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La Mort vient de la planète Aytin

Original title: La morte viene dal pianeta Aytin
  • 1967
  • G
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
3.6/10
736
YOUR RATING
La Mort vient de la planète Aytin (1967)
A weather station in the Himalayas is destroyed and Gamma I commander Rod Jackson and his partner, Frank Pulasky are sent to investigate. They are captured by the Aytia, who have established this relay station on Earth to aid in their plan to create a vast ice plane so their race can leave their doomed solar system and conquer the Earth.
Play trailer3:15
1 Video
9 Photos
DramaSci-Fi

A Himalaya weather station is destroyed. Commander Rod Jackson and his party are sent to investigate and are captured by the Aytia, a race of giants. The means to defeat them lead Jackson st... Read allA Himalaya weather station is destroyed. Commander Rod Jackson and his party are sent to investigate and are captured by the Aytia, a race of giants. The means to defeat them lead Jackson straight to the Jupiter moon Callisto itself.A Himalaya weather station is destroyed. Commander Rod Jackson and his party are sent to investigate and are captured by the Aytia, a race of giants. The means to defeat them lead Jackson straight to the Jupiter moon Callisto itself.

  • Director
    • Antonio Margheriti
  • Writers
    • Charles Sinclair
    • Bill Finger
    • Ivan Reiner
  • Stars
    • Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    • Ombretta Colli
    • Renato Baldini
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.6/10
    736
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Antonio Margheriti
    • Writers
      • Charles Sinclair
      • Bill Finger
      • Ivan Reiner
    • Stars
      • Giacomo Rossi Stuart
      • Ombretta Colli
      • Renato Baldini
    • 15User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:15
    Trailer

    Photos8

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    Top cast24

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    Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    Giacomo Rossi Stuart
    • Cmdr. Rod Jackson
    • (as Jack Stuart)
    Ombretta Colli
    Ombretta Colli
    • Lisa Nielson
    • (as Amber Collins)
    Renato Baldini
    Renato Baldini
    • Lt. Jim Harris
    • (as Rene Baldwin)
    Wilbert Bradley
    • Sharu
    Halina Zalewska
    Halina Zalewska
    • Lt. Teri Sanchez
    Enzo Fiermonte
    Enzo Fiermonte
    • General Norton
    Furio Meniconi
    Furio Meniconi
    • Igrun
    Goffredo Unger
    Goffredo Unger
    • Capt. Frank Pulasky
    • (as Freddy Unger)
    Isarco Ravaioli
    • Norton's Communications Technician
    Renato Montalbano
    Renato Montalbano
    • Control Room Technician
    Piero Pastore
    • Older Officer
    Giuliano Raffaelli
    Giuliano Raffaelli
    • Snow Devil
    Franco Ressel
    Franco Ressel
    Nino Vingelli
    Nino Vingelli
    • Peter the Waiter
    Fortunato Arena
    • Snow Devil
    • (uncredited)
    John Bartha
    John Bartha
    • Dr. Schmidt
    • (uncredited)
    Aldo Canti
    Aldo Canti
    • Judo Trainee
    • (uncredited)
    Nestore Cavaricci
    • Spaceman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Antonio Margheriti
    • Writers
      • Charles Sinclair
      • Bill Finger
      • Ivan Reiner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    3.6736
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    Featured reviews

    4graduatedan

    Slowly paced and cheaply made but not without merit.

    The Snow Devils is set in the same universe as War of the planets and Wild Wild Planet, but unlike those films, the action takes place largely on Earth. It seems that someone or something is affecting Earth's weather and not in a good way. The intrepid members of the gamma space station set out to find out what's going on. Even for the mid 60s, the special effects in this film are, well, let's say watery. The story is knuckleheaded, but rather fun and there's that killer music score, which probably deserved a better home in another movie. Still, for kids in the 60s, this kind of film was catnip. If you can get in touch with your ten year old self, or are a fan of b movies, you will enjoy 80 or so minutes of silly fun.
    Dethcharm

    This Is Why Cinema Exists...

