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Les premiers passagers du satellite

Original title: Satellite in the Sky
  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
776
YOUR RATING
Les premiers passagers du satellite (1956)
DramaSci-Fi

The British launch the world's first orbital vehicle. Their military sends a super-bomb along, which goes wrong and threatens the crew and a stowaway.The British launch the world's first orbital vehicle. Their military sends a super-bomb along, which goes wrong and threatens the crew and a stowaway.The British launch the world's first orbital vehicle. Their military sends a super-bomb along, which goes wrong and threatens the crew and a stowaway.

  • Director
    • Paul Dickson
  • Writers
    • John Mather
    • J.T. McIntosh
    • Edith Dell
  • Stars
    • Kieron Moore
    • Lois Maxwell
    • Donald Wolfit
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    776
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paul Dickson
    • Writers
      • John Mather
      • J.T. McIntosh
      • Edith Dell
    • Stars
      • Kieron Moore
      • Lois Maxwell
      • Donald Wolfit
    • 29User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Kieron Moore
    Kieron Moore
    • Commander Michael Hayden
    Lois Maxwell
    Lois Maxwell
    • Kim Hamilton
    Donald Wolfit
    Donald Wolfit
    • Professor Merrity
    Bryan Forbes
    Bryan Forbes
    • Jimmy Wheeler
    Jimmy Hanley
    Jimmy Hanley
    • Larry Noble
    Barry Keegan
    Barry Keegan
    • Lefty Blake
    Donald Gray
    Donald Gray
    • Captain Ross
    Thea Gregory
    • Barbara Noble
    Shirley Lawrence
    • Ellen
    Alan Gifford
    Alan Gifford
    • Colonel Galloway
    Walter Hudd
    Walter Hudd
    • Professor Blandford
    Peter Neil
    • Tony
    Ryck Rydon
    • Reporter
    • (as Rick Rydon)
    Ronan O'Casey
    Ronan O'Casey
    • Reporter
    Robert O'Neil
    Robert O'Neil
    • Reporter
    Charles Richardson
    • General Barnett
    Carl Jaffe
    Carl Jaffe
    • Professor Bechstein
    John Baker
    • Official
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Paul Dickson
    • Writers
      • John Mather
      • J.T. McIntosh
      • Edith Dell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    5.2776
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    Featured reviews

    youroldpaljim

    Good production, but mostly dull sci fi from the UK.

    This was the first 1950's British science fiction intended to be a major item. The film is in color and cinemascope, has decent special effects and production values and the film takes its subject matter seriously; space travel and nuclear testing. When this film was released in the United States by Warner Brothers in 1956, it was marketed as a major item with a big ad campaign. However, most reviews at the time were not favorable, and the film did not do as well at the box office as Warner Brothers had anticipated. The film rarely turned up on television and remains largely unknown to all but 1950's science fiction completests.

    It is no wonder really. Despite good production values, a good budget, some interesting art direction and a serious attitude taken by the films makers, SATELLITE IN THE SKY is mostly too talky and static to interest most mainstream movie viewers. The film is overall not bad, but it fails to generate little more than mild interest and at best moderate enthusiasm.

    Note: When this film first came out, several reviewers remarked favorably about the films color process and use of cinemascope. I missed this film when it used turn up occasionally on late night T.V. back in seventies. I only recently saw this film for the first time on video, and wouldn't you know it, all video copies are in black and white and in incorrect aspect ratio!! I would really would like to see a color and letter boxed video version.
    6AlsExGal

    Interesting study of 1950s nuclear war paranoia

    This is a moderately entertaining but rather dry and slow-moving British Cold War sci-fi adventure/parable in color and CinemaScope, released in the U. S. by Warner Bros. It's about an experimental new space project whose participants find out at the last minute was financed by military funds so a new super-bomb could be tested in space.

