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GoldLyrics.com - Forbidden Planet (Two-Disc Special Edition)

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List Price: $26.98
Our Price: $10.99
Your Save: $ 15.99 ( 59% )
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Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Starring: Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis, Leslie Nielsen, Warren Stevens, Jack Kelly Directed By: Fred M. Wilcox
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Audience Rating: G (General Audience) Binding: DVD Brand: Warner Brothers EAN: 0012569691223 Format: AC-3 Label: Warner Home Video Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Number Of Items: 2 Publisher: Warner Home Video Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2006-11-14 Running Time: 98 Studio: Warner Home Video Theatrical Release Date: 1956-03-15
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Editorial Reviews:
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A dutiful robot named Robby speaks 188 languages. An underground lair offers evidence of an advanced civilization. But among Altair-4's many wonders, none is greater or more deadly than the human mind. Forbidden Planet is the granddaddy of tomorrow, a pioneering work whose ideas and style would be reverse-engineered into many cinematic space voyages to come. Leslie Nielsen plays the commander who brings his spacecruiser crew to the green-skied world that's home to Dr. Morbius (Walter Pidgeon), his daughter (Anne Francis)...and to a mysterious terror. Featuring sets of extraordinary scale and the first all-electronic musical soundscape in film history, Forbidden Planet is in a movie orbit all its own.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: FLASH GORDON, THE THING, FORBIDDIN PLANET Comment: I WAS IMPRESSED. DAVE HAD A STROKE 10 YEARS AGO, I (HIS WIFE) AM TYPING THIS RESPONSE FOR HIM.
Customer Rating:      Summary: One of the Best SciFi Movies Comment: This is one of the best SciFi movies of all time (#1 being "The Day The Earth Stood Still"). Based (loosely) on Shakespeare's play "The Tempest", it brings together an outstanding cast (look at the cast list) to tell the story of genius ultimately controlled, then destroyed, by the "mindless primitive". The special effects are astounding; espcially for the time. I find the electronic music to be sometimes distracting and there are places where it's impossible to tell if the sound you are hearing is a monster, wind in the rocks, or the soundtrack. The movie, with its award winning special effects and soundtrack and its fine cast of actors appears to be quite rough in places (more on that later) but this is the way the movie was made. The acting is quite good. Walter Pidgeon is perfect as Morbius. Leslie Nielsen as Adams does a credible job in a dramatic role (but you can't help slipping to "Naked Gun"). I won't run down the rest of the cast except to say that Earl Holliman is, at best, light comedic relief; I could never figure out why he was really in this movie.
The disc set containts the movie, specials, and trailers on one disc with "The Invisible Boy" (which I have not yet seen) on the second. One special is a set of "lost" footage which is really a set of test shots of scenery but which is really quite interesting (watch as the camera moves around the planet and note that it looks like you are really circling a planet and not looking at a prop)
The other special contains scenes that were shot but not part of the original release. A couple of notes here. There is one scene of Adams dressing down three of his officers just after the communications officer is killed. The disc has that as a deleted scene and it is missing from the movie on this disc but that scene is included in every version of this movie I have ever seen. Another deleted scene is the "unicorn explanation" that I have never seen but that perfectly explains why Altaira has the affinity for animals that she does and why the tiger must later be killed. I had already surmised the reason but this was the actual confirmation (after 50 years!!). There is also a scene that seems to be rewritten on the disc (where Morbius asks Altaira to deny her love for Adams. When I watched the disc she just stands there but I recall her as saying something to the effect "No, not even if I could").
One of the specials also describes how the movie was apparently left roughly cut to rush it to general release instead of waiting for a finished product. I'd always wondered why there were obvious cuts in the film; now I know.
