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Planète terre

Original title: Planet Earth
  • TV Movie
  • 1974
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 14m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
964
YOUR RATING
Planète terre (1974)
DramaSci-FiThriller

A 20th Century man wakes up in 2133, where men are slaves and women rule.A 20th Century man wakes up in 2133, where men are slaves and women rule.A 20th Century man wakes up in 2133, where men are slaves and women rule.

  • Director
    • Marc Daniels
  • Writers
    • Gene Roddenberry
    • Juanita Bartlett
  • Stars
    • John Saxon
    • Janet Margolin
    • Ted Cassidy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    964
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marc Daniels
    • Writers
      • Gene Roddenberry
      • Juanita Bartlett
    • Stars
      • John Saxon
      • Janet Margolin
      • Ted Cassidy
    • 18User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos33

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    John Saxon
    John Saxon
    • Dylan Hunt
    Janet Margolin
    Janet Margolin
    • Harper-Smythe
    Ted Cassidy
    Ted Cassidy
    • Isiah
    Christopher Cary
    Christopher Cary
    • Baylok
    Diana Muldaur
    Diana Muldaur
    • Marg
    Sally Kemp
    Sally Kemp
    • Treece
    Jo de Winter
    Jo de Winter
    • Villar
    • (as Johana De Winter)
    Claire Brennen
    • Delba
    Corinne Camacho
    Corinne Camacho
    • Bronta
    • (as Corrine Camacho)
    Majel Barrett
    Majel Barrett
    • Yuloff
    Jim Antonio
    Jim Antonio
    • Jonathan Connor
    Aron Kincaid
    Aron Kincaid
    • Gorda
    John Quade
    John Quade
    • Kreeg Commandant
    Rai Tasco
    • Pater Kimbridge
    Sue Dahlman
    Sue Dahlman
    • Thetis
    • (as Sara Chattin)
    Lew Brown
    Lew Brown
    • Merlo
    Robert Sutton
    Robert Sutton
    • Kreeg Captain
    • (as Raymond Sutton)
    Joan Crosby
    Joan Crosby
    • Kyla
    • Director
      • Marc Daniels
    • Writers
      • Gene Roddenberry
      • Juanita Bartlett
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.7964
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    Featured reviews

    stephe1605

    fun Planet Earth facts

    Apparently, networks at the time were only comfortable with one sci-fi series at a time.

    CBS picked "Planet of the Apes" over Genesis II, and ABC picked "Six Million Dollar Man" over Planet Earth.

    The main character in each was Dylan Hunt, though they were played by different actors. This is interesting because when Roddenberry made the second Star Trek pilot, he gave the new lead actor a new name. (Capt. Pike became Capt. Kirk)

    The name Dylan Hunt would be used in Andromeda, which was an outer space version of Planet Earth, which in turn was a land-based version of Star Trek.

    The script for Star Trek: The Motion Picture was based on an unused Planet Earth script. In fact, several of the first season episodes of ST: TNG were written for either the unrealized new Star Trek series in the 70s, or Planet Earth,

    Roddenberry believed in recycling.
    TheTransfan

    If it's from Roddenberry, it's GOTTA be good!

    This movie was pretty awesome, with great acting(especially by Ted Cassidy and Diana Muldaur), decent special effects, and a good story. Star Trek's Gene Roddenberry, his friend Robert H. Justman, and Star Trek legend director Marc Daniels wove this tv-movie really well. It's available for rent and if you are a sci-fi fan, rent this. I guarantee you you'll like it!
    8planktonrules

    I liked this TV pilot though most of America didn't

    This was a second TV pilot for a proposed sci-fi series by Gene Roddenberry. The first, Earth II, starred Alex Cord. This time, things are almost the same, though John Saxon plays the lead. Saxon's characterization is less serious than Cord's and seems to be very much like Captain Kirk placed in an alternate version of Earth.

    The plot involves a group from PAX (a group of goody-goodies who are a lot like a planet-bound Federation--they try to make sure the world runs in peace and try to interfere in other cultures only when it's necessary). They are looking for an important scientist who disappeared in an amazon-like culture. It's up to Saxon and the others to infiltrate and return him before it's too late.

    FYI--Another team member is played by Ted Cassidy (Lurch the Butler from the Addams Family). I would have loved to see him return to a weekly series, though he died just a few years after this pilot was completed (died on the operating table while undergoing heart surgery).
    6Hey_Sweden

    Amusing entertainment for sci-fi junkies.

    Yet another of Gene Roddenberry's post-'Star Trek' attempts at a series, 'Planet Earth' is generally agreeable entertainment, although nothing special. It gets most of its juice from its digs at sexual politics. Obviously low-budget, it doesn't feature much in the way of futuristic environments, or costumes, or special effects. It is definitely fun in a cheesy, well-meaning sort of way, and it does NOT skimp on sex appeal, with appropriate eye candy for men and women alike.

    The almighty John Saxon stars as Dylan Hunt, a man who went into suspended animation in 1979, and was awakened in the 22nd century. Now, a post-"conflict" Earth is divided into societies both advanced and primitive. One such society is matriarchal in nature, with all the males kept drugged up and submissive. The virile, studly Hunt is considered good breeding stock by these women. One lady in particular, Marg (Diana Muldaur, who went on to a role on 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' the following decade), is especially taken with Hunt.

