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Planète interdite

Original title: Forbidden Planet
  • 1956
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
56K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,510
1,111
Planète interdite (1956)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer3:41
1 Video
99+ Photos
Space Sci-FiAdventureSci-Fi

A starship crew in the 23rd century goes to investigate the silence of a distant planet's colony, only to find just two survivors, a powerful robot, and the deadly secret of a lost civilizat... Read allA starship crew in the 23rd century goes to investigate the silence of a distant planet's colony, only to find just two survivors, a powerful robot, and the deadly secret of a lost civilization.A starship crew in the 23rd century goes to investigate the silence of a distant planet's colony, only to find just two survivors, a powerful robot, and the deadly secret of a lost civilization.

  • Director
    • Fred M. Wilcox
  • Writers
    • Cyril Hume
    • Irving Block
    • Allen Adler
  • Stars
    • Walter Pidgeon
    • Anne Francis
    • Leslie Nielsen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    56K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,510
    1,111
    • Director
      • Fred M. Wilcox
    • Writers
      • Cyril Hume
      • Irving Block
      • Allen Adler
    • Stars
      • Walter Pidgeon
      • Anne Francis
      • Leslie Nielsen
    • 436User reviews
    • 97Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Forbidden Planet
    Trailer 3:41
    Forbidden Planet

    Photos242

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Walter Pidgeon
    Walter Pidgeon
    • Dr. Morbius
    Anne Francis
    Anne Francis
    • Altaira Morbius
    Leslie Nielsen
    Leslie Nielsen
    • Commander Adams
    Warren Stevens
    Warren Stevens
    • Lt. 'Doc' Ostrow
    Jack Kelly
    Jack Kelly
    • Lt. Farman
    Richard Anderson
    Richard Anderson
    • Chief Quinn
    Earl Holliman
    Earl Holliman
    • Cook
    George D. Wallace
    George D. Wallace
    • Bosun
    • (as George Wallace)
    Robert Dix
    Robert Dix
    • Crewman Grey
    • (as Bob Dix)
    Jimmy Thompson
    Jimmy Thompson
    • Crewman Youngerford
    James Drury
    James Drury
    • Crewman Strong
    Harry Harvey Jr.
    • Crewman Randall
    Roger McGee
    • Crewman Lindstrom
    Peter Miller
    Peter Miller
    • Crewman Moran
    Morgan Jones
    Morgan Jones
    • Crewman Nichols
    Richard Grant
    • Crewman Silvers
    Robby the Robot
    Robby the Robot
    • Robby the Robot
    • (as Robby The Robot)
    James Best
    James Best
    • Crewman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Fred M. Wilcox
    • Writers
      • Cyril Hume
      • Irving Block
      • Allen Adler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews436

    7.555.7K
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    Featured reviews

    10Chris-180

    "Forbidden Knowledge"

    I first saw this movie when it originally came out. I was about 9 yrs. old and found this movie both highly entertaining and very frightening and unlike any other movie I had seen up until that time.

    BASIC PLOT: An expedition is sent out from Earth to the fourth planet of Altair, a great mainsequence star in constellation Aquilae to find out what happened to a colony of settlers which landed twenty years before and had not been heard from since.

    THEME: An inferior civilization (namely ours) comes into contact with the remains of a greatly advanced alien civilization, the Krell-200,000 years removed. The "seed" of destruction from one civilization is being passed on to another, unknowingly at first. The theme of this movie is very much Good vs. Evil.

    I first saw this movie with my brother when it came out originally. I was just a boy and the tiger scenes really did scare me as did the battle scenes with the unseen Creature-force. I was also amazed at just how real things looked in the movie.

    What really captures my attention as an adult though is the truth of the movie "forbidden knowledge" and how relevant this will be when we do (if ever) come into contact with an advanced (alien) civilization far more developed than we ourselves are presently. Advanced technology and responsibility seem go hand in hand. We must do the work for ourselves to acquire the knowledge along with the wisdom of how to use advanced technology. This is, in my opinion, the great moral of the movie.

    I learned in graduate school that "knowledge is power" is at best, in fact, not correct! Knowledge is "potential" power depending upon how it is applied (... if it is applied at all.) [It's not what you know, but how you use what you know!]

    The overall impact of this movie may well be realized sometime in Mankind's own future. That is knowledge in and of itself is not enough, we must, MUST have the wisdom that knowledge depends on to truly control our own destiny OR we will end up like the Krell in the movie-just winked-out.

    Many thanks to those who responded to earlier versions of this article with comments and corrections, they are all very much appreciated!! I hope you are as entertained by this story as much as I have been over the past 40+ years ....

    Rating: 10 out 10 stars
    mermatt

    Sci-fi Classic

    Like THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL, this film helped make sci-fi respectable instead of the stuff for silly B-movies with cheap costumes and obviously faked sets. To help strengthen the thought-level of the story, the scriptwriters included elements of Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST, the Biblical story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, and Freudian psychology to make an enlightening tale of other-worldly mystery.

    Leslie Nielsen is in his serious mode here long before he became the comic madman of the NAKED GUN movies and POLICE SQUAD television series. It is easy to see the prototypes of much of STAR TREK in this movie. The electronic soundtrack becomes a bit repetitious, but it works well as it is used in the scenes.

