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Showing posts with label Forbidden Planet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forbidden Planet. Show all posts

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Forbidden Planet (Finally)


This post is a continuation of what was begun previously in The Return of the C-57D.

We're returning to Forbidden Planet. It's a classic movie and after having had the opportunity to watch it on a big screen at one of our all-time favorite local theaters some disturbing notions crept into my febrile brain.

Everything is not quite as it seems in this wonderful old movie. There's a dark and sinister side to it, One of Mythic proportions that casts a disquieting shadow over this classic gem of the 1950s cinema.

Come along with me now as we delve a bit deeper into the lurking horrors that await us deep below the surface of Altair 4. Bring a blaster. Mine's out for repairs.

The following is extracted from a version of the Forbidden Planet Script, a transcript really, that has been painstakingly transcribed using the screenplay and/or viewings of Forbidden Planet by a guy named Drew who has made this available at his site: LINK REDACTED. (Please go visit Drew. He slaved away on this transcript and could use your support and encouragement. Or at least a Thank you.)
Link Removed: It appears Drew's site is now a bastion of malware...

The Krell Public Relations Campaign

In times long past...

this planet was the home of a mighty and noble race of beings...
which called themselves the Krell.

Ethically, as well as technologically...
they were a million years ahead of humankind...
for in unlocking the mysteries of nature...
they had conquered even their baser selves...
and when, in the course of eons, they had abolished sickness...
and insanity and crime and all injustice...
they turned, still with high benevolence...outward toward space.

Long before the dawn of man's history, they had walked our Earth...
and brought back many biological specimens
The Krell are great, the Krell are good, the Krell know better than we do just what is going on with the universe--or do they? Then where are they? Did they "...succumb to a...to a sort of a planetary force here...some dark, terrible, incomprehensible force?" You bet they did. And with a little effort and a quick trip to Altair 4 you can too. But we'll get to that in a moment.

So we know that the Krell visited the Earth way back when. They brought back specimens such as tigers and deer. Okay, so maybe they missed the dinosaurs, but Altair 4 looks like a great place for some dinosaurs. Or maybe a nice Shen colony.

Ahem. Ignore the large reptile with the sword-axe in the peanut gallery. He can go back to his own blog. Or get back to work. We need more maps done pronto.

Hard to get good help these days.


Anyhow. The Krell seem to have almost the same hyper-rational fixation as the Metalunans from This Island Earth. For my money, the Krell are probably related to the Metalunans. Something about the smug superiority complex and brain-expanding machines just makes it seem appropriate. Metalunans are probably the scabby remnants of the ancient Krell civilization. They were dying out, granted they were getting a little help in hastening their eventual extinction by the Zagons.

Chris Nigro from the Warrenverse site likewise sees some parallels between Forbidden Planet and This Island Earth and even takes things a good bit farther, right into the Wold Newton Universe:
"I also have a great interest in the classic 1950s sci-fi film 'The Forbidden Planet' which, along with Universal's memorable sci-fi flick from the same decade 'This Island Earth,' may very well have worked in tandem to launch the sci-fi and space opera genres we are so familiar with today, paving the way for the Star Trek, Star Wars, and Battlestar Galactica franchises, as well as other major sci-fi flicks such as 'The Black Hole.' Though the events of 'This Island Earth' took place in the then present to when the film was produced (the 1950s) the events of 'The Forbidden Planet' took place in an alternate future, and I am wondering if that timeline could possibly be connected to one of the many divergent future time tracks of the WNU; there is at least one online Wold Newton article opining that the events from that movie can occur at some point on the Classic Star Trek timeline, which branches off from the WNU of the present, as made quite clear in Greg Cox's three Star Trek novels, ASSIGNMENT: ETERNITY and the two volumes of THE EUGENICS WARS, all three of which incorporate the enigmatic agent of an advanced alien race operating on Earth of the WNU from the 1960s to the 1990s. Gary Seven first appeared in the classic episode of "Star Trek" called 'Assignment: Earth,' which was intended as a pilot for a Gary Seven TV series that didn't end up happening." -- Chris Nigro
But we're getting off track here. It's fun, but we'll have to come back to it another time. Maybe Chris will consent to be a guest blogger sometime and explore this tangent a bit further.

Back to Forbidden Planet.
From REDACTED Transcript again:
The heights they had reached...but then, seemingly on the threshold of some supreme accomplishment...which was to have crowned their entire history...this all but divine race perished in a single night.
This all but divine race perished in a single night. Really? A star-faring civilization that had reached multiple planets was expunged in one fell swoop? That's either a massive over-generalization, a bit of hyperbole, or something really, really rotten going on deep below the crust of Altair 4.

