The Mars rocketship is spotted entering Earth
orbit. The military and civilian experts are both worried and delighted
because now they know the ship was not lost as feared, yet there has been no
contact with the ship’s crew since arriving at Mars. Matters are complicated by
uncertainty as to how to land the ship. This can be done by remote control if
there is enough fuel. They decide to chance it and the rocket lands in the
Nevada desert successfully. When the hatch opens, it is discovered that of the
four-person crew, one is missing, one is dead, and another, Col. Thomas
O’Bannion, is unconscious with some sort of green slime covering his arm. Only
Dr. Iris Ryan can stand, but she is in serious shock.
Dr. Iris "Irish" Ryan in Cinemagic
Hospitalized, Iris is
incapable of explaining what happened. To make matters worse, all the data
tapes are blank. It is suggested that she may do better if she starts at the
beginning. Most of the movie is told in flashback from Iris’s point of view.
Her tale begins the day after takeoff. It is clear that Col. Thomas O’Bannion
and Iris (or “Irish” as he calls her) are fond of each other and we see them
constantly trading flirtations. After forty-seven days they land successfully
on Mars. Iris sees at the control cabin porthole a hideous face with three
eyes. She screams and faints. The three men don’t believe her and relentlessly
tease her. They don pressure suits and exit the rocket to explore the Red Planet. It is
at this point that Cinemagic kicks in, turning everything we see on Mars bright
red with light shades contrasting startlingly with dark shades. [This moment is much the same as the equivalent moment in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz when Dorothy opens the house door to expose the movie's wondrous Technicolor setting.]
On one side of
the ship is endless desert, on the other is dense jungle. They enter the jungle
where Iris is almost eaten by a carnivorous plant. Later they explore the
desert and encounter the 40-foot high iconic six legged bat-rat-spider
creature that is prominent on the movie poster. They survive the encounter with
the help of a “freezing gun,” then eventually break out a rubber dingy to
explore the wide lake that they found while on their desert trek. They paddle
part way out and see a vast city with buildings that spire at least half a mile
into the sky. At this point they choose to turn back and are attacked by a
giant amoeba with two rolling eyes. They make it to land and run to the
hoped-for safety of their ship. Crewman Sam Jacobs opens the hatch to get a
good shot at the monster with his freezing gun, but the creature grabs him and
digests him. They have no choice but to take off a day early to escape the
monster, but it is too late. The giant amoeba engulfs the ship. They are
trapped. In due course the monster releases the ship, but just before they take
off, they receive a radio message.... Cut back to the present.
Biologist
Iris
has created a method to cause the green slime to detach itself from the
colonel’s arm. Scientists rush in to say they were able to finally
extract a
message from the otherwise blank tapes. In one fearsomely deep voice,
the Martians explain that humans are dangerous and are not welcome on
Mars. If humans
travel to Mars again, the earth will be destroyed. Roll title credits.
.
The 40-foot high iconic six legged bat-rat-spider
creature.
.
The Angry Red Planet is of historical interest for
three primary reasons:
• Its use of Cinemagic.
• It was the first of Ib Melchior’s two directorial works. (See end of this blog post for a brief profile of Ib Melchior.)
• It may be the first time a science fiction movie eschewed
showing any credit—including the title—until the very end.
Cinemagic was one of long list of pregnant proper nouns used
to pique interest in some of the “B” movies of the era. There were William
Castle’s Emergo, Percepto, and Illision-o; Ray Harryhausen’s Dynamation; MGM’s
Duo-Vision; Arthur Crabtree’s Hypno-vista; John Water’s Odorama; Michael
Todd’s Smell-O-Vision; and Howco International’s Psychorama.
And let’s face it, the producers of “A” movies were
concurrently exploring the allure of hyperbolic catch phrases and words and
thus we were treated to Cinerama, Cinemascope, VistaVision, and Ultra
Panavision 70, though these last were names for new important cutting-edge
widescreen film processes, systems, and aspect ratios that quickly became
standard—so common as they evolved into still newer formats with still more
extravagant appellations, that before long there was no point publicizing the
processes any longer. Nearly all movies we see in theaters today (and for the
last 55 years) are widescreen movies of one sort or another, but never promoted
as such any more.
