The Angry Red Planet


1h 23m 1960

Brief Synopsis

A rocket ship returns from Mars. Contact was lost since the ship arrived on Mars. Now the crew does not answer any radio messages from mission control. The people from mission control try to land the rocket ship by remote control and investigate what happened on Mars.

Film Details

Also Known As
Invasion of Mars
Release Date
Jan 1960
Premiere Information
Los Angeles premiere: 23 Nov 1959; Los Angeles opening: 24 Nov 1959; New York opening: 4 May 1960
Production Company
Sino Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
American International Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 23m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color

Synopsis

Months after the experimental rocket ship MR-1 seems to have perished during its mission to Mars, signals are received from space, indicating that someone on the four-person crew may still be alive. Concerned for the safety of any survivors, and worried about possible radiation, Maj. Gen. George Treegar devises a cautious plan to bring MR-1 back to Earth. When the ship lands in the Nevada desert, the military personnel approach in protective suits until the sole woman on the MR-1 mission, Dr. Iris Ryan, opens the hatch. Although in shock, Iris guides medical personnel into the ship. They quickly leave, bearing a stretcher with a gravely ill man, the only other survivor of the mission, who has a hideous, gelatinous green growth on his arm. Later, at the Norwood Air Force Hospital, an exhausted Iris tells Dr. Frank Gordon and Treeger that she does not remember what happened. Hoping that by reliving the entire flight, she will be able to tell him more about the growth, which Gordon fears might prove dangerous to everyone on Earth, he asks her to recount everything, from the beginning: Days after MR-1's launch, Iris and the other three members of the mission, Col. Tom O'Banion, Prof. Theodore Gettell and Chief Warrant Officer Sam Jacobs, are happy that the flight has been so smooth and easily joke with one another about life in the rocket ship. Tom and Iris, who are attracted to each other, flirt, although each thinks that the other is not serious. The long flight is routine, and communications with Earth are uninterrupted, but Gettell worries about exterior radiation and other potential hazards of the mission. As the weeks pass, Sam reads comic books about Mars and wonders when he will ever get to see the next issue, while Tom continues to flirt with Iris and Iris wonders whether or not space exploration is a good idea. On the 47th day of the mission, when the ship finally lands on Mars, they are eager for the new experience, but concerned because they cannot observe any movement through their observation window. Suddenly, Iris sees a huge creature and screams. In her hospital bed, Iris now screams at the memory and cannot go on with her recollections. As she sleeps, Treeger tells Gordon that they have recovered tape recordings made inside MR-1 but, so far, nothing is on them. As they ponder whether Iris is recalling memories or fears, Iris awakens and implores Gordon to give her something to force her to remember what happened: In MR-1, Iris tells Tom that the creature was horrible. He wonders if her perception was clouded, but decides that they should go outside, dressed in protective clothing. Tom orders everyone to stay within sight as they hesitantly venture onto the red Martian landscape. Curious about a strange vine, Iris follows it and is suddenly grabbed by the octopus-like creature. Tom, Sam and Gettell rush to Iris and, with machetes and Sam's ray gun, kill the creature. Iris and Gettell conclude that the creature was a carnivore, beyond normal plant life, with a neuromuscular formation. The next morning, after studying samples from the previous day, the group again leaves MR-1. When Iris cuts off a sample from one plant, it reveals itself to be a huge creature on stilt-like legs. Even Sam's ray gun has no effect, until Tom tells Sam to aim at its eyes, thus immobilizing it. After this encounter, the group sees a large lake but decides to explore it the following day. Inside the ship, after discussing the great dangers they have encountered, Tom and Gettell determine that they must abort the mission immediately. The rocket engines ignite, but the ship cannot lift off. Frustrated, Tom orders the engines cut to save fuel and surmises that there must be a powerful force preventing them from leaving. He calms the fears of the others and wonders what "they" want. Later Tom, Iris, Sam and Gettell go back to the lake, and as they paddle across, a huge, industrial city appears on the horizon. As they contemplate the strange sight, a giant monster arises from the sea. Realizing that they must return to the ship, the four paddle furiously to get away from the beast. When they get to the shore, they rush back to the ship, but as they scramble to open the hatch, Sam is enveloped by the strange, amoeba-like beast that has followed them from the lake. Soon the view from the observation window reveals that MR-1 has been enveloped by the amoeba. Some time later, as Iris, who had done experiments on amoebas, tries to discover a way to stop its growth, Tom's arm, which brushed against it, begins to worsen. After Iris tells Tom and Gettell that electricity is the only thing that can stop the amoeba's growth, Gettell determines a way to electrify the outer skin of the rocket ship while not endangering their own lives. The plan works, causing the creature to shrivel away. Just then the ship's radio broadcasts a voice saying, "Red alert¿we of the planet Mars give you this warning." A short time later, the stress and exertion cause Gettell's heart to give out, and he dies. With Sam and Gettell dead and Tom unconscious, Iris tries to determine what Gettell would have done with the ship's wiring and looks out the window at the increasingly distant planet Mars. Awakening in her hospital bed, Iris cries, then faints after saying she cannot remember the rest of the warning. Because of clues in Iris' recollections, Gordon deduces that Tom is suffering from an enzymatic infection and gives him an injection. A short time later, Treeger asks Iris if there is anything in her research that might help Tom, and she asks for access to a lab. Knowing that electricity must be the key, Iris concludes that the amoeba growing on Tom's arm can be prodded with a mild electric shock to move onto a non-human host. The experiment works, and soon Tom and Iris are talking about their future. Treeger then tells them that the tape from MR-1 revealed the entire message from Mars. The message states that everything will be fine if the people of Earth stay on their own planet. It concludes with the words "Do not return to Mars. We can and will destroy you if you do not heed our warning."

