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L'homme homard venu de Mars

Original title: Lobster Man from Mars
  • 1989
  • PG
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
756
YOUR RATING
L'homme homard venu de Mars (1989)
ParodyComedyHorrorSci-Fi

A movie mogul in search of a tax shelter screens a space parody about a young woman, a mad scientist and a space monster.A movie mogul in search of a tax shelter screens a space parody about a young woman, a mad scientist and a space monster.A movie mogul in search of a tax shelter screens a space parody about a young woman, a mad scientist and a space monster.

  • Director
    • Stanley Sheff
  • Writers
    • Bob Greenberg
    • Stanley Sheff
    • Tommy Sledge
  • Stars
    • Deborah Foreman
    • S.D. Nemeth
    • Anthony Hickox
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    756
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stanley Sheff
    • Writers
      • Bob Greenberg
      • Stanley Sheff
      • Tommy Sledge
    • Stars
      • Deborah Foreman
      • S.D. Nemeth
      • Anthony Hickox
    • 18User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos15

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Deborah Foreman
    Deborah Foreman
    • Mary
    S.D. Nemeth
    S.D. Nemeth
    • The Dreaded Lobster Man
    Anthony Hickox
    Anthony Hickox
    • John
    Dean Jacobson
    • Stevie Horowitz
    Tony Curtis
    Tony Curtis
    • J.P. Shelldrake
    Mindy Kennedy
    • Tammy
    Phil Proctor
    Phil Proctor
    • Lou
    Tim Haldeman
    Tim Haldeman
    • Marvin
    Barry Hansen
    Barry Hansen
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    • (as Dr. Demento)
    Bobby Pickett
    Bobby Pickett
    • The Astrologer…
    Richard 'Dub' Wright
    • The Bearded Slave
    • (as Richard Wright)
    Ava Fabian
    Ava Fabian
    • The Queen of Mars
    Sage Whitfield
    • Beautiful Martian Maiden
    Erica Evans
    • Beautiful Martian Maiden
    Robert Breeze
    • Another Slave
    Stanley Sheff
    Stanley Sheff
    • Brainex
    • (as Itself)
    Tommy Sledge
    • Detective…
    Jim Bentley
    Jim Bentley
    • Rufus
    • Director
      • Stanley Sheff
    • Writers
      • Bob Greenberg
      • Stanley Sheff
      • Tommy Sledge
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.3756
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9markus-178

    brilliantly bad

    i just bought this movie for 2bucks thinking that it will surely be worth it's cost... and i was so right!! i saw it with a friend of mine and we just loved it's (mostly intended) badness. There are movies that are just bad and then there are these flicks that are so freaking' bad that they are really entertaining. the movie made me really laugh hard a couple of times and Tony Curtis just rocked being this bad producer. the day after i watched it i immediately wanted to watch it again.. and if that's not positive about a film.. for a movie as "b" as one movie could be, the cast isn't that bad: Tony Curtis and Patrick McNee are two stars of the 80ies, starring here and they do a good job (being bad). the story is really strange: i mean a lobster man and his adjutant, an ape with a spacehelmet, stealing earth's air for the mars is not a common thing in Hollywood. the characters are all very funny and the story is except for some lengths in the middle very amusing.. i'll give it an 9 out of 10
    7banguimikey

    Goofy, funny in spots. Worth a watch

    I started this thinking it would be a 1950s "man in a suit" horror movie. I failed to notice the creation date. But, it's running now, so why not. There are many little points where you will find something interesting. The reporter who does Rod Serling's voice is spot on. You have to watch every second. Something will happen.

    It is not hilarious. It is subtle, for the most part. There are some "huh?" moments, too. Where 1 + 1 does not add up to 2. They are surely intentional. But sometimes the total is 115 and you just look in disbelief.

    It is meant to be a spoof and it succeeds.

    The scene where they say "It's really dark in that cave" then walk right in, then the guy leaves the girl inside the cave and goes out for his camera is a hoot. Right out of the 1950s.

    Enjoy the schlock! The whole thing is stupid and enjoyable. No spoilers here. I don't know the ending yet. Probably absurd just like the rest of this movie. Will see, soon.
    aimless-46

    Unfortunately It Is Not Bad Enough to be Good

    So what have we got here with this "Lobster Man From Mars" (1989) movie? Think "The Producers" (1968) meets "Plan 9 From Outer Space" (1959). If you don't get parody you should give this one a wide berth. If you want really "clever" parody you should probably skip it as well. If you thought Buster Crabbe's Flash Gordon stuff was fun because it was so "unintentionally" hokey you might want to go into avoidance mode along with the others.

