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Top Ten Movies in Outer Space
By Christopher Stires
“One small step for man,
one giant leap for mankind.” Thirty-five years ago, on the 20th
of July 1969, Neil Armstrong spoke those words as he stepped onto the
surface of the moon. In the same year, the top-grossing western of all
time, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and the most controversial
western ever, The Wild Bunch, were released. On television, Star
Trek was canceled. One of the reasons given for the cancellation of
Kirk, Spock, Bones, and the crew of the Enterprise was that the show’s core
audience was teenagers and children. They were not the groups the sponsors
wanted to attract.
With a few notable
exceptions however -- such as Dances with Wolves, Unforgiven,
Lonesome Dove, The Outlaw Josey Wales, and Silverado --
the day of the western as a Hollywood staple was over.
A new era had begun.
While previous
generations had been interested in seeing films about our past and roots,
the younger generations were more interested in films about where we could
go. Space travel was permanently part of their universe and fantasies.
Before World War Two,
there were hardly any films that included space travel as an element of the
plot. French filmmakers made movies based on Jules Verne’s From the Earth
to the Moon in 1862 and H.G. Wells’s The First Men in the Moon in
1901. Beyond that, however, there were the Thirties serials based on the
exploits of Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers. And that was about it.
Then George Pal released
Destination Moon in 1950. It starred John Archer and Warner Anderson.
The plot revolved around America’s plan to beat the Russians to the moon.
More movies that showed us venturing into space followed. During the decades
of the Fifties and the Sixties, we saw such films as Rocketship X-M (1950),
Conquest of Space (1953 – also by Pal), Forbidden Planet
(1956), First Spaceship on Venus (1959), Robinson Crusoe on Mars
(1964), Planet of the Vampires (1965), Queen of Blood (1966), and
Women of the Prehistoric Planet (1966).
In 1968 however, as NASA
prepared to put a man on the moon, three very different films were released
that involved space travel. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey,
Arthur P. Jacobs’ Planet of the Apes, and Roger Vadim’s Barbarella.
Each would tap into very different audiences, but each showed that
moviegoers were eager for these adventures. Filmmakers began looking
seriously to the stars for new settings and stories.
2001: A Space Odyssey,
Planet of the Apes, and Forbidden Planet are all classics, but
the following list is the Top Ten Movies in Outer Space that were released
after the moon landing, after travel to other planets became a reality.
We begin:
10) SOLDIER (1998)
Directed by Paul Anderson. Starring Kurt Russell, Jason Scott Lee, and Gary
Busey. Tagline: Left for dead on a remote planet for obsolete machines
and people, a fallen hero has one last battle to fight. This is Shane
in outer space. A guilty pleasure to be sure. A professional
soldier (Russell), trained in the warrior arts since birth, is nearly killed
by his bio-engineered replacement (Lee) then marooned on a garbage-heap
planet. He is found by an outcast group of colonists. One family takes him
in and he sees a side of humanity that he has never encountered before.
Feelings he never knew he had begin to surface. A little bit anyway. But
the other colonists fear him and they banish him. Then his former comrades
return on a blood hunt.
Sandra: “You have
feelings, don't you?”
Todd: “Fear ... fear and
discipline.”
9) STAR TREK: FIRST
CONTACT (1996) Directed by Jonathan Frakes. Starring Patrick Stewart, Brent
Spiner, and Jonathan Frakes. Tagline: Resistance is Futile. The “Next
Generations” crew does it right. The Enterprise, captained by Jean-Luc
Picard (Stewart), chase the Borg into a space vortex and are whipped back in
time before Earth technology had uncovered the secrets of warp speed that
make space travel possible. If Picard and crew do not defeat the Borg,
history will be rewritten and Earth will be lost.
The Borg Queen (to
Picard): “Brave words. I've heard them before, from thousands of species
across thousands of worlds, since long before you were created. But, now
they are all Borg.”