Many
things can be said about Cinemagic. It was certainly
colorful, and images projected onto the screen were certainly different
and
to a large degree fun. And watching the Mars sections of this movie
today
certainly is nostalgic. But was it successful as a cinematic process?
Perhaps
not. But, not for lack of trying. For one thing, all the actors, while
on the
Mars sets, were required to wear stark white makeup to emphasize the
startling high-contrast effects. The problem with regard to the
successful
development of the process was no more complicated than simply money and
time
running out.
Top:
This rare The Angry Red Planet
(1959)
poster emphasizes the
mysterious
three-eyed Martian.
Bottom:
The Robinson Crusoe on Mars
one-sheet
poster; the ray gun is a bit
of
creative license (from the author’s
collection).
Ib Melchior co-wrote
The Angry Red Planet and directed it.
He
conceived Robinson Crusoe on
Mars and co-wrote it. His mind
was
at
the heart of both these seminal
Mars
motion pictures.
The development of Cinemagic and its use in The Angry Red
Planet has been well documented. To those readers wishing to learn about the
full history of the process I refer them to the writings of Robert Skotak, the
celebrated Academy Award winning special visual effects artist, who has written several
detailed articles and a chapter of a book on the subject. One interesting point
that this further inquiry will unveil is that Norman Maurer, the creator of the
complicated Cinemagic process, was severely disappointed that he had neither
the time nor the money to work closely with the film labs to render the images
just as he planned. The finally result, as seen in The Angry Red Planet,
apparently is only a shadow of what he had hoped to put on the screen. He had
another limited chance, though, when he was asked to produce The Three Stooges
in Orbit. In this movie,
there is an elongated scene where the black-tuxedo-clad Stooges cover their
hands and faces with white paint while being filmed as part of the movie.
Later, we see the results as shown on specially processed film. Maurer here was
finally able to successfully show, albeit in a very abbreviated version and
in black and white, what he had hoped to achieve with Cinemagic. The clear
potential is very interesting.
Some of Robert Skotak’s discussions of Cinemagic are
included in “The Angry Red Planet” in Filmfax Magazine number 17, November
1989, and “The Angry Red Planet” in Fantastic Films number 29, June 1982. Plus
the “The Angry Red Planet” chapter in his biography of Ib Melchior, Ib
Melchior: Man of Imagination, is chockful of history, as is Melchior’s own
autobiographical discussion of his film career in Six Cult Movies from the
Sixties: The Inside Stories by Writer/Director Ib Melchior. Though intimately involved as the co-writer of half a dozen
“cult” science fiction movies during the 1960s, Ib Melchior directed just two
of them, The Angry Red Planet and The Time Travelers, both of which he can be
justifiably proud. The Time Travelers was cleverly made and enjoyed a downbeat
ending that was novel at the time, earning it comparisons to Rocketship X-M’s
unexpected conclusion; the film also received fine international notices. The
Angry Red Planet is exceedingly novel and colorful and, in point of fact, won
this writer’s heart long ago despite some negative things that have been said
about it. The other genre films for which Melchior is known are Robinson Crusoe
on Mars (discussed elsewhere in this blog) and Planet of Vampires, both of which
are practically universally considered classics due to their high production
values and clever writing, and Reptilicus and Journey to the Seventh Planet,
both of which were made in Denmark with little money and directed by Sid Pink.
As stated in regard to earlier movies, creating a plot for
the crew aboard a spaceship on a long voyage is apparently not easy. In fact,
I’m not sure of the cause, but these 1950s space trips nearly always focus on
one or another plot point or both: The Angry Red Planet is the fourth
rocket-to-Mars movie in a row (following Rocketship X- M, Flight to Mars, and Conquest
of Space) that tries to liven up the shipboard boredom with a close call with
either meteors or asteroids. The other plot point is onboard romance involving
the sole woman with one or more of the men; only Conquest of Space avoids women
in space, which means that three out of four of these early movies are burdened
with the deadweight of both these asinine notions of acceptable scripting.
