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Voyage sur la planète préhistorique

Titre original : Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet
  • 1965
  • Unrated
  • 1h 18min
NOTE IMDb
3,8/10
2 k
MA NOTE
Voyage sur la planète préhistorique (1965)
AventureScience-fiction

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn 2020, after the colonization of the moon, the spaceships Vega, Sirius and Capella are launched from Lunar Station 7. They are to explore Venus under the command of Professor Hartman, but ... Tout lireIn 2020, after the colonization of the moon, the spaceships Vega, Sirius and Capella are launched from Lunar Station 7. They are to explore Venus under the command of Professor Hartman, but an asteroid collides and explodes Capella.In 2020, after the colonization of the moon, the spaceships Vega, Sirius and Capella are launched from Lunar Station 7. They are to explore Venus under the command of Professor Hartman, but an asteroid collides and explodes Capella.

  • Réalisation
    • Curtis Harrington
    • Pavel Klushantsev
  • Scénario
    • Curtis Harrington
    • Aleksandr Kazantsev
    • Pavel Klushantsev
  • Casting principal
    • Basil Rathbone
    • Faith Domergue
    • Marc Shannon
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    3,8/10
    2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Curtis Harrington
      • Pavel Klushantsev
    • Scénario
      • Curtis Harrington
      • Aleksandr Kazantsev
      • Pavel Klushantsev
    • Casting principal
      • Basil Rathbone
      • Faith Domergue
      • Marc Shannon
    • 67avis d'utilisateurs
    • 32avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos6

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux11

    Modifier
    Basil Rathbone
    Basil Rathbone
    • Prof. Hartman - Lunar 7
    Faith Domergue
    Faith Domergue
    • Dr. Marsha Evans - Vega
    Marc Shannon
    Christopher Brand
    John Bix
    • John the Robot
    Lewis Keane
    Gennadi Vernov
    Gennadi Vernov
    • Andre Ferneau - Sirius
    • (images d'archives)
    • (as Robert Chantal)
    Georgi Zhzhyonov
    Georgi Zhzhyonov
    • Hans Walters - Sirius
    • (images d'archives)
    • (as Kurt Boden)
    Vladimir Emelyanov
    Vladimir Emelyanov
    • Cmdr. Brendan Lockhart - Sirius
    • (images d'archives)
    • (non crédité)
    Yuriy Sarantsev
    Yuriy Sarantsev
    • Allen Sherman - Vega
    • (images d'archives)
    • (non crédité)
    Georgiy Teykh
    Georgiy Teykh
    • Dr. Kern - Vega
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Curtis Harrington
      • Pavel Klushantsev
    • Scénario
      • Curtis Harrington
      • Aleksandr Kazantsev
      • Pavel Klushantsev
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs67

    3,81.9K
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    Avis à la une

    5mstomaso

    Visually excellent, entertaining, and campy sci-fi adventure

    Before you view this film, you should read some of the comments on it here on IMDb. Most of the film is lifted from Planeta Burg, a Soviet sci-fi film made around 1960 by none other than legendary American workhorse B film-maker Roger Corman. Corman added Faith Domergue and Basil Rathbone and some poorly dubbed English, but, thankfully, left the plot, soundtrack, visuals and most of the dialog intact. What's enjoyable about this film is the original film included within it.

    The story line is pretty simple. A manned space flight to Venus encounters many unforeseen challenges, including a great diversity of life forms, including, possibly, intelligent beings. Braving the elements of this tectonically unstable planet, an unbreathable atmosphere and dangerous creatures are several cosmonauts and a powerful and intelligent robotic android (somewhat derivative of Robbie the Robot).

    This is a nice piece of mid-twentieth century pulp sci-fi. While it doesn't carry the weight of many of its contemporaries - such as The Day the Earth Stood Still, or Forbidden Planet, etc - it's enjoyable for its clever low budget visual effects, eerie atmospherics, and inventive technological ideas. Great film for sci-fi buffs and film history fans.
    tedg

    Fiction Drives Life

    I'm of the opinion that film is powerful, powerful enough that large segments of our imagination is guided by cinematic relationships. That even the nature of reasoning is affected, even as deeply as how we reinvent practical logic. There are lots of examples to show and arguments to be made -- they are in a collection I am incubating.

    Science fiction is a special case, at once more obvious. Not all as subtle as what I study. But surely it had as profound an effect on daily lives.

    To understand this film, you need to know some history. Alas, many readers will not appreciate the cold war that was the overriding impetus for the two largest political entities from the 50s through the 80s.

    Some dates for you. In 56, the US saw "Forbidden Planet," with a superintelligent robot, space travel and mind augmentation. It was based on Shakespeare's most interesting play and is still among the best scifi films.