Film Details

Also Known As
Invasion of Mars
Release Date
Jan 1960
Premiere Information
Los Angeles premiere: 23 Nov 1959; Los Angeles opening: 24 Nov 1959; New York opening: 4 May 1960
Production Company
Sino Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
American International Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 23m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color

Articles

TCM Remembers - Jack Kruschen


Jack Kruschen (1922-2002)

He may have not been a household name, yet his career consisted of over seventy-five films, spanned over six decades, and displayed a strong versatility in playing either dramatic or comic roles with equal effectiveness. He was the definitive, "I can't quite remember the name, but I remember the face" character player who enlivened many films with his robust frame, cherubic face and infectious smile. His name was Jack Kruschen, a superb performer who died on April 2, 2002 at the age of 80, leaving behind a strong body of work that was impressive as any character actor of his generation.

Kruschen was born on March 20, 1922 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The son of a watchmaker who later set up shop in Hollywood, he was performing in an operetta at Hollywood high school when a talent scout for CBS radio discovered him. Kruschen was soon doing voice characterizations on popular network programs such as Dragnet, The Danny Thomas Show and Sam Spade. With his gift for dialects (he was most adept at playing ethnic types like Greeks, Yiddish or Italians - a skill finely honed in his radio days), Kruschen was a natural for the movies and soon made his film debut with a small role in the Betty Hutton comedy Red, Hot and Blue (1949).

Kruschen's early career is peppered with a variety of roles like a comical gangster in both Abbott & Costello Go to Mars (1953) and Money from Home (1953) starring Jerry Lewis & Dean Martin; a hard-nosed police detective in Confidence Girl (1952) and Julie (1956), an underrated Doris Day thriller; or doomed victims to alien prey in Sci-fi cult classics: the 1953 version of War of the Worlds (fans remember him as Salvatore, one of the first earthlings to be killed by the invading Martians) and The Angry Red Planet (1959). The roles offered steady work, but not much critical recognition. All that changed when Billy Wilder cast him in the key role as Jack Lemmon's bemused but caring neighbor, Dr. Dreyfuss in The Apartment (1960). As the man who observes the steady stream of women in and out of Lemmon's apartment and the one who saves Shirley MacLaine from a drug overdose, Kruschen offered a wonderful performance - viewing his neighbor's proceedings with a jaundiced eye, yet never letting his disdain overtake his humor and humanity. He was justly rewarded with an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor.

From this point on, Kruschen was seldom out of work, appearing in over 40 films (including a terrific dramatic turn in the original Cape Fear (1962) as Dave Grafton, a corrupt southern bigot) and nearly 60 guest roles on television for the next two decades. Kruschen would later find fame toward the end of his career when he was cast as Papa Papadapolis in the hit sitcom Webster (1985-1987) and would show pleasant variations of the "kindly old codger" throughout the remainder of his career - like his final role in the romantic comedy 'Til There Was You (1997). His death in April this year may have gone largely unnoticed by the movie-going public, but for those of us who treasure the art of the character player, Kruschen's passing was a loss that is fortunately compensated by his strong body of work that will be enjoyed for fans of the late show for many years to come.