Perhaps the first, Rocketship X-M, can get a pass, since these two ideas were
introduced in that movie, but there is no excuse for the others rehashing the
same threats and conflicts. For whatever reasons (probably executive
ignorance), the writers of these four movies all seemed happy to create and
then recreate the same preposterous romantic and dramatic situations.
The shipboard scenes of The Angry Red Planet are all
painfully pedestrian, but the actors seem to be having fun, nonetheless. Les
Tremayne plays the professor, Jack Kruschen doubles as the comic relief and the
audience substitute, Gerald Mohr as the macho cap- tain, and Nora Hayden as the
doctor of biology, Dr. Iris “Irish” Ryan. The one bit of the script that I
found original and especially enjoyable is the captain invariably calling Iris
“Irish,” with her complaints falling on deaf ears.
It is difficult to evaluate the character of Iris from our 21st
century perspective. On one hand she is portrayed in a far better light than
other women in 1950s science fiction movies, who often were merely window
dressing, such as Margaret Sheridan’s Nikki Nicholson in The Thing from Another
World, Joan Taylor’s Carol Marvin in Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, and even
Alix Talton’s magazine editor Marge Blaine in The Deadly Mantis. On the other
hand, Hayden’s Irish is the real hero of the story; she has a doctorate in
science; her role is solid; and the whole picture revolves around her
performance. Yet, she is consistently referred to as “the girl,” is often asked
to fetch coffee, and is constantly screaming and fainting. Irish certainly is a
far cry from Carrie Anne Moss’ hard-as-nails Captain Bowman in 2000’s Red
Planet.
Ib Melchior
co-wrote The Angry Red Planet and directed it. He conceived Robinson Crusoe on
Mars and co-wrote it. His mind was at the heart of both these seminal Mars
pictures.
Cinemagic offered many exotic views of Mars.
Interestingly, producer Sid Pink had conceived of the movie
as the obverse of the invasion from alien planets pictures that had
proliferated during the decade before. He explains, “I thought that there had
been so many invasions of Earth from space, that it would be novel to do the
reverse, where we are the invaders of someone else’s realm” (from Skotak’s Ib
Melchior: Man of Imagination). Indeed, the film’s original working title prior
to completion was “Invasion of Mars.”
Unfortunately, that noble goal was superseded by a fairly
routine rocket-to-Mars adventure story, and it isn’t until the last moments of
the picture that the crew (and the audience) discovers that they have
unknowingly “invaded” Mars. One last item: the title credit for The Angry Red Planet
does not appear until the end of the movie. That’s relatively common these
days, but it was unheard of in the 1950s. I’m surprised that, with all my
research, I haven’t seen that pointed out before.
Ib
Melchior (1917–2015)
Ib and Cleo Melchior
The
year was 2013, and my wife and I were attending the wedding in Los Angeles of
one of my wife’s friends and business associates. The reception afterward was
extremely loud with the band playing and all the cocktail chatter combining to
make me uncomfortable. We sought out an untenanted corner and I sat on a chair
and rested. Before long, I saw an older man in a wheelchair being pushed in our
direction by an equally older woman. In a couple of minutes, the couple had
joined us but conversation was utterly impossible because of the volume of the
ambient noise. In a few minutes the man leaned over in his wheelchair and
indicated he wanted to talk to me. I placed my right ear next to his mouth and
his words were inaudible, I mouthed, “I can’t hear you.”
He tried
again, and this time I heard the word “Melchior.” Hearing these three syllables
was a joy to me just then because I was in the middle of writing a novel
dealing with the three wise men and the Star of Bethlehem, and Melchior was the
traditional name of one of the wise men. (The joy came from some sense of
serendipity that I was on the right track.) He indicated he wanted to speak
again, and this time I heard “Ib Melchior.” At first the addition of the prefix
meant nothing to me, but suddenly it hit me (like a brick) that Ib Melchior was
the man’s name and his name was one I was very familiar with. I yelled back,
“The Angry Red Planet.... Robinson Crusoe on Mars!” He smiled and nodded. I was
amazed; here I was minding my own business at this wedding and the next thing I
knew I was conversing with the director of The Angry Red Planet and the
co-writer of both The Angry Red Planet and Robinson Crusoe on Mars, two of my
favorite Mars movies! Real conversation was impossible just then and the two
wives quickly put their heads together and hatched a plan for us to get
together.
