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Forbidden Zone

  • 1980
  • R
  • 1h 14min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
5,8 k
MA NOTE
Danny Elfman, Jan Stuart Schwartz, and Susan Tyrrell in Forbidden Zone (1980)
Trailer for Forbidden Zone
Lire trailer0:48
1 Video
34 photos
BurlesqueComédie noireParodieSatireComédieComédie musicaleFantaisie

La famille Hercule s'installe dans sa nouvelle demeure californienne et découvre dans la cave une porte qui donne accès a la sixième dimension, un univers lubrique peuple de personnages comp... Tout lireLa famille Hercule s'installe dans sa nouvelle demeure californienne et découvre dans la cave une porte qui donne accès a la sixième dimension, un univers lubrique peuple de personnages complétement loufoques.La famille Hercule s'installe dans sa nouvelle demeure californienne et découvre dans la cave une porte qui donne accès a la sixième dimension, un univers lubrique peuple de personnages complétement loufoques.

  • Réalisation
    • Richard Elfman
  • Scénario
    • Richard Elfman
    • Matthew Bright
    • Martin Nicholson
  • Casting principal
    • Gene Cunningham
    • Marie-Pascale Elfman
    • Virginia Rose
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    5,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Richard Elfman
    • Scénario
      • Richard Elfman
      • Matthew Bright
      • Martin Nicholson
    • Casting principal
      • Gene Cunningham
      • Marie-Pascale Elfman
      • Virginia Rose
    • 111avis d'utilisateurs
    • 51avis des critiques
    • 64Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Forbidden Zone
    Trailer 0:48
    Forbidden Zone

    Photos33

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 27
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    Rôles principaux51

    Modifier
    Gene Cunningham
    • Pa Hercules
    • (as Ugh-Fudge Bwana)
    • …
    Marie-Pascale Elfman
    Marie-Pascale Elfman
    • Frenchy…
    Virginia Rose
    • Ma Hercules
    Phil Gordon
    • Flash Hercules
    Hyman Diamond
    Hyman Diamond
    • Gramps Hercules
    Brian Routh
    • Military Duet
    • (as The Kipper Kids)
    • …
    Martin von Haselberg
    Martin von Haselberg
    • Military Duet
    • (as The Kipper Kids)
    • …
    Jan Stuart Schwartz
    Jan Stuart Schwartz
    • Bust Rod…
    Susan Tyrrell
    Susan Tyrrell
    • Queen Doris of the Sixth Dimension…
    Gisele Lindley
    • The Princess
    Rosilyn Aronson
    • First Teasing Girl
    Rosilyn Crinion
    • Second Teasing Girl
    Matthew Bright
    Matthew Bright
    • Henderson Twins Squeezit & René
    • (as Toshiro Boloney)
    Kedric Wolfe
    • Human Chandelier…
    Sugar Bear
    • Gunfighting Student
    James Bordus
    • Gunshot Victim…
    Redonte Reola
    • Small Student
    Brenda Star
    • Sexy Student
    • Réalisation
      • Richard Elfman
    • Scénario
      • Richard Elfman
      • Matthew Bright
      • Martin Nicholson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs111

    6,55.7K
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    Avis à la une

    8chuckc

    If David Lynch Had Directed Betty Boop . . .

    No live-action movie has ever captured the anarchic feel of the rubbery Max Fleischer cartoons of the 1930s better than "Forbidden Zone." It's an LSD-fueled Betty Boop picture mixed with "Alice in Wonderland" and "The Inferno," all filtered through David Lynch's kaleidoscope (or run through R. Crumb's Cuisinart).

    The story, such as it is, deals with the adventures of Frenchy Hercules, who lives over a doorway to the "Sixth Dimension," which is ruled by King Fausto (Herve Villechaize) and Queen Doris (Susan Tyrrell) with sadomasochistic glee. The whole flick really fits the Betty Boop formula perfectly--a shapely heroine (who loves to rumba) falls from her own bizarre "reality" into an even stranger one. Much mayhem and cool swing music ensue, as Frenchy's brother and grandfather (playing the roles of Bimbo and Koko the Clown from the old Fleischer cartoons) try to rescue the unfortunate girl.