By Michael T. Toole

SIGNE HASSO, 1910-2002

Actress Signe Hasso died June 7th at the age of 91. She was best-known for starring in A Double Life (1947) but played numerous Europeans in films during the 1940s. Hasso was born on August 15, 1910 in Stockholm, Sweden and began acting on stage at the age of 13. Ten years later made her first film appearance as Signe Larsson. She was married in 1936 and adopted the last name of her husband, cinematographer and later director Harry Hasso. After a dozen Swedish films, Hasso moved to Hollywood in 1940 where her first screen appearance was an uncredited role in Journey for Margaret (1942). A brief stint at RKO didn't lead to any more promising film parts so Hasso concentrated on her stage career in New York City. Eventually, her film career became more active, thanks to a quick succession of roles, most notably in Fred Zinnemann's The Seventh Cross (1944), Douglas Sirk's A Scandal in Paris (1946) and Henry Hathaway's The House on 92nd Street (1945). However it was her portrayal of Ronald Colman's wife in the Oscar-favorite A Double Life that solidified her fame. But as Hasso continued to act on the stage and TV, her film work began to taper off. She appeared in high-profile thrillers like Crisis (1950), several made-for-TV movies, a few European productions and even the cult murder mystery, Bert Gordon's Picture Mommy Dead (1966). In 1972, the king of Sweden decorated Hasso for her work. Her final appearance was in a 2001 documentary about Greta Garbo.

HERMAN COHEN, 1927-2002

One of the key producers of B-movies, Herman Cohen, died June 2nd at the age of 76. Like most producers, his name wasn't generally known outside the industry or the realms of film buffs but most people never forget the titles of his films: I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957), Horrors of the Black Museum (1959) and the not-quite-immortal Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (1952). Cohen was a Detroit native, born August 27, 1927. He entered the film business in the smallest possible way, as a 12-year-old janitor, often accepting passes for his family and friends instead of wages. Cohen served in the Marine Corps (several articles incorrectly say the Army) before becoming a publicist at Columbia Pictures. By 1951 he was working as a producer's assistant on low-budget independent films, mostly for Realart Pictures run by another Detroit native Jack Broder. Soon Cohen was producing his own movies, including Westerns and mysteries, until hitting big with the famous I Was a Teenage Werewolf. Starring a then-unknown Michael Landon (under personal contract to Cohen who later tore it up so Landon could appear in Bonanza), the film was made for $100,000 but in just a few months grossed over $2 million. Cohen didn't hestitate to turn out I Was a Teenage Frankenstein and Blood of Dracula by Thanksgiving of that same year and before long had made several films that continued to earn money for years to come. (One TCM writer remembers Horrors of the Black Museum turning up in a small Alabama town in the early 70s, over a decade after its initial release. The film is scheduled for a DVD release with a Cohen commentary from VCI Entertainment.) Cohen also made several films in England including The Headless Ghost (1959) and the cult favorite Konga (1961) where Cohen even paid RKO $25,000 for the rights to use the title King Kong in publicity for his own film. Cohen's later movies included a spaghetti Western and Joan Crawford's final acting role Trog (1970). In the 1980s Cohen ran a company, Cobra Media, that distributed some films and licensed material such as Teenage Werewolf to Landon for use in one of his Highway to Heaven episodes.