8) GALAXY QUEST (1999)
Directed by Dean Parisot. Starring Tim Allen, Sigourney Weaver, and Alan
Rickman. Tagline: The show has been canceled...but the adventure is just
beginning A tickler – one of those rare films that puts a smile on your
face and keeps it there. The cast of a canceled TV series, who make a living
attending sci-fi conventions and store openings, are recruited by aliens who
believe that the episodes of their series are “historical documents.” The
aliens are being attacked by another alien species and believe the actors
can save them.
DeMarco (to the good aliens):
“They're not all ‘historical documents.’ Surely, you don't think Gilligan's Island is a...”
The aliens moan sadly.
Alien Leader: “Those
poor people.”
7) STAR TREK IV: THE
VOYAGE HOME (1986) Directed by Leonard Nimoy. Starring William Shatner,
DeForest Kelley, and Leonard Nimoy. Tagline: They traveled back to where
23rd century man had never gone before. To a mad, crazy, outrageous time.
1986 The original Star Trek crew show that they have a sense of
humor and this becomes one of their best adventures. And (don’t tell
anyone) it has a morale, too. A mysterious space probe approaches Earth
and begins wrecking havoc on the planet. Spock (Nimoy) determines that the
probe’s signal is an attempt to contact humpbacked whales that have been
extinct for centuries. Kirk (Shatner) and crew in a captured spacecraft
slingshot around the sun and jump back in time to 1986 San Francisco. Their
plan is to locate two humpbacked whales and take them back to the 23rd
Century.
Whale environmentalist:
“Don't tell me, you're from outer space.
Kirk: “No, I'm from
Iowa. I only work in outer space.”
6) STAR TREK II: THE
WRATH OF KHAN (1982) Directed by Nicholas Meyer. Starring William Shatner,
DeForest Kelley, and Leonard Nimoy. Tagline: At the end of the universe
lies the beginning of vengeance. Without this film, the Star Trek franchise more than likely would have ended.
Star Trek II showed what
the series was all about and pitted Kirk (Shatner) against a great villain,
Khan (Ricardo Montalban). While on a cadet-training exercise, the Enterprise
encounters another Federation ship that has been hijacked by an old enemy
who has also commandeered a top-secret device called Genesis.
Spock: “If I may be so
bold, it was a mistake for you to accept promotion. Commanding a starship is
your first, best destiny; anything else is a waste of material.”
Kirk: “I would not
presume to debate you.”
Spock: “That is wise.
Were I to invoke logic, however, logic clearly dictates that the needs of
the many outweigh the needs of the few.”
Kirk: “Or the one.”
Spock: “You are my
superior officer. You are also my friend. I have been and always shall be
yours.”
5) ALIEN (1979) Directed
by Ridley Scott. Starring Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skeritt, and Veronica
Cartwright. Tagline: In space no one can hear you scream. An
awesome, terrifying film. The crew of the cargo ship, Nostromo, is awakened
from deep sleep to investigate an SOS signal coming from a desolate planet
they are passing. While exploring an area, a crewmember (John Hurt) is
attacked and the injured man is taken back to the ship. Big mistake. The
alien creature designed by H.R. Giger is astonishing.
Ripley: “Ash, that
transmission -- Mother's deciphered part of it. It doesn't look like an
SOS.”
Ash: “What is it, then?”
Ripley: “Well, it looks
like a warning. I'm gonna go out after them.”
Ash: “What's the point? I
mean by the time it takes to get there, you'll … they'll know if it's a
warning or not,
yes?”
4) APOLLO 13 (1995)
Directed by Ron Howard. Starring Tom Hanks, Gary Sinise, and Ed Harris.
Tagline: Houston, we have a problem. Terrific, solid film. True story
and, despite the fact that we know the ending, keeps us on the edge of our
seats. Three astronauts are stranded two hundred thousand miles from Earth
in their crippled Apollo 13 spacecraft. How they return home with the help
and aid of the crew at Mission Control is the story of real heroes.
NASA
executive: “This could be the worst disaster NASA's ever faced.”
Kranz: “With all due respect, sir, I believe this is going be our finest
hour.”
