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Le monstre aux yeux verts

Original title: I pianeti contro di noi
  • 1962
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
175
YOUR RATING
Le monstre aux yeux verts (1962)
HorrorSci-Fi

An alien race sends cyborgs--made to look like the son of a famous scientist, whom they killed when he landed on their planet--to Earth to help pave the way for an invasion.An alien race sends cyborgs--made to look like the son of a famous scientist, whom they killed when he landed on their planet--to Earth to help pave the way for an invasion.An alien race sends cyborgs--made to look like the son of a famous scientist, whom they killed when he landed on their planet--to Earth to help pave the way for an invasion.

  • Director
    • Romano Ferrara
  • Writers
    • Romano Ferrara
    • Piero Pierotti
    • Massimo Rendina
  • Stars
    • Michel Lemoine
    • Maria Pia Luzi
    • Jany Clair
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    175
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Romano Ferrara
    • Writers
      • Romano Ferrara
      • Piero Pierotti
      • Massimo Rendina
    • Stars
      • Michel Lemoine
      • Maria Pia Luzi
      • Jany Clair
    • 10User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos37

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    Top cast20

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    Michel Lemoine
    Michel Lemoine
    • Bronco…
    Maria Pia Luzi
    Maria Pia Luzi
    • Marina Ferri
    Jany Clair
    Jany Clair
    • Audrey Bradbury
    Marco Guglielmi
    • Capt. Carboni
    Piero Palermini
    • Ufficiale italiano
    Jacopo Tecchi
    • Prof. Giorgio Borri
    Otello Toso
    • Maj. Michelotti
    Peter Dane
    • Funzionario ONU
    Osvaldo Ruggieri
    Osvaldo Ruggieri
    • Agente servizio speciale
    Adriano Micantoni
    Donatella Marrosu
    Renato Navarrini
    Roberto Meloni
    • Bambino
    Antonio Piretti
    • Bambino
    Anna Maria Surdo
    Franca Lumachi
    Elvira Cortese
    Elvira Cortese
    Consalvo Dell'Arti
    • Generale Rossi
    • Director
      • Romano Ferrara
    • Writers
      • Romano Ferrara
      • Piero Pierotti
      • Massimo Rendina
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    4.5175
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8metalunar

    Camp

    There is a bit of " Being There" in this flick as the people around our visitor make many assumptions about him. It is well worth watching just for the old Alpha and the Euro-style shades , but also consider it for a double -bill with the first Terminator or Without Warning.Or if you want to consider other Italian Science Fiction films and see how much can be done with a low-budget try watching Planet of the Vampires which has some of the best futuristic spaceship interiors I've ever seen despite the fact that they look like they were all done out of plywood. Or consider that it could have been picked for the prototype of Alphaville had history been a little different.
    5Atomic_Brain

    Great Title Hides Problematic Allegorical Melodrama

    Planets Against Us is a film I have been obsessed with most of my life. First seeing it on television in the late 1960s, I was sorely disappointed, as it was advertised as Science Fiction, and to my teenage mind, it was in no way Sci-Fi. Plus, it was loooong, and kind of boring. I was excited not only by the great title, but by the fact that it was released to TV by Walter Manley Enterprises, which had also released the astounding Starman movies to TV, and so I hoped that this would be another easy-to-love pulp-fiction adventure. What I got was something entirely different. I tried to watch PAU again in the late 1980s, when Sinister Cinema had it on VHS for a short while, but again, I just couldn't get through it. Finally, a DVD found its way into my stash and I decided to just sit and watch it, regardless of interest. It was certainly worth it, but I can't say its a film for everyone.

    Planets Against Us is a slow, contemplative allegorical melodrama, with only the lightest SF touches. The cat-eyed Michael Lemoine (who seemed to be in every French/Italian/International Co-production of the 1960s) plays Bronco, an alien and/or cyborg (explanations differ throughout the film) who is trying to warn Earthlings of their self-destructive nature, ala The Day the Earth Stood Still. Yet Bronco is a soulless, clueless version of who he used to be, in a nod to Invasion of the Body Snatchers. This is a great start, but the film veers towards the melodramatic in that most of Bronco's encounters are with two woman who are obsessed with him, and at times the film seems little more than a weak sex farce.