    In 57, Russia launched a satellite and declared that they "owned" space (and would put nuclear bombs over the US ready to "drop"). Also, that soon, they would have men in space.

    In 58 one of the most successful Russian filmmakers (Klushantsev) made a film about "cosmonauts" and space travel that was enormously successful with the Russian public (and their captive peoples). That film was the beginning of a deeper than usual partnership between Klushantsev and the propaganda arm of the Kremlin.

    In 1960, an unknown in East Germany made a film (Road to the Stars) about cosmonauts on Venus. It was a runaway hit. In the following year, Kennedy made his famous pledge to put an American on the moon by the end of the decade.

    The Soviet moon program had some catastrophic disasters, in large part resulting from lies told to the old Stalin regime by Soviet scientists working on ballistic missiles supposedly (but not really) capable of destroying the US. Khrushchev had these scientists destroyed or imprisoned. That meant no moon program.

    But the people already were convinced that Venus was the prize, so the space propagandists seized on this and retooled their manned program as a race to Venus, forget the moon. As a consequence, Klushantsev was given a (for the times and conditions) vast budget and told to make a film of the heroic Soviet nation exploring Venus. This he did in the 62 "Planet of Tempests," known in the US as "Planet of Storms."

    The effects developed by this team would be used in strange circumstances for the next 8 years. This crew filmed fake footage of real spaceflights. The Kremlin was never so bold as to fake a success when everyone knew the missions ended in fiery death. But they did decorate their successes with these true-fake movies. The most famous was the 65 spacewalk of Leonov, wonderfully believable until you wonder who is holding the camera. Oddly, the propagandists assumed that the camera eye was such a magical omnipresence that no one would ask.

    Anyway, that 62 film was somehow procured by the infamous Roger Corman. He shortened it and dubbed in English. He substituted the blank female (who says in an orbital craft) with an even more blank female. One wonders why; Faith Domergue had been hot 15 years earlier but here is wallpaper. And he adds an earthside leader who radios a few times, played by the already embarrassing Basil Rathbone. Something interesting could be said about his Sherlock Holmes here.

    Kubrick's 1968 2001, used many conventions from this shop, even when they went against the science of the thing. And ever since, on through "Star Wars," we have that single vision of what space SHOULD look like.

    Anyway, when you see this, you are seeing all these layers. Straight fiction, political fabricated truth, the unreal as more real than the real, the persistence of cinematic imagination, and the crass, stupid exploitations of the whole thing by Hollywood.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
    4ma-cortes

    A low-budget space opera being actually a rip-off from a Russian flm , adding wasted appearances by Basil Rathbone and Faith Domergue

    There is rip-roaring action, spirit of adventure , derring-do , thrills , and results to be quite amusing , concerning an expedition to Venus forced to deal with dinosaurs and other perils . In the making of this picture producers and filmmaker Curtis Harrington edited in special effects and additional footage from recently Russian movie ¨Planeta Burg¨ and his own ¨Queen of blood¨. This nifty sci-fi/horror has a thrilling plot , if simple and ordinary , similar to subsequent Sci-Fi- movies . In the year 2020 , cosmonaut Marcia (Faith Domergue) orbits the planet Venus and communicating through radio transmission with five astronauts who have landed on Venus surface to discover extraterrestrial life , and they are accompanied by a robot (Robbie the Robot lookalike) . Professor Hartman (Basil Rathbone) is also on hand to control the space journey to explore Venus . When the aircraft lands on Venus the are attacked by prehistoric beasts , and then lose their robot and nearly their lives in a volcanic eruption , while preparing a rescue team . At the end the explorers discover signs of a lost civilization and a sculpture indicating that the Venusians had looked human.

