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Space Master X-7

  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 1h 11m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
529
YOUR RATING
Paul Frees, Lyn Thomas, and Bill Williams in Space Master X-7 (1958)
HorrorSci-FiThriller

A fungus brought from space threatens to grow and spread, devouring everyone in its path.A fungus brought from space threatens to grow and spread, devouring everyone in its path.A fungus brought from space threatens to grow and spread, devouring everyone in its path.

  • Director
    • Edward Bernds
  • Writers
    • George Worthing Yates
    • Daniel Mainwaring
    • Edward Bernds
  • Stars
    • Bill Williams
    • Lyn Thomas
    • Robert Ellis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    529
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edward Bernds
    • Writers
      • George Worthing Yates
      • Daniel Mainwaring
      • Edward Bernds
    • Stars
      • Bill Williams
      • Lyn Thomas
      • Robert Ellis
    • 32User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos10

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Bill Williams
    Bill Williams
    • John Hand
    Lyn Thomas
    Lyn Thomas
    • Laura Greeling
    Robert Ellis
    Robert Ellis
    • Pvt. Joe Rattigan
    Paul Frees
    Paul Frees
    • Dr. Charles T. Pommer…
    Rhoda Williams
    • Archer - Stewardess
    Joan Barry
    • Jean Meyers - Brunette
    Carol Varga
    Carol Varga
    • Elaine Frohman
    Thomas Browne Henry
    Thomas Browne Henry
    • Prof. West
    Thomas Wilde
    • Collins
    Fred Sherman
    Fred Sherman
    • Mr. Morse - Hotel Manager
    Gregg Martell
    Gregg Martell
    • Jim Dale - Plane Engineer
    Jess Kirkpatrick
    Jess Kirkpatrick
    • Vaccarino - Pilot
    Court Shepard
    • Hendry - Battalion Fire Chief
    Moe Howard
    Moe Howard
    • Retlinger - Cab Driver
    Al Baffert
    • Plane Passenger
    Edward Bernds
    • Television News Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Nesdon Booth
      • Director
        • Edward Bernds
      • Writers
        • George Worthing Yates
        • Daniel Mainwaring
        • Edward Bernds
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews32

      5.2529
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      Featured reviews

      4bkoganbing

      Why Mars is so red

      This independent cheapie released by 20th Century Fox had a potential to be a lot better than it was. Clearly also the plot was ripped off from that other 20th Century Fox film Panic In The Streets.

      Try as I might I could not get passed the fact that the military would let Dr. Paul Frees take home cultures of this fungus taken from outer space. It's a fungus that is rust colored and it is apparently what gives Mars its color. Which begs the question what in that world does it feed on.

      After a fight with his ex-wife who is visiting him on custodial issues Paul Frees is killed when that red fungus gets loose. Bill Williams and Robert Ellis representing security for the space program are on a desperate hunt for Lyn Thomas the ex-wife who they know was the last person to see Frees alive as she is unknowingly carrying the stuff.

      From that god awful premise the film does in fact become exciting and the climax on board a Honolulu bound flight over the ocean is very well staged.

      If this had been produced at a major studio like Fox and given a decent budget this might well have become a science fiction classic.
      kc5arb

      Finally found!

      I figure I saw this gem when I was about 11, back when I lived in Queens NY.

      My memories are similar to the other notations on this flic, except that I was too young to form an opinion about its artistic merits. My real memory was the term blood rust, and the memory of a scene where detectives were finding it in a boxcar. (Ok, its possible I mixed that one up with a scene from "Them". I remembered it as the b part running with This Island Earth, but it may well have been playing with the Fly, as others indicated. The long and this short of it was that this one bugged me, as I could until recently find no movies referenced to "blood Rust". None of the printed compendiums of Sci-Fi movies helped. A recent call for help on another web site finally gave me the Space Master title, which did the trick! A 45 year mystery solved!

      Now I need to find a copy!
      youroldpaljim

      Better than I expected.

      When I was kid, I used to sometimes see stills or brief mentions of this film in science fiction movie books or in the pages of "monster" magazines. But for some strange reason this film never turned up on TV, even though other science fiction offerings made by Fox from the same period often did. No one I knew had seen it except for older people who saw it when it was first released in 1958 to theaters. Having seen it recently on video, I can tell you that SPACE MASTER X 7 is no "lost" classic, but its a not bad low budget drive in feature with a slightly unusual menace and director Edward Byrnes deserves credit for trying hard to make a serious (sometimes he tries to hard) adult science fiction thriller. Done in a semi-documentary style, Byrnes sometimes slows down the films pace but overall its not a bad job.

      One area of interest to film buffs is the films casting. We have Paul ("man of a thousands voices") Frees in a surprisingly large on screen role as a "heel" scientist who accidently unleashes the "blood rust". Of course the person often mentioned in this film is Moe Howard of the Three Stooges, in a rare character part as a cab driver who helps the feds track down a woman who was exposed to the deadly alien fungus. This film was made when the stooges career was in limbo; between the time Columbia dropped the stooges because it was no longer interested in making shorts, and the time before they boys returned to the screen for feature films. Director Byrnes began his film career directing 3 Stooges shorts, and was good friends with the boys, so it was he who probably got Moe a part in the picture.
      7michael.will

      BLOOD RUST!