    The hokey elements in "Lobster Man From Mars" are anything but unintentional, it wants your attention like a one-trick pony mad for a carrot. This lack of subtlety would pretty much doom the thing had it not already expired from a case of terminally lame screen writing.

    The root of the problem is that they were given too much money to make this thing. Much like the fake disaster movie playing in the background of "Drive-In", it utilizes a film within a film device; only this time a Hollywood executive is screening what is supposed to be a bad "student" film. The saving grace of bad student films is their unity of weak writing, poor production values, and unpolished acting. But the student film being viewed in "Lobster Man From Mars" has some recognizable cast members and enough money for semi- authentic production design; which does not work to its benefit.

    Here's the premise: a Hollywood studio needs a really bad film to use as a tax write-off. They screen a high school kid's science fiction film, which while really bad would be another "Citizen Kane" compared to any bad student film. In the film within the film, Mars is running out of air and sends the "dreaded" Lobster Man to earth where he and a hairy sidekick begin randomly zapping people with a ray gun. The too competent cast includes Patrick Macnee (playing a British scientist) and Deborah Foreman looking (as the film moves along) like she is gradually deciding in favor of retiring from acting (which she actually did-was it coincidence or was her decision made midway through the production of this turkey?).

    The problem is that there is very little in the movie that is particularly funny, intentional or unintentional. The only bit that works repeatedly involves the zany space bats who fly around cackling manically. And there is one good line by Tommy Sledge, as a film noir parody private detective who inspects the giant lobster tracks leading away from the site of an explosion and then says: "It means that either he escaped, or he walked backwards from the horizon to commit suicide in this bonfire".

    If you want to see this stuff done right, cleverly written and with a student film level of production design, check out Larry Blamire's "The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra" (2001). 90 minutes of inspired spoofing.

    Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
    10max-140

    Mars is running out of air...

    Voracious flesh eaters from Mars invade the Earth! A very funny bad movie made for the cost of coffee and donuts on any of today's blockbuster epics. The film's star Tony Curtis puts this picture right up there with "Some Like It Hot" and "Spartacus" - he says so right there on the DVD edition this movie.

    If you are a fan of trashy science fiction, you will most certainly enjoy this humorous spoof of such classics as "Invaders from Mars", "Night of the Ghouls" and "Teenagers from Outer Space".

    It can all be summed up in this typical line of dialogue spoken by Professor Plocostomos (Patrick Macnee)... "If you were a Lobster Man, would you enter a haunted house surrounded by artillery?"

    Well, would you?
    youroldpaljim

    Enjoyable spoof.

    A film within a film; a producer needing a tax write-off agrees to screen and buy the rights to a student film called LOBSTER MAN FROM MARS. Most the of the film spent viewing the film which about an alien lobster man wrecking havoc on Earth. The producer finds the film so shoddy that he agrees to buy it in order to lose money so he doesn't owe the IRS so much money. The film is obviously inspired by the producers. The film is loaded with many jokes that only buffs of horror and science fiction films would get. For example: the colonel is named "Ankrum", after Morris Ankrum who played military men and other authority figures in dozens of 1950's science fiction and horror films. The film is loaded with gags like these that most viewers probably would not get. I would mention any more as I would not want to spoil it for people who are in the know.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In his autobiography, Tony Curtis says that he worked on the movie because they paid him $100,000, and he needed to make child support payments. He also mentions that during the production, he never saw the scenes of the movie that his character was reacting to.
    • Quotes

      Professor Plocostomos: If you were a lobster man, would you go into a haunted house surrounded by hot springs?

    • Crazy credits
      No lobsters were harmed during this production, only eaten.
    • Connections
      Featured in Waxwork 2: Perdus dans le temps (1992)
    • Soundtracks
      Rock Lobster
      Written by Kate Pierson (uncredited), Fred Schneider, Keith Strickland (uncredited), Cindy Wilson (uncredited) / Ricky Wilson

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 29, 1989 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Lobster Man From Mars Official Headquarters
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lobster Man from Mars
    • Filming locations
      • Malibu Creek State Park - 1925 Las Virgenes Road, Calabasas, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Electric Pictures
      • Filmrullen
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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