    It's a formula outer space film with tension , thrills , including some elaborate FX , and results to be entertaining enough . It's a brief fun with average special effects , passable set decoration , functional art direction and none use of computer generator. This fantasy picture packs thrills , action , weird monsters, a flying car , lively pace and fantastic scenarios . The monsters and a Robot are the real stars of this production and its chief attribute . The tale is silly and laughable but the effects and action are passable . Among the most spectacular of its visuals there are a Pterodactilus roaring menacingly towards the camera , a huge octopus-alike with several tentacles , a little tableau comprising attacks of various monsters and the colorful backgrounds of the lost land . Some monsters are clumsily made , but the movie is so-so . Highlights of the adventure includes a roller-coaster trip towards unknown land in Venus , and appearance of prehistoric reptile and othr beasts , such as Pterodactilis and a giant dinosaur . In addition the final scenes where appears breathtaking volcanic eruptions and thunderous explosions . Some illogical parts in the argument are more than compensated for the excitement provided by the astonishing monsters , though sometimes are a little bit cheesy . If you've ever seen the soviet film ¨Planeta Bur¨(1962) by Pavel Klushantsev don't be surprised if some scenes look familiar , the script was written around segments cut from that film and subsequently adding scenes shot by Curtis Harrington in Chicago , Illinois, USA . In fact In 1965 Roger Corman bought the Russian rights to the film, added some scenes with Faith Domergue and Basil Rathbone , and then released it in America with the title "Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet" . This was an ultra low budget production with acceptable special effects taken from a big budget Soviet production , though Harrington estimated that most of the film was his . A bit later on , Roger Corman took out the former additions , added more footage , and released it again as "Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women" and even a third more erotic and exciting version with plenty of gorgeous and exuberant girls . Producer Roger Corman and his brother Gene Corman made a similar operation to ¨Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet¨, as economic as rip-off from a Russian film , with ¨Queen of Blood¨also starred by Basil Rathbone . And being released on a double-bill by AIP along with other B-Science Fiction pictures . Acceptable main cast , such as : the great Sherlock's Basil Rathbone as a scientific who observes the exploration from a distance and Faith Domergue ; however , remaining cast being formed by unknown Russian actors.

    The picture was regularly directed by Curtis Harrington , and it was shot in seven to eight dayd . Curtis Harrington was a good craftsman in B-territory . In 1961 he made a strong and impressive feature-film debut with the nicely moody and quirky Night tide (1961) with Dennis Hooper. His follow-up features were a pleasingly diverse , idiosyncratic and often entertaining bunch , and included the delightfully campy Shelley Winters vehicles as Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? (1972) , What's the Matter with Helen? (1971) ,the perverse The Killing Kind (1973) and the immensely fun Ruby (1977). Moreover , Harrington directed a handful of solid and satisfying made-for-TV offerings: The cat (1973), Killer bees (1974), The Dead Don't Die (1975) and the terror animal Devil Dog: The Hound of Hell (1978) , as well as TV episodes from The Twilight Zone, The Colby , Dynasty , Wonder woman , Hotel , among others .
    Infofreak

    Roger Corman re-edits a Soviet science fiction movie with added Basil Rathbone and bad dubbing. A mess but strangely entertaining.

    This is a really odd one! B-grade horror/exploitation movie legend Roger Corman ('A Bucket Of Blood', 'The Masque Of The Red Death', 'The Wild Angels') and writer/director Curtis Harrington (of highly thought of cult movies 'Night Tide' and 'Games') take an obscure low budget Soviet science fiction movie, re-edit it, badly dub it, and add extra footage of faded star Basil "Sherlock Holmes" Rathbone and 'This Island Earth's Faith Domergue, and come up with... well, I don't know what you call it! Let's face it, this movie's a mess, but it's a strangely entertaining cheesy mess. The story concerns a mission to Venus that goes wrong. But I must say, even with 'Voyage To The Prehistoric Planet's the hokey dinosaurs, silly lizard-men, laughably inept robot ("Robot John"), bargain basement special effects, awful dialogue, and moments of NOTHING HAPPENING, I still enjoyed it much more than Brian De Palma's dull Hollywood "blockbuster" 'Mission To Mars'!
    6vampi1960

    Russian cosmonauts vs dinosaurs

    i watched this as a kid when it was shown almost every sat and Sunday night on wor TV channel 9 and thought it was kind of cool.there's a big clunky robot that talks in electronic monotones,rubbery dinosaurs,a big flying reptile and hints of an alien race hiding in the shadows,roger corman bought this film from the Russians when it was called planeta berg(planet of storms)inserted American scenes with basil rathbone and faith domerge and retitled it,and used the leftover footage for two other movies;planet of blood and voyage to the planet of prehistoric women(that features a busty Mamie van doren in a seashell bra)anyway its not bad,the dubbing is really poor,some of the special effects are pretty good for its time,i did like the hovercraft ship thy used.this DVD is very easy to find in sets or even for a dollar.avoid the sinister cinema print its too fuzzy.its not the best sci fi but its not the worst.its science fiction from the 1960's compliments of Russia and roger corman.6 out of 10.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Most of the credits on the U.S. version are phony in order to hide the fact that the film was made in Russia.
    • Gaffes
      Although the ship was still in orbit, landscape and mountains can be seen in the view port.
    • Citations

      Hans Walters, Sirius: I can't imagine anyone in their right mind exploring Venus.

    • Versions alternatives
      For this version, all footage featuring Kyunna Ignatova has been removed and replaced by footage of American actress Faith Domergue playing the character whose name has been changed from "Masha" to the more American sounding "Marsha."
    • Connexions
      Edited from La planète des tempêtes (1962)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 1 août 1965 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Union soviétique
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Prehistoric Planet
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Chicago, Illinois, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Roger Corman Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 18min(78 min)
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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