3)STAR WARS (1977) Directed by George Lucas. Starring Mark Hamill,
Harrison Ford, and
Carrie Fisher. Tagline: A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away... A touchstone film. Audiences stood in line for hours to see this film and
then stood in line again and again. It redefined how films were marketed and
when they were released. One of the most successful films of all time. A
young farmboy (Hamill) acquires two robots who lead him to a mysterious
hermit (Sir Alec Guinness) then into a space adventure to rescue a princess
(Fisher) from the clutches of the evil Darth Vader and the Empire. Sheer fun
from beginning to end with audiences cheering the heroes and booing the
villains A cultural event.
Obi-Wan: “Luke, there was nothing you could have done
had you been there. You would have been killed, too, and the droids would
now be in the hands of the Empire.”
Luke: “I want to come with you to Alderaan. There is nothing here for me
now. I want to learn the ways of the Force and become a Jedi like my
father.”
2) ALIENS (1986)
Directed by James Cameron. Starring Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, and
Lance Henriksen. Tagline: This time it's war. A major
edge-of-your-seat movie. Ripley (Weaver), the sole survivor of the Nostromo,
is found and awakened after fifty-seven years in deep sleep. She is asked by
the Company to return to the planet where her crew first encountered the
alien. A colony was established there and contact with the colonists has
been lost. Reluctantly she agrees, and along with a team of heavily armed
Space Marines, returns to the planet. The battle royal that follows is total
suspense.
Ripley: “These people are here to protect you. They are soldiers.”
Little Girl Survivor: “It won't make any difference.”
And…
1) THE EMPIRE STRIKES
BACK (1980) Directed by Irvin Kershner. Starring Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford,
and Carrie Fisher. Tagline: The Adventure Continues... And it did …
with aces. Darker in tone than Star Wars and Return of the Jedi
and stronger for it. Darth Vader and the Empire want their revenge for
the destruction of their prized Deathstar and hit back at the rebel forces
with all their might. After a magnificent battle on the ice planet Hoth, our
heroes separate. Luke (Hamill) travels to Dagobah for training by the Jedi
master, Yoda, to become a knight and learn the ways of the Force. Solo
(Ford), Leia (Fisher), and Chewbacca journey to Cloud City which is run by
Solo’s old friend. Or is it? While the ending is a cliffhanger (to be
resolved in Return), this film is a roller-coaster ride from
beginning to end. Sheer fun and a feast for the eyes and for the
imagination. Movie-making (and movie-watching) at its best.
Yoda (to Luke): “Ready are
you? What know you of ready? For eight hundred years have I trained Jedi. My
own counsel will I keep on who is to be trained. A Jedi must have the
deepest commitment, the most serious mind. This one a long time have I
watched. All his life has he looked away... to the future, to the horizon.
Never his mind on where he was. Hmm.. What he was doing? Hmph... Adventure.
Heh... Excitement. Heh... A Jedi craves not these things. You are reckless.”
Jedi knights may not crave
excitement but moviegoers do and, in outer space, films can literally
deliver the stars and they have in the ten examples cited. Where do the
movies go from here? The best answer is a quote from the intrepid space
adventurer in Toy Story.
Buzz Lightyear: “To
infinity, and beyond!”
About the Author
Christopher Stires lives in Loma
Linda CA with his wife, Annie, and daughter, Katie. He has sold over
sixty-five short stories and reprints. His stories have appeared in "Fangoria,"
"Vestal Review," "The Edge: Tales of Suspense," "The Best of Pirate Writings
II," "Darkness Rising 7," "Underworlds," "Outer Darkness," "Fantastic:
Stories of the Imagination," "Hauntings," "Futures Anthology Mag-Ezine
(Fame)," "Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine," "Elysian Fiction,"
"Hardboiled," "9," and others. His debut horror novel, The
Inheritance, is available in trade paperback from Zumaya Publications (www.zumayapublications.com)
and in eBook format at FictionWise (www.fictionwise.com).
His alternate-history thriller, REBEL NATION, will be released in early
2005. He has also had nonfiction articles appear in "SFReader," "Peridot
Books," and "Speculations."
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