The highly advanced, highly ethical, all but divine Krell built an impressive super-technological civilization, at least according to Morbius. He wouldn't lie. Would he? Didn't the brain-expansion machines down below in the alien labs located conveniently right beneath Morbius' cozy little chalet also enhance his ethical nature as well? Hmmm...

No.

It didn't.

He should have been able to have used his super-enhanced brain to out-think and out-wit the lonely spacemen on the C-57D. But he didn't. He also revealed too much of what was down below the surface of the planet, much like a classic Bond villain. He put a lot of people in potential jeopardy and a genius like he was supposed to be, with highly advanced ethics like the Krell supposedly had would not have done things that way. Not unless deep down he wanted to do it. Or was being manipulated into doing it.

Keep that thought in mind as we move along a bit.

Whatever happened, it wiped away all traces of the Krell. Or at least most such traces.
In the centuries since that unexplained catastrophe...even their cloud-piercing towers...of glass and porcelain and adamantine steel...have crumbled back into the soil of Altair...and nothing, absolutely nothing remains above ground.
Okay. Sounds like a seriously cool post-apocalyptic dungeoncrawl on an alien planet in the making.

What did the Krell look like?
No record of their physical nature has survived...except, perhaps, in the form of this characteristic arch. I suggest you consider it in comparison to one of our...functionally designed human doorways
That arch is shaped like a truncated diamond. It would accommodate Daleks, but there is one other vaguely conical rugose race that also was supposedly super-advanced in their technology that springs to mind, But we'll wait on that for a moment.

Did someone say dungeoncrawl?

The alien ruins beneath the surface of Altair 4 are the most impressive, and one of the biggest Megadungeons of them all.


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Morbius takes the intrepid Captain J. J. Adams and his chief medical officer (sound like anyone else's manner of handling an away team?) on a tour of the mega-huge underground Krell installation just beneath their feet. The place is 20 miles in each direction and powered by 9,200 thermonuclear reactors. The entire alien complex had been operating and maintaining itself ever since the extinction of the Krell. When asked about its purpose, Morbius says he knows only that it can supply a practically limitless supply of power.

You can watch the Altair 4 Megadungeon sequence LINK EXPIRED.

Over 8,000 square miles …that's 40 miles cubed, 8,000 cubic miles of complex, 7,800 levels, 401 great shafts = 400 surrounding a central shaft—that's if Morbius was accessing the Central Shaft. We'll just assume he was. He was a smart guy after all.
 
It's like someone was hell-bent to update Piranesi for the Atomic Age. They did a fantastic job.
 
That's one incredible Megadungeon. You couldn't map it with forty pounds of graph paper and a year locked in a padded cell. Not. That. Anyone. Has. Tried. That. Of course.
 
Ahem.
 
Down in the Altair 4 Megadungeon, in the Labs, Morbius shows off some of the tools and toys left behind by whoever built the place.
On this screen may be projected...the total scientific knowledge of the Krell...from its primitive beginning to the day of its annihilation...a sheer bulk surpassing many million earthly libraries.
Yeah. A massive, hidden repository of lost knowledge buried deep under the crust of a planet and maintained by super-high tech perpetually self-sufficient. Hmmm...where might we have read of anything like that before, like in 1934 perhaps?

Morbius knows a lot more than he's letting on. He has gained a great deal of Forbidden Knowledge.
Twenty years ago, I began here with...this page of geometrical theorems. Eventually I was able to deduce most of their huge, logical alphabet. I began to learn. The first practical result was my robot...which you gentlemen appear to find so remarkable. Child's play. I've come here every day now for two decades...painfully picking up a few of the least difficult fragments of their knowledge.
A logical alphabet. Geometry. The knowledge is dangerous to those not properly prepared by the mind-expanding mechanisms so as to withstand the shock of its revelation. The knowledge that is difficult to cope with even after letting the alien machines mess around inside your skull. The knowledge that is painfully obscure, esoteric, and incredibly ancient--left behind by a race that was expunged from physical existence in one evening, a near-divine race of super-geniuses who had been to Earth a long time ago.

In 1934, H. P. Lovecraft wrote a story titled The Shadow Out of Time. In this story he introduced an alien race, a Great Race...
"The Great Race ... waxed well-nigh omniscient, and turned to the task of setting up exchanges with the minds of other planets, and of exploring their pasts and futures. It sought likewise to fathom the past years and origin of that black, aeon-dead orb in far space whence its own mental heritage had come – for the mind of the Great Race was older than its bodily form. . . The beings of a dying elder world, wise with the ultimate secrets, had looked ahead for a new world and species wherein they might have long life; and had sent their minds en masse into that future race best adapted to house them – the cone-shaped beings that peopled our earth a billion years ago."


—H. P. Lovecraft, The Shadow Out of Time
IA! IA! Krell Fhtagn!