    A rich cast of familiar faces (Janet Margolin, Ted Cassidy, Christopher Cary, Majel Barrett, Jim Antonio, John Quade) helps to make this easy enough to watch, even though it's just as easy to forget. One good thing about TV movies from this era is their brief running times, so there's less chance of them wearing out their welcome. 'Planet Earth' is adequately paced, but its real strongest suit is its sense of humour. As I already said, some of the cast members are very attractive, so that helps as well; Muldaur is quite striking as the leader of these women.

    One thing this viewer liked was the idea that all major population centres on Earth are connected by these underground tunnels, through which Hunt and others travel as if they were subways.

    Six out of 10.
    7silverscreen888

    Humorous and Interesting Sci-Effort; Women's Lib Run Wild

    This is a tough-minded and quite intelligent script, by Juanita Bartlett and Gene Roddenberry. It is, as those who have seen "Genesis II" and an inferior sequel know, the second attempt to create a pilot film that would sell as a television series. It might be instructive I suggest to study the primary changes made from the first to the second attempt; this one was written not as an original concept but from a story treatment called "Poodle Shop" that was one of more than a dozen developed by Gene Roddenberry, when he had hoped "Genesis II" might be picked up by a network's 'tsars' under its unarguably better title. First, we have John Saxon a suspended-in-cryogenics 20th century scientist Dlan Hunt instead of Alex Cord, an improvement in accent and general acting. Second, we start with Hunt in the 22nd century, not in his own time. Third, he is here a member of a Pax City team, one of many that comb the world from their southwestern location in North America discovering what changes a 150-plus year period has made after a devastating nuclear conflict altered the lives of the planet's peoples. Ecologically, the world has been given a second chance; but there are strange peoples, tribes and cities everywhere. Fourth, he is accepting from the beginning the idea championed by Pax not to use force for its ends, a notion which he did not buy in the first script. And fifth, the aristocratic aliens of the city of Tyrania have been replaced as villains in this feature by Kriegs, aliens with a raised skull ridge whose mutation leads them to be warlike, not very bright and just smart enough to run wood-burning war-vehicles, cars kept running somehow, for their purposes of enslaving everyone they meet. The story-line involves Pater (formerly "Primus" in the first film) Kimbridge being grievously injured during a Krieg attack away from Pax. The Team tries to get him away by diverting the Kriegs, but by the time they get him into sub-shuttle tunnels and back to Pax, he is beyond all but the best medical help. Since he is Pax's leader, Hunt takes the team, consisting of a giant white Indian, a skinny blond cockney and a young female unisex worshiper of St. Freud in search of the doctor they need, who had been reported lost a long while ago in a nearby territory. They know only that it is a zone ruled by a matriarchy, so they plan to try to penetrate it several ways. Harper-Smythe, played by Janet Margolin plays her role by ear, asking to join the group and having to fight to defeat a challenger. Having done so, she is warmly welcomed into a home, where she finds men are slave-servants, kept in check emotionally by a special gruel that saps resolve when they ingest it. Hunt tries his own entry and with his men he is captured and tossed into a pen with other slaves, bossed over by lovely Johana De Winter as Villar. He is vended to Marg, the best warrior of the Confederacy of Ruth; and all the women slave-owners can talk about is that there is too-much resolve being removed from their males, "dinks", since no babies are being born. Hunt is fed the gruel and gets frightened; but he fights it with better results than others have, and learning what it is, he avoids a second dose. He also finds the missing doctor. He plays on Marg's pride by telling her of his fantastic prowess as a lover; angrily, she lets him come to her and show her his method--it is booze. They get closer and closer to the right moment of "balance", and when he is inebriated and ready--she has fallen asleep entirely. The next day, Harper-Smythe challenges Marg for her "dink", her slave, and defeats her. It is soon after that the Kriegs attack; Hunt and his team, the others also captured, fight, with Harper-Smythe's help. even the male slaves joining in. The old way it now seems will be altered in the Confederacy; and Marg invites Hunt to visit any time and finish the experiment. "On balanced terms?" he asks. "On any terms", she adds. Then they have rescued their medical man, so they take him back to Pax City. Will they be in time to save the Pater? There is little music, but what there is is good. The film was decently directed by Marc Daniels, who is better with actors than camera angles, a veteran of "Star Trek" assignments. Costumes were provided as in the first pilot by "Star Trek" costumer William Ware Theiss and they are very imaginative indeed. The very fine alien set decorations were the work of Edward Baer. Among the cast, Jo De Winter is superb, and Diana Muldaur very good as the fiery Marg. Others in the mix include Ted Cassidy as Isiah the white Indian, Christopher Cary as the new team member, Baylok, Sally Kemp as Treece, Harper-Smythe's hostess, Claire Brennan, Corinne Camacho, Majel Barrett as the new Pax Security Chief and Aron Kincaid and Jim Antonio in support. This is an interesting, often thoughtful attempt I assert to make a feature-length film of an intended series episode. The color in the effort is pretty, but perhaps it belonged in B/W as a drama; however, the unusual use of comedy in the sexually-charged portions works rather well because it is kept satirical. "Women's lib--or women's lib gone mad?" Hunt asks at one point. This entertaining and well-mounted story does a good job of presenting the women's reasons for suppressing males--who had all-but-destroyed the Earth with their wars. Their way, historically, seemed to be better; but as Hunt reminded the Confederacy's members, there are other ways to rule men than by drugging their food, for a real woman.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The outdoor scenes were filmed at The University of California, Riverside due to the many "futuristic" architectural features.
    • Connections
      Follows Genesis II (1973)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 23, 1974 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Planet Earth
    • Filming locations
      • University of California, Irvine, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros. Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 14m(74 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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