      Behind this bland, forgettable and indescriptive title is one of that decade's more interesting low budget items. "Blood Rust" was probably the script's original name, and this refers to the red coloring of Mars which, as is found out on the return of a space probe, is a fungal overgrowth that could easily thrive on the Earth. THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN, while not exactly a remake, shares both the panicky concept and something akin to realism in its approach. SPACE MASTER's an Edward Bernds quickie, no nonsense drive-in fare with logic secondary to pace, but there's a continual teetering on the edge of DETOUR-like brilliance that makes it, if not a classic, quite exceptional.

      The strength of writing is ever evident, as the threat to humanity theme is subverted away from the usual conquering hero routine to documentary-like police procedural, the pursuers taking on near anonymity as our attentions, and sympathies, focus on the fleeing "Typhoid Mary". She's finely played by Lyn Thomas, a mature and intelligent 50s beauty in the Jan Sterling mode. We're told just as much as we need to know about her, that she once was involved in an S&M fling (I kid you not, it's ALL THERE in 1958) with arrogant scientist Paul Frees (Richard Deacon doing Clifton Webb, and does he deliver cutting lines!) Their unholy reliance resulted in a child that she now wants back in her new life of respectability. His experiments with the alien fungus result in his hideous death and the government, knowing that she was with him at the time, has to track her down so that she won't infect the world. However, they can't throw the public into panic (cover-up stuff, another first) by saying why they've put out an all-points bulletin out on her, so she goes into hiding and flees so that she won't be framed for his murder! Now I ask you, how often do you run into plot intricacies (as opposed to absurdities) like this during your typical monster movie round-up?

      At the same time SPACE MASTER X-7 is as frustrating as it's intriguing, because get-it-out-on-schedule Bernds never quite takes that extra step ahead of his time. There's a beautiful scene involving Miss Thomas and a cop the predates PSYCHO, where you're rooting for her to get away and the world's fate be damned, and though this perversion of empathy carries on the irony of it is somehow lost in the climactic shuffle. Said climax, stunningly prepared for in both mood and pacing, aboard a threatened air liner complete with children on the threshold of death, is shied away from in terms of intensity when it could've become a Hitchockian runaway carousel. One feels, by the movie's end, that something truly magnificent just didn't quite break free from the shackles of its period's conventions.

      I think this one's ripe for a remake and hopefully by someone with brains and taste. It certainly has a plot, very friendly to updating, that doesn't sit still. One thing that gets this film footnoted out of the collective amnesia is the presence of Moe Howard as a cab driver. He's funny as can be but plays it straight, as a regular Joe who finds himself in the midst of things, and makes one wish that, like brother Shemp, he and the rest of those Stooges would've done a little more dramatic character work.
      5philipa

      Age and era make a difference

      As a child I spent the summers with my grandparents in northern New Jersey. In the summer of 1959 the parents of a friend of mine were taking him to see a movie at a drive-in and I was invited,which movie didn't matter to me, just a chance to see a movie was great. The movie was Space Master X-7 and as child of 11 it scared the heck out of me (my mental film vault still has a has a clip of the scientist being absorbed by the fungus). That was the 1950's, cold war, Castro and all, traveling to outerspace was still a dream. A child of 11 today would find the movie laughable and the effects lame, but in the dark of a summer night in 1959 the movie had its effect.

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Moe Howard: , of The Three Stooges fame, as a cab driver. Production assistant Norman Maurer was Moe's son-in-law, and director Edward Bernds was a longtime friend and had directed many Three Stooges shorts and several of their features. Moe found himself out of work after more than 25 years when Columbia Pictures closed its Shorts department with no notice early in 1958. Bernds offered Moe the cab driver part, and Moe in turn asked him to take on hire Maurer, who was trying to get a foothold in the film business. Bernds knew Maurer and considered him to be a talented artist, so he hired him as a sketch artists to help the special-effects department.
      • Goofs
        Laura moves the TV unit in the hotel room a bit when she turns it off, but the picture on the TV doesn't move at all, as it was inserted afterward.
      • Quotes

        Pvt. Joe Rattigan: [to the stewardess] Are there any other brunettes on this flight wearing tweed coarts?

      • Connections
        Featured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Space Master X-7 (1966)
      • Soundtracks
        Atomic Age
        (uncredited)

        Music by Louis De Francesco

        Sam Fox Music Library

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • April 21, 1960 (Mexico)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • X-7 rey del espacio
      • Filming locations
        • Union Station - 800 N. Alameda Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA(interiors and exteriors of station)
      • Production company
        • Regal Films
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Budget
        • $125,000 (estimated)
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 11m(71 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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