    A woman reporter (a young Lois Maxwell) who doesn't think any space exploration is worth the money stows away on board. When the bomb is ready to be released there is a malfunction and it sticks to the rocket ship, so the ground crew and rocket crew have to decide what to do next. It's okay as a sci-fi drama but more interesting as a symptom of 1950s nuclear war paranoia.
    boydco

    Greatly interested me as a child

    When I was a child of about 4-5, the local Los Angeles station where we lived broadcast The Million Dollar Movie each weeknight. It was usually the same movie, night after night. On occasion, even though it was past my bedtime (much!), my mom would let me watch a movie if she felt it would hold my interest. THIS ONE DID, as I recall, and I specifically remember being able to talk her into letting me see it several times (a record, never again achieved!).

    Other reviewers have given the plotline and it seems accurate, to the best of my recollection. However, regardless of how "talky" the film was, the dialog and visuals definitely made their impact, even on my fledgling brain. I have, more or less, remembered the story for 40 years. I'd like to write a script or make a film that someone else would find so memorable!

    Maybe it was just that I was so young, but I remember loving this film and I would absolutely love to see it again. Maybe I'd be disappointed, maybe I'd smile at my young self, maybe I'd really like it. Who knows?
    Wizard-8

    Not awful, but kind of flat

    No doubt due to the fact that a big American distributor (Warner Brothers) helped to bankroll its production, the British film "Satellite In The Sky" does look better than many other British productions of the time. It's filmed in color, and there is money for things ranging from extras to elaborate set design. Some (not all, but some) of the special effects are also not bad for this time period. Still, there are some big problems, problems that are more evident to a modern audience than audiences in 1956. The script suffers from the problem of many other British movies, that being that it's very talky and reluctant to get to the action. It takes more than half of the movie before the rocket takes off into space. Another problem is that there is a remarkable lack of tension once the space mission gets into trouble. It's too casual of a feeling. While the movie is never aggressively bad, it feels kind of flat. Still, those who are fans of '50 sci-fi and who also are interested in seeing a British perspective of more realistic space travel story might find the movie has enough interest to make it worth tracking down.
    6Bunuel1976

    SATELLITE IN THE SKY (Paul Dickson, 1956) **1/2

    Included on the same disc as WORLD WITHOUT END (1956), this contemporaneous sci-effort from Britain takes a much more serious approach (down to the stiff-upper-lipped characters and stirring score) – with its documentary-like depiction of flights outside the Earth's atmosphere, the ultimate reason for which is the testing of a new type of bomb that's so powerful it can only be blown in outer space! While not uninteresting in itself, the treatment is so hackneyed as to render the whole dull instead of gripping, managing only a modicum of suspense during the last half-hour or so when the bomb, already timed to explode, remains attached to the back of the shuttle when dislodged! Casting is second-rate but adequate: Kieron Moore (as the stoic test pilot), Lois Maxwell (an intrepid reporter who, having lost her father and brother to science, feels a natural aversion to progress…but still can't help stowing away on the space vessel for the sake of a scoop!), Donald Wolfit (in the obligatory pompous physicist role, who then breaks into hysterics when the going gets tough!) as well as Bryan Forbes and Jimmy Hanley, playing other members of the flight each given a dreary romantic subplot fraught with complications.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The delta wing aircraft in the opening minutes of this movie was the long-range British heavy bomber the Vulcan. It was in use from 1952-1984 and saw service in the Falkland war.
    • Goofs
      In the opening sequence of the jet flying, it is obviously different from the one that is taxiing after landing. The jet on the ground is painted brown and black under the nose, while the one previously flying was entirely white.
    • Quotes

      Kim Hamilton: Well, what if the STARDUST blows up, as she probably will?

      Cmdr. Michael Haydon: Well, then we'll know... at least the designers will know... that the fuel or the design wasn't perfect.

      Kim Hamilton: Some people find it impossible to be quite so impersonal, Commander. If I may be personal, I'm glad I'm not your wife.

      Cmdr. Michael Haydon: And if I may be personal, so am I.

    • Connections
      Featured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Satellite in the Sky (1966)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 1956 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Satellite in the Sky
    • Production companies
      • Danziger Productions Ltd.
      • Tridelta Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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