By Lang Thompson

Tcm Remembers - Jack Kruschen

TCM Remembers - Jack Kruschen

Jack Kruschen (1922-2002) He may have not been a household name, yet his career consisted of over seventy-five films, spanned over six decades, and displayed a strong versatility in playing either dramatic or comic roles with equal effectiveness. He was the definitive, "I can't quite remember the name, but I remember the face" character player who enlivened many films with his robust frame, cherubic face and infectious smile. His name was Jack Kruschen, a superb performer who died on April 2, 2002 at the age of 80, leaving behind a strong body of work that was impressive as any character actor of his generation. Kruschen was born on March 20, 1922 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. The son of a watchmaker who later set up shop in Hollywood, he was performing in an operetta at Hollywood high school when a talent scout for CBS radio discovered him. Kruschen was soon doing voice characterizations on popular network programs such as Dragnet, The Danny Thomas Show and Sam Spade. With his gift for dialects (he was most adept at playing ethnic types like Greeks, Yiddish or Italians - a skill finely honed in his radio days), Kruschen was a natural for the movies and soon made his film debut with a small role in the Betty Hutton comedy Red, Hot and Blue (1949). Kruschen's early career is peppered with a variety of roles like a comical gangster in both Abbott & Costello Go to Mars (1953) and Money from Home (1953) starring Jerry Lewis & Dean Martin; a hard-nosed police detective in Confidence Girl (1952) and Julie (1956), an underrated Doris Day thriller; or doomed victims to alien prey in Sci-fi cult classics: the 1953 version of War of the Worlds (fans remember him as Salvatore, one of the first earthlings to be killed by the invading Martians) and The Angry Red Planet (1959). The roles offered steady work, but not much critical recognition. All that changed when Billy Wilder cast him in the key role as Jack Lemmon's bemused but caring neighbor, Dr. Dreyfuss in The Apartment (1960). As the man who observes the steady stream of women in and out of Lemmon's apartment and the one who saves Shirley MacLaine from a drug overdose, Kruschen offered a wonderful performance - viewing his neighbor's proceedings with a jaundiced eye, yet never letting his disdain overtake his humor and humanity. He was justly rewarded with an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor. From this point on, Kruschen was seldom out of work, appearing in over 40 films (including a terrific dramatic turn in the original Cape Fear (1962) as Dave Grafton, a corrupt southern bigot) and nearly 60 guest roles on television for the next two decades. Kruschen would later find fame toward the end of his career when he was cast as Papa Papadapolis in the hit sitcom Webster (1985-1987) and would show pleasant variations of the "kindly old codger" throughout the remainder of his career - like his final role in the romantic comedy 'Til There Was You (1997). His death in April this year may have gone largely unnoticed by the movie-going public, but for those of us who treasure the art of the character player, Kruschen's passing was a loss that is fortunately compensated by his strong body of work that will be enjoyed for fans of the late show for many years to come. By Michael T. Toole SIGNE HASSO, 1910-2002 Actress Signe Hasso died June 7th at the age of 91. She was best-known for starring in A Double Life (1947) but played numerous Europeans in films during the 1940s. Hasso was born on August 15, 1910 in Stockholm, Sweden and began acting on stage at the age of 13. Ten years later made her first film appearance as Signe Larsson. She was married in 1936 and adopted the last name of her husband, cinematographer and later director Harry Hasso. After a dozen Swedish films, Hasso moved to Hollywood in 1940 where her first screen appearance was an uncredited role in Journey for Margaret (1942). A brief stint at RKO didn't lead to any more promising film parts so Hasso concentrated on her stage career in New York City. Eventually, her film career became more active, thanks to a quick succession of roles, most notably in Fred Zinnemann's The Seventh Cross (1944), Douglas Sirk's A Scandal in Paris (1946) and Henry Hathaway's The House on 92nd Street (1945). However it was her portrayal of Ronald Colman's wife in the Oscar-favorite A Double Life that solidified her fame. But as Hasso continued to act on the stage and TV, her film work began to taper off. She appeared in high-profile thrillers like Crisis (1950), several made-for-TV movies, a few European productions and even the cult murder mystery, Bert Gordon's Picture Mommy Dead (1966). In 1972, the king of Sweden decorated Hasso for her work. Her final appearance was in a 2001 documentary about Greta Garbo. HERMAN COHEN, 1927-2002 One of the key producers of B-movies, Herman Cohen, died June 2nd at the age of 76. Like most producers, his name wasn't generally known outside the industry or the realms of film buffs but most people never forget the titles of his films: I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957), Horrors of the Black Museum (1959) and the not-quite-immortal Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (1952). Cohen was a Detroit native, born August 27, 1927. He entered the film business in the smallest possible way, as a 12-year-old janitor, often accepting passes for his family and friends instead of wages. Cohen served in the Marine Corps (several articles incorrectly say the Army) before becoming a publicist at Columbia Pictures. By 1951 he was working as a producer's assistant on low-budget independent films, mostly for Realart Pictures run by another Detroit native Jack Broder. Soon Cohen was producing his own movies, including Westerns and mysteries, until hitting big with the famous I Was a Teenage Werewolf. Starring a then-unknown Michael Landon (under personal contract to Cohen who later tore it up so Landon could appear in Bonanza), the film was made for $100,000 but in just a few months grossed over $2 million. Cohen didn't hestitate to turn out I Was a Teenage Frankenstein and Blood of Dracula by Thanksgiving of that same year and before long had made several films that continued to earn money for years to come. (One TCM writer remembers Horrors of the Black Museum turning up in a small Alabama town in the early 70s, over a decade after its initial release. The film is scheduled for a DVD release with a Cohen commentary from VCI Entertainment.) Cohen also made several films in England including The Headless Ghost (1959) and the cult favorite Konga (1961) where Cohen even paid RKO $25,000 for the rights to use the title King Kong in publicity for his own film. Cohen's later movies included a spaghetti Western and Joan Crawford's final acting role Trog (1970). In the 1980s Cohen ran a company, Cobra Media, that distributed some films and licensed material such as Teenage Werewolf to Landon for use in one of his Highway to Heaven episodes. By Lang Thompson