    In SNOW DEVILS, havoc strikes in the Arctic, and climate change ensues. This has to do with Yeti whom are actually hairy-armed aliens wearing Bigfoot boots.

    Apparently, our planet is doomed.

    Enter Commander Jackson (Giacomo Rossi Stuart), a man with the most glorious pompadour on any human head. Ever! Jackson is dispatched to engage the aliens on their home turf. He's humanity's only hope.

    This movie contains: Absurd action! Ridiculous romance! Dizzyingly dumb dialogue! Catastrophic costumes!

    The "special" effects pretty much boil down to miniature displays on someone's billiard table, and outer space models with absolutely no effort made to make them appear even remotely realistic. In other words, this is a must-see for the true schlock enthusiast. So, if you're a connoisseur of crap, this is your BEN HUR!

    An astonishing achievment...
    7Steve_Nyland

    The Last of the Gamma One Quartet

    Antonio Margheriti's THE SNOW DEVILS was probably the first of his GAMMA ONE films to be made though the last released in English and remains the most unique of the four movies ... though it may not necessarily be the most impressive of the efforts. My favorite is PLANET ON THE PROWL (or WAR BETWEEN THE PLANETS), with its emphasis on military jargon and space action. SNOW DEVILS is for the most part an Earth-bound adventure but is another example of Margheriti's fascination with hostilities existing not so much between the races inhabiting the cosmos, but battles between the actual stellar bodies themselves.

    Some of the GAMMA ONE films are amongst the best pre-"2001: A Space Odyssey" science fiction from the 1960s but all are essentially potboilers with ready-made elements that are reused from film to film in the same way that Spaghetti Westerns were made. In spite of the release dates assigned by the IMDb (no offense!) the films were all made *simultaneously* in 1964 using the same sets, stock casts, musical cues, technical crew and basic story premise ideas. This has resulted in some confusion not only of the dates of execution/release, but in precisely which order they should be viewed when considered as a "series". After all, any story arc needs a beginning and an ending, you can't have four narrative arcs in a single story line existing simultaneously simply because it's impractical to watch four movies at the same time. You'd need four TV sets either stacked up 2 on top of each other or arranged around you in a square, with the viewer seated in a revolving chair. The question would then be which screen do you look at for any given moment? Which aptly illustrates the absurdity of the idea.

    So where in the series do you start? My answer is with THE SNOW DEVILS, since it is the most unique of the four examples that exist in English (the other three being PLANET ON THE PROWL, WILD WILD PLANET and THE DEADLY DIAFONOIDS, amongst other alternate titles for each of them). My thesis on why begins with the look of the film: It does not have the polished sheen of the other three films and is literally the most "down to earth" and thusly lowest budgeted of the three. It's musical score by Angelo Francesco Lavagnino (who provided the scores for all four films) is the most unique & memorable: The scores for the other three films are more interchangeable and in fact recycled from movie to movie, though the energetic theme for SNOW DEVILS is only heard in SNOW DEVILS. We never hear that memorable refrain again in any of the three other movies, though some of the more incidental musical fills do pop up again (as well as the proto-Loungey pop song used during a lighter moment at a summer resort during the beginning of the film).

    The space technology props are also more spare & "klunky" looking, picking up what may have been left over from 1962's BATTLE OF THE WORLDS and suggesting that Margheriti's skills in production design evolved as the series progressed (with PLANET ON THE PROWL being the most "realistic" looking, the goofy spacewalk scenes notwithstanding). SNOW DEVILS also has somewhat different costuming than the later efforts, suggesting to me at least that Margheriti's wardrobe department copped whatever pre-existing costumes they could get their hands on that looked futuristic, resulting in a kind of mismatched hodgepodge where the other three films are more unified in how the characters dressed. Star Giacomo Rossi Stuart's hair also changes between SNOW DEVILS and PLANET ON THE PROWL (he does not appear in the other 2 films). Here he is more of a coiffed blond though by PROWL it got darker & redder and had a more military look to the styling. Here he looks like he just wandered onto the set from romantic comedy where his hair was dyed blond. His Commander Rod Jackson is also somewhat less gruff & formal than in PROWL, where his barking of orders & dressing down of pretty female subordinate officers is one of the film's guilty pleasures. Jack Stuart would have made a fantastic air force officer.