I bought this set to fill in my collection of great, old, classic, SciFi films. And, while I have seen the film at least 50 times, I still enjoy it and I still see something interesting in the special effects or the sets. It's worth getting.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Sci-fi classic beautifully restored Comment: Forbidden Planet was always a science fiction favorite of mine due to it's outlandish setting, great acting, great sets, great characters, excellent science fiction and human element. It's pretty much everything good science fiction should be but too seldom actually achieves: intellectually stimulating, frightening, sexy, bold in story and look, fantastic, etc. This 2006 remastering is stunningly beautiful even on a standard DVD. Someone kept or found an excellent print or negative which is very fortunate.
So in this Forbidden Planet DVD we have arguably the most significant science fiction film of the surrounding decades beautifully restored to probably better than it's ever been seen in a theater. Kudos to the makers and restorers of this classic.
For those who haven't seen Forbidden Planet, it's been likened to Shakespeare's Tempest set in space, but it has interesting plot twists of its own. This film significantly influenced every movie or television series set on a spaceship, particularly Star Trek which followed about a decade later.
The extras include deleted scenes which were rightfully deleted. Those scenes edited out, the theatrical release is much tighter, if one can forgive the ugly jump cuts that result.
I highly recommend this science fiction classic, especially for the wonderful remastering.
Customer Rating:      Summary: BAD DVD - not the movie just the DVD received Comment: I received the DVD. It would not play on my DVD player. Thinking that the HD DVD would not play on the older DVD player, I purchased an HD DVD player only to find out the DVD was actually BAD - NOT IN PLAY MODE.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Monsters From the Id Comment: When FORBIDDEN PLANET was released in 1956, science fiction films tended to be low budget black and white affairs that called to mind aliens attacking earth when Americans still recalled vividly GIs storming the beaches at Iwo Jima. Director Fred Wilcox wanted to continue the very recent trend blazed by the slightly earlier THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD which similarly suggested that science fiction could reflect some serious subtexts. Here, Wilcox took the essentials of Shakespeare's THE TEMPEST and incorporated Walter Pidgeon in the Prospero role as Dr. Morbius, Anne Francis as Altaira (Miranda in THE TEMPEST), and the invisible monster from the ID as Caliban. Moviegoers were immediately entranced for all the right reasons. Leslie Nielsen as the captain was properly heroic as the one who emerged as the most insightful of his crew despite his failing to register high on the Krell brain booster. It was he who directed his crew to defend their ship against the ID beast. It was he who wound up with the lovely Altaira. And it was he who determined how to defeat a creature that was deemed too impossible to exist. Part of the allure of FORBIDDEN PLANET was the seamless melding of drama with comedy and ultimately with tragedy. The drama lay in how the crew from earth could avoid being picked off one by one as the crew of the Bellerephon had been twenty years earlier. As did Shakespeare in many of his tragedies, FORBIDDEN PLANET has several moments of low comedy (mostly in the intonations of Robby the Robot interacting with the goofy Earl Holliman). And the tragedy came not from the deaths of the crew but from the conversations of Dr. Morbius who sadly bemoaned the deaths of the technologically advanced Krell who in Morbius' words: "Could hardly have known what was killing them." Tying these three disparate elements into a cohesive whole was the Freudian subtext of the monsters from the ID. Morbius refused to grant until the very end that even his beloved Krell could yet retain a semblance of human emotion that might damn them just as thoroughly as it did for Freud's patients. There is a telling scene at the end when Morbius finally realizes the ghastly truth that it was he who was responsible for reviving the ID beast. He faces the beast and denounces it, all the while knowing that he can no more disavow it than he could disavow his own inner demons. As he confronts it, the captain takes out his blaster and points it at Morbius, realizing that the only way to stop the beast was to kill Morbius.
Even after watching FORBIDDEN PLANET numerous times over the decades, I can still eagerly view it with each viewing, much like one of Shakespeare's plays, revealing a new facet to enjoy. The special effects, top notch as they are, are not what I take away from any viewing. What brings me back again and again to the fold is the realization that what is normally forbidden for anyone to make use of is under the right circunstances a license for brutality that can overwhelm the best of anyone us, including even the godlike Krell.
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