Quotes

Men of Earth, we of the planet Mars give you this warning. Listen carefully and remember. We have known your planet Earth since the first creature crawled out of the primeval slime of your seas to become man. For millennia, we have followed your progress, for centuries, we have watched you, listened to your radio signals and learned your speech and your culture. And now, you have invaded our home. Technological adults, but spiritual and emotional infants. We kept you here deciding your fate. Had the lower forms of life of our planet destroyed you, we would not have interfered. But you survived. Your civilization has not progressed beyond destruction, war and violence against yourselves and others. Do as you will to your own and to your planet, but remember this warning--Do Not Return To Mars. You will be permitted to leave for this sole purpose--Carry The Warning To Earth. Do Not Come Here. We can and will destroy you, all life on your planet, if you do not heed us. You have seen us, been permitted to glimpse our world. Go now. Warn mankind not to return unbidden.
- Martian Voice
The hell with radiation. Let's go.
- Maj. Gen. George Treegar

Trivia

Director Ib Melchior was given just 9 days to shoot the film, on a budget of $200,000.

The 40-foot alien monster was actually a marionette about 15 inches high. It was essentially a combination of a rat, bat, spider, and crab.

The alien monster is the same one featured on the cover of the album "Walk Among Us" (1982) by The Misfits.

The "Cinemagic" process, used for all scenes on the surface of Mars, was the result of an attempt by producer Norman Maurer to turn live-action footage directly into hand-drawn animation - or to simulate that. This would enable hand-drawn backgrounds to look as real (or as unreal) as the live action footage. It didn't have that effect here, of course. But see Three Stooges in Orbit, The (1962) for Maurer's second (and failed) attempt at the same process.

Notes

The film's working title was Invasion of Mars. With the exception of an opening title card bearing the name of releasing company American International Pictures, all of the credits, including the film's title, appear at the end of the story. The title card reading "The End" appears at the end of the credits, following an acknowledgment by Sino Productions of the cooperation of the United States Air Force; The Burroughs Corporation, electrodata division; the Paillard Corporation, distributors of Hasselblad cameras; Weber Aircraft Corporation, designers and manufacturers of ejection seats; and Avis Rent-a-Car System, which provided ground transportation.
       Ned Shielle was listed as the art director on the film's only Hollywood Reporter production chart, but received the onscreen credit of "Set construction." According to a February 20, 1960 Hollywood Reporter news item, producer Norman Maurer settled a lawsuit he had brought against Sino Productions "involving 5% participation on pic's profit." No additional details of the suit have been located.
       The Angry Red Planet was the first film to utilize a technique known as "Cinemagic," which created the effect of live actors being incorporated into animated scenes in a reverse negative effect. All of the outdoor sequences that take place on Mars exhibited the technique, which resulted in the illusion that everything on the planet, including its atmosphere, was in varying shades of red or deep pink. The technique also created the illusion that the sets and props were drawings, similar to the kind of drawings seen in comic books. As noted in a Hollywood Reporter news item, just prior to the start of production, the film's budget was raised from $250,000 to $500,000.
       According to an AMPAS information sheet submitted by Sino Productions for Academy Awards consideration in the category of Visual Effects, Cinemagic, which was developed by Maurer, was "a printing process employing the use of special optical equipment" that required "four separate printings to produce the final Cinemagic negative." Contemporary reviewers did not praise the technique, which most termed another science fiction "gimmick" being promoted by producer Sid Pink, who earlier had been the associate producer of the 1953 3-D film Bwana Devil.
       The AMPAS information sheet also stated that the miniatures used in the film all were based on Maurer's sketches and incorporated latex and stay-foam plastic with various coverings, including monkey fur for "the rat bat spider crab." According to a modern source, dwarf actor Billy Curtis was inside the suit of the Martian creature that menaced the rocket ship's crew. The same source indicates that American International picked up distribution rights to the film after its initial showings in Los Angeles. This is corroborated by the fact that preview reviews and the Los Angeles Times review do not include American International in the credits.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1959

The "Cinemagic" process was a gimmick which made the frame appear with a pinkish tinge.

Cinemagic

Released in United States 1959