    This strange mix of animation and live action really has to be seen to be believed--all very low budget and very imaginative (a quality sorely lacking in movies lately). Fans of Oingo Boingo won't want to miss this one (especially group leader Danny Elfman's Cab Calloway-like turn as Satan in the flick's best scene). There are racial and ethnic stereotypes galore, but since this movie seems to exist in an entirely different universe, it doesn't come across as offensive.

    Not for everyone--but a "can't miss" for some. Worth seeing just for the musical numbers alone.
    8NateManD

    The weirdest most nonsensical musical you'll ever see!

    "Forbidden Zone" is up there on the list of strangest films of all time. It's a hell of a lot of fun, even though it doesn't make much sense. The film was created by Matthew Bright and Richard Elfman from the 80's rock band Oingo Boingo. They also did the film's music. The story concerns a family who buys a house from a drug dealer. Little do they know that it has a door that leads to the sixth dimension. The film becomes a crazed B&W surreal musical of comical strangeness. Tattoo of "Fantasy Island" plays the king of the sixth dimension. There's a depraved queen, a giant frog, a topless princess, drag queens, gigantic dice props and other things that you have to see to believe. It's as if John Waters and Jodorowsky teamed up to film "the Wizard of Oz" in black and white. The funniest part of the film has to be the guys wearing jockstraps who make musical fart noises while boxing. This is definitely not your average musical!
    8aimless-46

    Extremely Original

    Danny Elfman's outlandish 1980 film "Forbidden Zone" has to be seen to be believed, and if you are not at least slightly demented you should probably pass on the seeing part. Imagine a cross between "Alice in Wonderland" and "The Rocky Horror Picture Show", with lots of animation in the style Monty Python's Flying Circus and the rubbery Max Fleischer cartoons of the 1930's (which probably inspired much of the original Monty Python stuff anyway). Also deserving mention is the fact that this relatively low budget black and white film is a musical.

    There are a lot of characters and the story is somewhat hard to follow so here is what I hope is a helpful summary. The Hercules family (father, mother, son, daughter, and grandfather) live in a house with a door to the Sixth Dimension a/k/a The Forbidden Zone (think Wonderland). Their daughter Frenchy (think Alice) and son Flash (who looks like third stooge Joe Besser in a cub scout uniform) go to school one day. When a gunfight erupts in the classroom Frenchy runs home.

    Tripping on a roller skate she tumbles through the door into a large intestine and ends up in the sixth dimension, which is ruled by a King and Queen of dice-used instead of wonderland's playing cards. There are a lot of half-dressed wonderland type characters down there although only the Frog Footman looks the same. There is a shapely princess who runs around topless, a living chandelier that eventually decays into just a skeleton, a devil (Elfman) who is like Cab Calloway playing the Cheshire Cat, and a rival queen.

    Frenchy's family and one of her classmates go into the Forbidden Zone to attempt a rescue. The film is a mix of live action and animation. The editor deserves a lot of credit because the whole thing is sequenced quite well and even has a strange unity. There are racist stereotypes (generally too silly to be offensive), lively swing music, and sets that look to have been painted and constructed by a third grade art class.

    If this whole wacky concept sounds interesting you should check it out.
    9Quinoa1984

    a definitive 'take it or leave it' flick. I'll take more, please!

    Dr. Hunter S. Thompson once said, "It never got weird enough for me." With all respect and love to that late-great Gonzo God, I wonder if he would eat those words following a viewing of this. This is truly one of the weirdest movies ever conceived, shot, executed, whatever-ed. But it's brilliance is in the fact that amid its chaos and delirious mayhem is that it's not really all that incoherent. It may not be any more or less crazy a piece of avant-garde experimentation than a super-obscure picture like Pussbucket.

    The difference, I think, lies in professionalism. In a small way I'm reminded of Russ Meyer; Richard Elfman is a very careful director with his camera, never making a shot unintentionally out of focus or deranged in masturbatory terms, and with his production designer (if maybe it was just him and his wife who also financed the picture) create madness that can't exactly be called shoddy in production value. Like it or not, and I can imagine people definitely NOT liking this, there's some art going on here.

    It's also the kind of movie you can't peg down. I was laughing mad throughout, almost convulsively at one other step after another in the 'plot' (and yes, there is one, once checked into the 'Zone' and the 6th dimension and the annals of the Queen and the family going through the zone), but is it entirely a comedy? Actually - yes, it is. But what kind of comedy? There's a sensibility that borrows heavily at times from those delightfully insane cartoons from the 1920s and 1930s (Un Iwerks' obscurer shorts come to mind), but only at times like bits in that classroom singing old songs.

