Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAliens take five people, give them small capsules which can kill mankind without additional damage, with the understanding they will colonize Earth only if they use the weapons.Aliens take five people, give them small capsules which can kill mankind without additional damage, with the understanding they will colonize Earth only if they use the weapons.Aliens take five people, give them small capsules which can kill mankind without additional damage, with the understanding they will colonize Earth only if they use the weapons.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Friedrich von Ledebur
- Dr. Karl Neuhaus
- (as Frederick Ledebur)
Fred Aldrich
- Russian Officer
- (sin créditos)
Monty Ash
- Soviet Prison Physician
- (sin créditos)
Irvin Ashkenazy
- 2nd Man
- (sin créditos)
Charles Bennett
- Gorki
- (sin créditos)
John Bleifer
- Spokesman
- (sin créditos)
David Bond
- Dr. Schmidt
- (sin créditos)
George Boyce
- Diplomat
- (sin créditos)
Ralph Brooks
- Pentagon Officer
- (sin créditos)
George Bruggeman
- Russian Officer
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
I liked this movie. It was your typical lets see if human beings act like they have any sense if given the power to act otherwise because if they mess up the Aliens will destroy us movie. But what was different was the solution. What the alien really wanted us to do. And that is what puts this movie above the usual movies in this genre. What I didn't like is the cop out roles they gave the 2 females. I am not going to tell what they did but I was highly disappointed. Why even have the two females in the movie if they were going to do what they did. I guess they needed a love interest for Barry. The actor who played the evil Soviet was very good. He was very scary. Barry played his usual laid back self. Don't expect special effect. This is more of a morals story then a Sci Fi movie IMO.
An alien ship picks up five different people from the five super powers of the world. There he gives each a device that only they can open. Each device contains three vials that have the power to annihilate every human being on Earth. The aliens are a dying race from a dying planet, and even though they can and will not destroy mankind on earth, they will speed up the process of seeing whether mankind will destroy itself. How long is the experiment of seeing whether these five will survive and live without opening the vials? 27 days. This is a thought-provoking film about the nature of man more than anything. The underlying point behind the film is that mankind needs to rise from its child-like state of fighting and killing itself over seemingly petty issues. The aliens act merely as referees watching and waiting to see if the Soviet Union will destroy North America or vice versa. Now, the film definitely has an anti-communist slant(not that there is anything wrong with that)but admonishes all negativity, power hunger, and perniciousness in humankind worldwide. Director Will Asher does a fine job setting up the pace of the story and creating tension. The script, even though very weak in some areas, is quite interesting and full of thoughtful insights. Gene Barry plays the American representative and is good as a cynic. The rest of the cast is also very good with George Voskovec as a German scientist and Stephan Schnabel as a Soviet general standing out. Arnold Moss is the alien and he certainly makes his screen presence memorable. A good film. After watching I kept wondering what I would do if given the same circumstances, and I must confess I am so very happy that that burden lies not on my shoulders! Take some time to see The 27th Day and enjoy!
THE 27th DAY replaces the cliched threat of aliens blasting us lasers with the chilling fact that a handful of earth people have the power to destroy the world. Of course, one is an upright American citizen, the ohter is a robotic Russian soldier, etc, etc. It gives a wonderful view of how these people would be feared, treated and simply how they would react. My only squabble with the film is that the filmmakers didn't hide their low budget well enough. An example there is a scene where movie characters address the United Nations. The close up of the characters is done in a well lit studio, the cutaways of the UN assembly are handheld and grainy.
Gene Barry and Valarie French are wonderful leads. Look for Roger Corman regulars Paul Birch (NOT OF THIS EARTH) and Mel Welles (Gravis Mushnick from LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS) in cameos.
Gene Barry and Valarie French are wonderful leads. Look for Roger Corman regulars Paul Birch (NOT OF THIS EARTH) and Mel Welles (Gravis Mushnick from LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS) in cameos.