    The short skirt on the heroine is a bit much but of course "cheesecake" was one of the things the cigar-chomping studio suits always liked in the 1950s and still do. Robbie the Robot is thrown in for some comic-relief and appeared in many other movies and television shows including LOST IN SPACE.

    The most interesting aspect of the story for me was Monsters from the Id. The point being made is that the serpent is still in the Garden of Eden because we carry evil around with us wherever we go.

    This is an excellent entertainment.
    7Xstal

    The Prohibited Planet...

    A Starship has arrived at Altair IV, to ascertain the fate, of those that went before, but the visit has been spurned, Dr. Morbius has concerns, do not land, it is not safe, he so implores. Commander Adams disregards and duly lands, a year long journey has a mission, there's a plan, Robbie Robot then arrives, takes three crew out for a drive, to where the Doctor and his daughter, live and thrive. The other members of the mission are all dead, there is a force on the planet, that fills with dread, just the two of them remain, you must take to space again, but Adam's will not flee this strange homestead.

    A perpetually engaging film that continues to deliver all these years later, as the powers hidden beneath a planet's surface by a long expired indigenous race cause unexpected trauma to those rediscovering the reasons for the aliens demise.
    9Kingkitsch

    Gets better as it gets older

    While not re-treading the comments or plot summaries of other IMDB users, I thought I'd say that this particular film does get better as it gets older. While ground-breaking on it's release in 1956, the visual "look" of this film has grown over the 46 years since it first arrived.

    True to the pulp sci-fi of its day, the art direction has mellowed into an archetype that has not been bettered to this date. MGM put a surprising amount of money into the production values (similar to, but better than Universal's "This Island Earth"). This is a living "cover art". The indelible images of the saucer passing through space, landing on Altair-4, Robby, and the disintegrating tiger linger long in collective memory.

    This must be seen on the big screen if possible, and in the original Cinemascope format. I've been lucky enough to see it (it was re-released in the 70's on a double bill with George Pal's "The Time Machine"), and the power it carries in scenes such as the Krell machines and the attack of the Id Monster are truly impressive. Watching it on a television just doesn't come close, although the "letterboxed" version is better than nothing. I am a poster collector, and even the advertising material for this film is exceptional. I see the one-sheet for it every day in my living room, and have never grown tired of it. "AMAZING!" is what is says, and for once they got it right. A true classic of it's type.
    9arbilab

    The seminal space movie

    If you like Star Wars/Trek, come see where they got all their ideas and cinematic devices. It's my top 2 favorite movies of all times, other-worldly-futuristic and psycho-thriller. The intensity of the root material (Shakespeare's "The Tempest") is not overshadowed by whizbang gimmickry (a la later Lucas). And just because it was made in 1956, don't assume you can 'see the strings' holding the flying saucer up. This was the first movie where you COULDN'T. Miracle it was made at "A-movie" scale, economics and tastes at the time were stacked heavily against it. And director Wilcox's previous 'hit' was "Lassie Come Home". Until I looked him up, I assumed 'Fred Wilcox' was a pseudonym for a director who was already or later became famous, but at the time didn't want to be associated with sci-fi, which was strictly a "B" genre back then. This was either a very VERY visionary production, or a very fortuitous 'mistake' on the part of the folks who bankroll Hollywood.

    There are the massive-scale mattes with live action almost microscopically inserted that Lucas used extensively. There are intelligent machines that transcend the stereotypical 'user interface'; "computers", as they've come to be portrayed much less futuristically in later works. Star Trek's 'transporter' is there, visually, almost unaltered by Roddenberry 10 years later. And if the Trek/Wars technobabble turns you off, FP's scientific references are not overdone and are all accurate, even today. The "ship" set is comprehensive, sparklingly realistic, as good as anything you've seen since, and more convincing than anything 'Trek' has done, for TV or film. We didn't get to spend as much time there as I would have liked.

    If you ever wondered how movies got into space so competently, watching FP will explain all that. It's definitely not 'Wagontrain to the Stars'.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The famous poster for the film shows a menacing robot carrying a struggling pretty girl - a staple of monster movie posters from the 1950's. In fact, no such scene occurs in the film itself and the robot portrayed in the poster is the very likeable Robby the Robot.
    • Goofs
      When Doc describes their C-57D star ship's weapon capacity as 3 billion electron volts, that value is actually quite minuscule, something less than the energy expended by a flying mosquito.

      For example, a weapon like a 20 kiloton nuclear detonation would be on the order of 10 to the 32 exponent electron volts.
    • Quotes

      Commander Adams: Nice climate you have here. High oxygen content.

      Robby the Robot: I seldom use it myself, sir. It promotes rust.

    • Alternate versions
      Whe Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer reissued this film as part of a kiddie-matinée package, the scene where Jerry Farman cons the socially naive Altaira into kissing him was excised.
    • Connections
      Edited into La quatrième dimension: The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street (1960)

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    FAQ29

    • How long is Forbidden Planet?Powered by Alexa
    • Didn't the Commander of a Star cruiser have basic Psych 101, which would include Freudian theory, and the Id?
    • What is 'Forbidden Planet' about?
    • Is 'Forbidden Planet' based on a book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 22, 1956 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El planeta desconocido
    • Filming locations
      • Sony Pictures Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Loew's
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,900,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $900
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.55 : 1

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