    There's also characters in black-face (yes, black-face), obvious caricatures of black people and Jews, a little person (the actor from Man with the Golden Gun), a guy with a giant frog head and a suit, and Satan. Did I mention it's a musical shot in black and white and that it's also like if Rocky Horror Picture Show wasn't likable for its badness but was genuinely f***ed-up as a true cult hit?

    Enough trying to explain it- this is cult in the sense of Eraserhead or Ichi the Killer, or even one of the real old-school guards of the avant-garde like Jack SMith. You really do have to see it to believe it, and understand how much of a mix of forms and styles work its way into it, of the obvious and joyfully exaggerated "characters" (just between that one Queen with the hair and the little guy it could be enough, but then what about the little guy's new French mistress?), of the sudden title-cards, of the animations from time to time with most prominent example a travel down an intestine.

    Not to mention the music, which is some of the purest genius in the picture (this and Blues Brothers, both good for a double feature not too oddly enough considering one specific song I need not mention here, are great wacky musicals of 1980). There's two facets: the usage of old blues and show-tunes of the 30s, almost like speakeasy songs, and then the songs of Oingo Boingo, Danny Elfman's equally weird band he had before becoming a composer. Needless to say he composes his first time here, and it's a great training ground for the likes of other great scores in Tim Burton's pictures; his one appearance as Satan is a howler, though overall he matches up to what his brother has to offer as a filmmaker of verve and daring.

    How much you might respond positively to the daring of Forbidden Zone will depend on how seriously you take it. I don't think I got any profound life lessons, but if you can tap into the vibe of the picture then you got it made. It doesn't get much weirder than this, and I love it for it on whatever terms it makes as imaginative low-budget gonzo comedy.
    EL BUNCHO

    A LYSERGIC LIVE-ACTION MAX FLEISCHER CARTOON...WITH OINGO BOINGO!!!

    I first discovered this one during my early mania for the band Oingo Boingo back in the early 1980's. I was expecting anything other than what I got: a live-action Max Fleischer cartoon brimming with low-budget insanity! FORBIDDEN ZONE is balls-out strange, and a hell of a lot of fun for those with a taste for the odd. Truly unique in every way, it is sad to see that more films like this will probably never be made again in this era of big-budget drivel and rampaging political correctness.

    FORBIDDEN ZONE follows the adventures of the almost indescribably weird Hercules family who have recently moved into a house whose basement contains the doorway to the 6th dimension. When their bathrobe-clad daughter Susan (who has been studying abroad in France, returning home with an outrageous French accent and now goes by the totally original nickname of "Frenchy") falls into the 6th dimension, all manner of looniness ensues. A tuxedoed frog-man, jockstrap wearing goons, animation that looks like it was done by an acidhead, a wonderful soundtrack that blends oddball rock and big band classics, the worst blackface makeup in film history, Squeezit "Chicken-boy" Henderson and his "sister" Renee, the funniest elementary school sequence in memory, Herve Villechaize as King Fausto, the Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo and Danny Elfman as the devil himself...All this and more (!!!) in a ninety minute tour de force of unbridled imagination. HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION!

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Director Richard Elfman and star Marie-Pascale Elfman, who were married at the time, financed the movie by buying, renovating and selling houses. They ran out of money and the movie was rescued by a benefactor.
    • Citations

      Chicken: You know the chickens are always ready to help you any way we can. But as you know...

      Squeezit: What can chickens do?

      Chicken: Precisely.

    • Versions alternatives
      Premiere long version running time is: 76 mins., 38 secs. Theatrical Version is: 73 mins., 11 sec. The colorized version runs 74 mins., 14 secs., restoring René Henderson's verse in "Queen's Revenge," which previously only appeared as a "deleted scene" in the special features section of the Fantomas DVD edition. This is the version preferred by the director.
    • Connexions
      Featured in A Look Into 'The Forbidden Zone' (2004)
    • Bandes originales
      Witch's Egg
      Composed by Georg Michalski (as George Mishalsky) and Susan Tyrrell

      Performed by Susan Tyrrell (uncredited)

      Produced by Loren-Paul Caplin

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Forbidden Zone?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 avril 1984 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • Official site
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Totaler Sperrbezirk
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Hercules Films Ltd.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 14min(74 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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