The Krell are probably not the Great Race. Altair 4 is very likely one more world that the Great Race built one of their repositories of knowledge upon. The Krell, some offshoot of the Metalunans possibly, stumbled upon the Megadungeon-like Machine beneath Altair 4 and in their haste to sample forbidden knowledge they unleashed the Monster of the Id and it destroyed them.

It's a theory.
 
Another theory is that the Altair 4 installation is a back-up location for the Time Tunnel project.

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You can watch episodes of the classic 1960's Sci-Fi TV series The Time Tunnel over at one of the myriad streaming services, but you'll need to go search for it yourself. Our old links went bad.

Whomever built the Altair 4 Megadungeon could very likely have built a simple Time Tunnel and vice-versa.

Who wouldn't want to go exploring a massive 8,000 square mile Megadungeon built by alien time travelers?

Friday, August 27, 2010

Return of the C57D


Monday September 20, 2010, The Heights Theater is showing the 1956 Classic SciFi movie Forbidden Planet.  One show only (7:30PM).  Advance tickets are available via The Heights Theater website.  All seats are $8.00.  We've already reserved ours.

This is part of the Before CGI: Six SciFi Classics series being co-presented by The Heights and the local Take Up Org.  More details about this series can be found on the Heights site or at TakeUp Production's site.  They'll be doing a War of the Worlds/Invasion of the Body-Snatchers double-feature!  Plus The Invisible Man, The Incredible Shrinking Man and the original King Kong are all slated to be part of this series of incredible, classic movies.  Fun, fun, FUN!

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In the meantime, you can catch Forbidden Planet at Youtube, as long as you don't mind the lower quality image and having it chopped into 10 parts. You can also find some Out-takes and if you're really pressed for time you can just watch the highly memorable Monster Attack scene.

Here's Part One to get you started:
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And for Christmas...there's the Ultimate Collector's Edition box-set of the Forbidden Planet DVD.

Then there's the reproduction of the movie poster: which you used to be able to find at All Posters dot com, as well as a few other sites/services. 
This is a truly Classic movie.  The sets are well-done, the costumes have been ripped-off for decades by both TV and other, lesser movies, and the special effects are tastefully done despite being top of the line for 1956 are still decent, still effective, and the interior shots of the alien Krell Labs have been ripped-off borrowed by such gems of TV-dom as The Time Tunnel amongst others.  Then there's the theramin used in the soundtrack.  Hmmm...what other Classic SciFi franchise used a theramin in their soundtrack?  Duh! 

Robby went on to guest star in two episodes of Lost in Space (War of the Robots & Condemned of Space), the 1957 movie The Invisible Boy, a cameo on The Twilight Zone, The Thin Man, Love Boat, Ark II and other TV shows.  Robby The Robot has really and truly become the hardest working robot in Hollywood.  He even did a Charmin commercial back in the Seventies with Mr. Whipple.

An interesting bit of trivia: Robby was designed by Robert Kinoshita, the guy who also designed GUNTER the Lost in Space robot nearly a decade later.  You can find a far more exhaustive list of Robby The Robot trivia at Goremaster's blog, or check out Fred Barton's website. (Both links are defunct, sorry).

Getting back to Forbidden Planet itself, It's rather interesting how much influence Forbidden Planet had on many, many other productions and in particular, Irwin Allen's TV Series Lost in Space -- just take a look at the suspended animation tubes from the unaired episode No Place To Hide which are shown on the Wikipedia page.  If you take a few minutes you'll be able to find a few more points of similarity/convergence.  Irwin Allen always stole borrowed from the best, despite whatever he wound up doing with it...which almost always involved explosions and things shaking around a lot.  They sure blew up a lot of stuff on all of Irwin Allen's shows.  It still didn't make up for the generally lousy scripts and overly cheesy acting(?) that tended to dominate those shows, though every now and then something cool would filter through.

John C. Snider includes Forbidden Planet in his accounting of the Ten Movies That Changed Science Fiction.  J. Michael Straczynski paid a nice homage to the Krell Machine of Forbidden Planet with his own Great Machine on Epsilon 3 in the episode "A Voice in the Wilderness" of Babylon 5.  Gene Roddenberry claimed Forbidden Planet as an influence, something that is fairly obvious if you just watch the re-vised pilot The Cage which became the episode The Menagerie.  The influence and impact of Forbidden Planet goes deep and lingers on to this day, in a very, very positive way.

When I first got my hands on the Little Black Books for the Traveller Box Set, I was happy to see the H. Beam Piper influences, but I was sad to see Forbidden Planet get short shrift.  I have always wanted to see a SciFi RPG based on the core assumptions and tropes of Forbidden Planet.  Hyperdrive saucers, autonomous robots that can distill extra-fine whisky on demand, alien relics that would have given Lovecraft bad dreams...isn't it about time that someone developed an RPG rooted/based upon Forbidden Planet?