien invasion movies, usually involving a misunderstood E. T., or some hideous monster causing mayhem.
When a UFO crashes into a mountainside releasing a deadly creature, the otherworldly pilot of the craft must track it down. Eric McCormack is dead-on as both the intrepid scientist investigating the situation and the alien. Robert Patrick co-stars as the jaded, mean cop.
This movie is a delightful diversion...
Let's be clear right from the start -- "Alien Trespass" is not a spoof. Nor is it a parody, satire, sendup, lampoon, or pastiche. It may be presented as a spoof and most ticket buyers will likely go in expecting one, and the makers of the film may even have set out to produce a spoof.
But what they achieved instead is a meticulous recreation of a film from the 1950s, earnest and straightforward. The period detail is truly impressive, with costuming, sets, and locations all note-perfect. Even the casting is to be commended, especially for the younger actors -- it is actually difficult to find actors who can convincingly portray people outside their era, but these folks do a great job. There are a few minor anachronisms, but overall the period recreation is staggering, right down to the feel of the film stock and even the lighting.
The film's accuracy is actually its greatest problem, in terms of success. Instead of the "Airplane" type treatment many will expect, the film instead gives us just what it pretends to: a film made in the 50s but only recently unearthed. But this means it has only the camp factor inherent in those films; the audience with which I shared the preview screening wanted it to be a spoof, laughed at some parts, but the things they were laughing about were accurately rendered from that time -- they were laughing at period "quaintnesses" only gently exaggerated. The film is too straight-faced and sincere to get the average viewer laughing.
I am surprised this movie got made, but near-astounded that it is getting a theatrical release. The production values are high, and Eric McCormack has some name draw, but I am still not sure how they sold it for distribution.
Let's put it this way: If you know who Wade Williams is, if you and your friends trade dialogue from "Forbidden Planet" and "The Day the Earth Stood Still", or if you ever saw the original Blob in an actual theater, this movie will give you a warm feeling and a nostalgic smile as a love letter to the movies from that time. Just about everyone else, I am afraid, will feel perplexed and disappointed.
I enjoyed "Alien Trespass", and I feel like they made it just for me. But really, how many of me are there out there?
But what they achieved instead is a meticulous recreation of a film from the 1950s, earnest and straightforward. The period detail is truly impressive, with costuming, sets, and locations all note-perfect. Even the casting is to be commended, especially for the younger actors -- it is actually difficult to find actors who can convincingly portray people outside their era, but these folks do a great job. There are a few minor anachronisms, but overall the period recreation is staggering, right down to the feel of the film stock and even the lighting.
The film's accuracy is actually its greatest problem, in terms of success. Instead of the "Airplane" type treatment many will expect, the film instead gives us just what it pretends to: a film made in the 50s but only recently unearthed. But this means it has only the camp factor inherent in those films; the audience with which I shared the preview screening wanted it to be a spoof, laughed at some parts, but the things they were laughing about were accurately rendered from that time -- they were laughing at period "quaintnesses" only gently exaggerated. The film is too straight-faced and sincere to get the average viewer laughing.
I am surprised this movie got made, but near-astounded that it is getting a theatrical release. The production values are high, and Eric McCormack has some name draw, but I am still not sure how they sold it for distribution.
Let's put it this way: If you know who Wade Williams is, if you and your friends trade dialogue from "Forbidden Planet" and "The Day the Earth Stood Still", or if you ever saw the original Blob in an actual theater, this movie will give you a warm feeling and a nostalgic smile as a love letter to the movies from that time. Just about everyone else, I am afraid, will feel perplexed and disappointed.
I enjoyed "Alien Trespass", and I feel like they made it just for me. But really, how many of me are there out there?
For a moment I thought I was really back in my teen-age 1957, the big-finned cars, the flouncy dresses, the sci-fi saturated drive-ins. Okay, I'm nostalgic, but it really is a good flick, well acted, produced and written; plus, entertaining all the way through. So how will space-ranger Urp defeat the man-eating Ghota whose flying saucer has crashed into the North American desert. Good thing Urp borrows Dr. Lewis's body if not his hormones. At the same time, the village towns-people have to overcome their disbelief in alien space craft and shape-shifting monsters. What with all those vulnerable blonde cuties, I was really worried.
There are touches of satirical humor trading on 50's sci-fi, but the flick's too well rounded to qualify as just a spoof. In many ways, however, it does suggest a version of 1951's The Day The Earth Stood Still, from the latter's metal clad Gort to Klaatu's cosmic police force. However that may be, I was grabbed by that suburban house and its grassy yard sitting alone and in the middle of the immense desert, like a surrealist illusion. Actually, it's likely meant to show Lewis and wife's middle-class status among the town's backwoods types. And how about the parallel theatre scene with the panicked audience from 57's The Blob. It's an imaginative touch tying in with both AT's plot and the time period. Sure, the movie's gangly monsters are on the silly looking side, at least before they reduce you to goo. Still, it's an imaginative and well-done sci-fi, and a tribute to its 50's predecessors.
There are touches of satirical humor trading on 50's sci-fi, but the flick's too well rounded to qualify as just a spoof. In many ways, however, it does suggest a version of 1951's The Day The Earth Stood Still, from the latter's metal clad Gort to Klaatu's cosmic police force. However that may be, I was grabbed by that suburban house and its grassy yard sitting alone and in the middle of the immense desert, like a surrealist illusion. Actually, it's likely meant to show Lewis and wife's middle-class status among the town's backwoods types. And how about the parallel theatre scene with the panicked audience from 57's The Blob. It's an imaginative touch tying in with both AT's plot and the time period. Sure, the movie's gangly monsters are on the silly looking side, at least before they reduce you to goo. Still, it's an imaginative and well-done sci-fi, and a tribute to its 50's predecessors.
Aien Tresspass is in my opinion a genuine horror movie: not only does it belong to the tradition of horror films in the broad sense of the term but it is a modern recreation of a genre that is pure horror cinema: films meant to scare the audience. This is particularly true of the American films of the 50s that came into existence within context of the Cold War and the possibility of a nuclear war. The ideological confrontation between two "alien" worlds was simply transposed in a S-F kind of setting. This is the innocent homage to that outmoded genre that this film is modestly offering us, succeeding, at any rate, in lighting it up with a delicious vintage flair. I absolutely recommend it.
This is a nice little silly movie, that really dives into horror movie history. It pays homage some might say by playing tropes and cliches (to a certain degrees) of what can be considered old school horror movies from 60 years ago and even earlier. The characters and the story fit that perfectly and if you have a heart for such things you will be delighted to watch this.
The actors are more than decent and do what we would think is silly or dated in other movies, but work for the sense and sensibility of the movie. The mood it is setting and how you perceive the movie. You can and should decide for yourself - decent movie overall.
The actors are more than decent and do what we would think is silly or dated in other movies, but work for the sense and sensibility of the movie. The mood it is setting and how you perceive the movie. You can and should decide for yourself - decent movie overall.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesAccording to the director, R.W. Goodwin, he feels that Alien Trespass has its roots in genre classics Krieg der Welten - Schlacht um die Invasion (1953), Gefahr aus dem Weltall (1953) and Der Tag, an dem die Erde stillstand (1951), as well as The Blob, and It Conquered the World.
- PatzerThough the film is clearly set in 1957, a key sequence takes place in a movie theatre showing Blob - Schrecken ohne Namen (1958), which was not released till Fall 1958.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Starfilm (2017)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Invasion from Outer Space
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 104.526 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 43.437 $
- 5. Apr. 2009
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 104.526 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 24 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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