    One other aspect of the film that suggests to me that it was the first one executed is that of all the four GAMMA ONE movies, this is the one to which time has been the least kind. The Snow Devil monsters themselves come off as somewhat less than intimidating, the set design has more in common with classic Flash Gordon than Stanley Kubrick, and the emphasis on Earth bound set & location work makes the film feel more like a throwback to the 1950s than a vision of things to come. But since there is no specific documentation of just which order Margheriti himself had in mind when making them any such conjecture is mere speculation. I've asked his son, producer/director Edoardo Margheriti, for advice on this and his own reply was somewhat ambiguous, confirming that all four were made at the same time but that there is no specific order in which they are to be viewed since they all had different release dates in different regions or as different language versions. Just because this one was released later than the others does not mean it was finished last, nor does this mean that the others were completed after it. And since they were essentially disposable B-grade movies usually shown on a double bill with something else like it the release schedule was arbitrary based on the needs of the distributors.

    Confused? GOOD. I have been puzzling over this conundrum of which order in which to view the GAMMA ONE films for about four years now and am delighted to pass the brain-twister on. Figure this one out with a formula proof to back it up and I will buy you an orange.

    7/10.
    3SnoopyStyle

    bad spaghetti sci-fi

    There is a mysterious warming of the ice cap. An outpost in the Himalayas is attacked by unknown forces. An expedition is sent to investigate. There is also a local legend of the abominable snowman. There is a truth to that legend but it lies in outer space.

    This is bad futurism, bad sci-fi, and bad Italian B-movie. It is campy and that is a little fun. It is interesting to see bad futurism out of 60's Italy. Otherwise, it's a lot of bad.
    4planktonrules

    A 'Spaghetti Sci-Fi' film....and some big, mean Smurfs!

    Although Italy was known for sword and sandal films (such as the Hercules and Machiste pictures) and the so-called spaghetti westerns in the 1960s, the country made many other types of movies...including some sci-fi. "La Morte Viene dal Pianeta Aytin" ("Snow Devils") is one of quite a few sci-fi movies that were dubbed into English and marketed in the States. While the film would look like absolute garbage when "2001: A Space Odyssey" debuted just a year later, for 1967 the effects are actually generally pretty good...at least when they weren't using cheap and fuzzy stock footage here and there during the story.

    When the picture begins, the temperatures around the planet are on the rise and snow is melting everywhere. An expedition in the Himalayas stumbles into the cause...some aliens who have been there for 100 years waiting to unleash their plan. What is the plan of these big, furry blue aliens? To flood the Earth and then quickly freeze it to turn the planet into a giant glacier, as that's the sort of temperatures these aliens like. And, since they also plan on taking over the planet, who cares what happens to the humans?! Can our intrepid heroes defeat the aliens at this base? And, if they do, will it stop the climactic problems...or is there another battle looming in the near future?

    The film is modestly entertaining albeit a bit silly here and there. But for a 1960s sci-fi movie, it's actually reasonably good. Too bad the magnificent special effects with "2001" would soon make these Italian exports look mega-crappy in comparison.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      William Finger is credited as one of three screenplay writers of THE SNOW DEVILS. As "Bill" Finger he is also credited as the co-creator of the iconic comic book character BATMAN (with Bob Kane).
    • Goofs
      The jet Commander Jackson flies off in at first when recalled from vacation appears to be a B-52, with dual engine pods at each of the four wing stations, for a total of eight engines. This is obvious in the view from below as the jet takes off billowing black exhaust. A short time later, the jet is shown from above as it's flying and it's a delta-wing four-engine jet, with the two inboard engine on each side of the cockpit clearly single engines and not double engine pods.
    • Connections
      Featured in Chiller Theatre: Snow Devils (1974)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 18, 1967 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Snow Devils
    • Filming locations
      • E.U.R., Rome, Lazio, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Mercury Film International
      • Southern Cross Feature Film Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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