    Yet, in its emphasis on Bronco's strange isolation and inability to connect emotionally with the women who love him, PAU comes across - whether intended or not - as some sort of treatise on two very topical cinema tropes of the day: the angst of existential alienation, and the phenomenon of urban loneliness, of folks in crowded cities being somehow more emotionally distant from their neighbors than the rural populace. The European immigration movement of the day is also addressed, as Bronco is seen - and suspected - as an outsider or "foreigner" (which he assuredly is, being either otherworldly or machine).

    The severe emotional detachment perceived throughout the scenario is quite disturbing, and conveys something of the International rootlessness felt by many parties at the time. In a way, PAU seems like a Sci-Fi take on Michelangelo Antonioni's masterpiece, L'Avventura. The idea of the replicated cyborg - endless duplicates of anonymous amoral clones - is a good one, with chilling implications, but the theme is not addressed very profoundly, at least not in the dubbed English release.

    Yet for the patient viewer, PAU does have a few thrills to offer. Although the effects scenes are sparse, they are admirable when they occur, including some crude stop-motion animation, some optical effects depicting radiation poisoning, and a real "Wow" of a finale, in which Bronco literally disintegrates before our eyes. There is also a hilarious early depiction of an all-seeing surveillance TV camera, a stupid little gadget which would not fool a fly. The black and white photography is excellent, and there are many wonderful location scenes.

    The film's original title - "The Man With the Yellow Eyes" - is more accurate and honest, as the film is really about a man who exists outside of normal society, seen as either a boon or an existential threat to same. Bronco, in all his incarnations, is a cypher, merely a catalyst for others' interpretations and agendas. Although his touch is instant death, his message ironically may be peace for all humanity.
    1Ritz

    Plan 9 Meets La Dolca Vita

    If Ed Wood made "La Dolca Vita" or if Felinni made "Plan 9" this film would be the result. Hilarious all the way through as a bunch of affluent Rome layabouts encounter a catatonic spaceman who never changes his expression but does some amazing things with his finger. Also wacky are the cops in pursuit with the most prepostrous portable TV camera ever seen in a movie. Watch for the doorman who looks exactly like Larry Bud Melman
    5microx96002

    Slow cheap but not uninteresting

    Slow moving, it will probably feel more like a couple of hours than 85 minutes, but you get an android a flying saucer and a ray gun, what more could you want? Maybe for everyone to shift into 2nd gear would be nice. But if you stick with it, it's not all that bad, it's like the terminator sans the action. I've definitely seen worse B movies than this!
    4jamesrupert2014

    Plodding sci-fi espionage thriller

    A mysterious man who seems to be in multiple places at the same time is sabotaging Earth's space-programs in this low-budget and slow-moving French/Italian sci-fi thriller. Typical of '50s films, radiation serves as a preposterous plot driver - unless he is wearing gloves, the man's briefest touch causes catastrophic radiation poisoning. As revealed in the film's deceptive (Earth is never approached by a fleet of spaceships) poster, the saboteur is actually a cyborg, and the scenes in which an X-ray reveals machinery and later, when he removes some of his outer 'tissue' (a brief and blurry foreshadowing of the climactic 'from the ashes' scene in 'The Terminator' (1984)) are the film's highlights. Michel Lemoine is reasonably creepy as Bronco the cyborg - an emotionless agent who seems to have substantial sex appeal (the outcome of his liaison with infatuated Audrey (Jany Clair) is one of the film's few surprises). The film lacks the visual imagination of most contemporaneous Italian sci-fi films, and there is not much to it beyond a prolonged search for the saboteur with a few science fiction highlights towards the end. For dedicated genre fans only.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Italian censorship visa # 36481 delivered on 13-1-1962.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Les veinards (1963)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 6, 1962 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Planets Around Us
    • Filming locations
      • Roma, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Comptoir Français du Film Production (CFFP)
      • Wanguard Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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    Le monstre aux yeux verts (1962)
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