1957's "The 27th Day' remains a seldom seen Columbia effort made on an obviously low budget without much in the way of special effects. Five people from different nations are chosen at random by a being from another world who identifies himself only as The Alien (Arnold Moss), his world dying but seeking to colonize the earth to survive. As their species abhors violence they need reassurance that mankind can put a stop to their self destructive tendencies, and to that end each of the five is given a small container with three capsules each, capable of wiping out all human life within a 3000 mile radius (the bombardment of radiation has no effect on plants or animals). Granting them the power of life and death, The Alien releases his captives unharmed, the five all facing difficult challenges ahead for they have only 27 days to use these tiny weapons before they are automatically deactivated. The Chinese girl, plucked from a burning village and without hope, takes her own life thus rendering her capsules useless. The Russian soldier is tortured by his superiors to reveal his secrets, the Soviet leader (Stefan Schnabel) eager to force the West to withdraw from Europe and Asia or face obliteration. German professor Klaus Bechner (George Voskovec) flies to Los Angeles for an important conference, only to hear a devastating worldwide broadcast by The Alien revealing the names of all five people in possession of the deadly capsules, injured by a speeding car and having his capsules confiscated by the United States government during his convalescence. Residing in Los Angeles is hot shot reporter Jonathan Clark (Gene Barry), swiftly going into hiding at a nearby race track after reuniting with English Rose Eve Wingate (Valerie French), the only recipient who immediately threw her capsules away into the ocean. Learning that an innocent man thought to be Clark was killed by a panicked mob, the pair decide to give themselves up to find a solution with Prof. Bechner's invaluable assistance, only 12 days left. The viewer is put in the position of wondering what to do in such a situation, and in the hands of comedy specialist William Asher things remain on a commendably serious level (Asher graduated from features to television, at the helm for BEWITCHED, starring his then-wife Elizabeth Montgomery). The ending is a bit too convenient to be credible but at this point adult sci fi was relatively rare, a welcome change from the more juvenile antics of something like "The Giant Claw." Good roles for reliable players like Paul Birch as the Admiral, Mel Welles as a Russian Marshal, and Paul Frees (seen as well as heard) as a newscaster, but Arnold Moss steals the film. A ubiquitous presence on television who did relatively few features, Moss is instantly recognizable by his Shakespearean voice, best remembered as Anton Karidian in STAR TREK's "The Conscience of the King."
The underlying premiss of this film is quite interesting. Five people are kidnapped by a vastly superior alien race and each given a potentially toxic capsule. These capsules can only be opened upon the command of the owner, but if they ever are then mankind is doomed to eradication. The five are from different nations and all walks of life and once the alien announces to the assembled world the identities of the group, their lives become frantic and unsafe - a predicament they must endure for twenty-seven days if they are to save the population from certain death! Arnold Moss does his best "Klaatu" impersonation as the visitor and William Asher offers us a considered story about how ordinary people - and their governments - might react in such weighty circumstances. Gene Barry leads a rather unimpressive cast, however, and that really lets this decent story down somewhat. He wasn't very good at the best of times, and here neither he nor Valerie French's "Eve" do justice to the intrigue of the plot. The ending, even after a few viewings, is a bit disappointing - but the whole concept makes this well worth watching.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe glimpse given of the spacecraft reveals it to be from another Columbia release, Invasión de discos voladores (1956). The scene was also used in Flying Saucer Daffy (1958) and an episode of The Twilight Zone (1985).
- ErroresThe alien assumes that there are only two outcomes: humans use the weapons and destroy themselves, leaving Earth open for occupation OR humans don't use the weapons, and the alien species dies out, BUT there is a third, more likely outcome: the major powers use the capsules to attack each other (either pre-emptively or in retaliation) but millions of people in South America, Africa and Australia/Oceania remain alive (the five people chosen to control access to the weapons were all from the Northern hemisphere).
- Citas
Jonathan Clark: People hate because they fear, and they fear anything they don't understand, which is almost everything.
- ConexionesEdited from Invasión de discos voladores (1956)
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- How long is The 27th Day?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Der 27. Tag
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 15 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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