When an alien artifact discovered on Earth is found to have come from Venus, an international team of astronauts embarks to investigate its origins.When an alien artifact discovered on Earth is found to have come from Venus, an international team of astronauts embarks to investigate its origins.When an alien artifact discovered on Earth is found to have come from Venus, an international team of astronauts embarks to investigate its origins.
- Die japanische Ärztin
- (as Yoko Tani)
- …
- Sowjetischer Astronaut
- (as Michail N. Postnikow)
- …
- Chinesischer Linguist
- (as Tang Hua-Ta)
- …
- Fernsehreporterin
- (as Lucina Winnicka)
- …
- Bit Part
- (uncredited)
- Bit Part
- (uncredited)
- Bit Part
- (uncredited)
- Bit part
- (uncredited)
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
- Brinkmanns Mutter
- (uncredited)
- Bit Part
- (uncredited)
- Bit Part
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
When the expedition arrives on Venus they find a dead world whose civilization has been destroyed by some kind catastrophe. The story contains good ideas, but the plot seems to race along with no regard for dramatic timing or narrative clarity, undoubtedly because of the thirty minutes of footage which were removed from the American version. The obvious dubbing is a major distraction, and the sound effects are garish and unappealing. For some reason, there are very few shots of the rocket traveling through space during the voyage. Generally speaking, the special effects run hot and cold.
The spaceship itself, however, is a beauty (both the interior and exterior), rivaling the best rockets for the 1950s. The little robot is memorable and well designed (it looks like a miniature tank).
The exterior shots of the strange Venusian surface are imaginative, with superimposed wisps of vapor constantly drifting past. Listen for several segments of music borrowed from "Destination Moon" and "This Island Earth".
Excavators at the site of the 1906 mystery explosion in Tunguska, Siberia, discover evidence that the explosion was the destruction of an alien spaceship. Evidence includes a "memory spool." Scientist determine the alien spaceship came from the planet Venus, and cryptographers and linguists begin to translate the memory spool.
Before translation can be completed, an international crew is assembled and an enormous nuclear powered spaceship constructed (a stunningly beautiful piece of matte work) for a flight to Venus. The ship begins its voyage before the on-board linguist makes a startling announcement. The memory spool contains plans for a Venusian invasion of earth!
The ship lands on a eerie, vapor-cloaked Venus (Striking art direction; just how did they do those strange, microbe-like vapors?). The crew discovers, a burned out, uninhabitable planet. The Venusians, apparently attempting an invasion to escape either overcrowding or an impending nuclear war, have destroyed themselves, leaving only the shadows of their disintegrated bodies. Further exploration discovers a strange, living amoeba-like organism and a damaged, super-gravity beam weapon aimed toward earth. Many members of the crew are lost, and the ship is eventually deflected back to earth by the accidental discharge of the gravity beam.
The movie IS choppy, without a doubt because the American distributor, Crown International, cut the film by over one half hour. I'd certainly LOVE to see the excised footage; however, since the film is East German, I doubt if a complete print still exists. Besides, we Americans are having enough trouble finding obscure fifties and sixties from ENGLISH-speaking countries, including our own.
As regards ideology, one can't make out more than a slightly pathetic call for peace in the world (which is perfectly agreeable, really) and a casual remark on how well Soviet astronomy is developed. The crew of the spaceship, though, includes an American and a Japanese as well, so it is openly international.
The moment the spacecraft starts, however, the science-fiction story stands in the foreground. It was written by Stanislaw Lem and is therefore quite interesting, shocking and full of suspense - another aspect I wouldn't have expected to get in a film like that. Of course, the acting is stiff, dialogues are reduced to a necessary minimum and the romantic element in the plot is too weak to be convincing. Probably, the screenwriters have removed most of the depth of Lem's original novel. Nevertheless, the whole film manages to evoke Kubrickesque feelings at times (note that it was made before 2001: A Space Odyssey!) and serves as an interesting historical document but also as good sci-fi fun on a Sunday afternoon.
Did you know
- TriviaIn the US, this was distributed in an edited and English- dubbed version as "First Spaceship on Venus" through Crown International. It was at the top of a prepackaged double feature with Varan the Unbelievable (1962). It became Crown's most successful double feature since, unlike other Crown releases, it was booked into many theaters as well as drive-ins.
- GoofsThe narrator mentions that one of the crew has created a special food formula for the crew to be able to consume and digest in zero gravity, yet everyone is walking around as if on planet Earth. This is not a goof, since (at least in the original German version) after a time spent in zero gravity, they show the crew activating an artificial gravity field, which allows them to walk around as if they were on Earth.
- Quotes
Intervision-Reporter Jeanne Moreau: Scientists, mathematicians and astrophysicists; seven men and
[pause]
Intervision-Reporter Jeanne Moreau: and a -
[emphasis]
Intervision-Reporter Jeanne Moreau: WOMAN.
Deutscher Pilot: [Running up to her] Sumiko!
Die japanische Ärztin: [Surprised to see - even though both on same rocket project] Brinkmann! Have I changed that much?
Deutscher Pilot: Well, I
[pause]
Deutscher Pilot: I don't know. I got it, your hair used to hang down to your waist.
- Alternate versionsThis film was released in the United States as _First Spaceship on Venus (1962)_. This version was edited down to 80 minutes, dubbed into English, and had Andrzej Markowski's score replaced by a stock score prepared by Gordon Zahler of the General Music Corporation.
- ConnectionsEdited into Tela Class: Uma Odisseia Brazuca (2008)
- How long is First Spaceship on Venus?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Un viaje a Venus
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1