One
thing led to another and soon my wife and I and Ib and his wife Cleo, a land-
scape architect and set designer, were enjoying a great lunch at The Tam O’
Shanter restaurant, which, once upon a time, was Walt Disney’s favorite
restaurant in Burbank. It happened to be down the street from the new studio he
built with the profits garnered from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. In fact,
we all sat at “Walt’s table,” as the back corner table is affectionately
remembered.
Ib
entertained us with some anecdotes from his native Denmark and with produc-
tion stories of the six “cult” science fiction movies he wrote and/or directed
in the six- ties: The Angry Red Planet, The Time Travelers, Reptilicus, Journey
to the Seventh Planet, Robinson Crusoe on Mars, and Planet of Vampires—most
especially The Time Travelers, which he viewed as his finest film. He helped us
understand his rocky rela- tionship with Sid Pink, his creative partner on
three of these films. (In 1952, Pink, with radio personality Arch Obler, had
made cinematic history by producing the first 3D color feature, Bwana Devil, a
true story about a pair of man-eating lions marauding a bridge-construction
site in British East Africa at the turn of the 20th Century, the same story
that was filmed again 44 years later as The Ghost and the Darkness.) Hearing
the highlights and low points of his career in the film industry, we began to
understand how frustrating, on one hand, and how rewarding and exhilarating, on
the other, such a career amongst Hollywood power brokers could be.
In the
“frustrating column” can be listed his well-documented contention that the hit
Irwin Allen TV series Lost in Space had begun with Ib’s space-age Swiss Family
Robinson treatment that had made the rounds in Hollywood, though he was never
given any credit nor was he compensated. This Swiss Family Robinson idea had
origi- nated from the same respect for the iconic classics from which Robinson
Crusoe on Mars had sprung. Ultimately, the producers of the 1998 feature film
version of Lost in Space recognized his fundamental contribution and hired him
as that film’s Special Advisor.
The
“exhilarating column” includes his directing and co-writing 1964’s very well-
received and thought-provoking special-effects feast The Time Travelers, and
also his collaboration with American International Pictures’ co-founder Samuel
Z. Arkoff and the great Italian director Mario Bava on Planet of Vampires. A
much-prized letter from Arkoff reads in part, “As you will note, Bava’s
comments about your abilities are ... laudatory.” As will be mentioned often in
this book, Planet of Vampires is one of three classic science fiction movies
that heavily influenced the creation of Ridley Scott’s Alien, the other two
being Queen of Blood and It! The Terror from Beyond Space.
The
four of us had a great time. I hauled out my Robinson Crusoe on Mars discs and
poster from my bag and asked Ib to sign them. He was 95. Sadly, early in 2015
he passed away at the age of 97, with Cleo preceding him by a few months.
THOMAS KENT MILLER
USA. American International Pictures. Sino Production, Inc.
Eastman Color 5250. 1.85:1. 83m.
CREDITS: Director Ib Melchior. Producers Sid Pink, Norman
Maurer. Associate Producer Lou Perlof. Script Ib Melchior, Sid Pink. Story Sid
Pink. Score Paul Dunlap. Special Effects Herman Townsley. Director of
Photography Stanley Cortez. Editor Ivan J. Hoffman. Special Sound Post-Production, Inc. Cinemagic Norman Maurer.
CAST: Col. Thomas O’Bannion Gerald Mohr. Dr. Iris “Irish”
Ryan Nora Hayden. Sam Jacobs Jack Kruschen. Prof. Theodore Gettell Les
Tremayne.
Naysayer.
“If the Martians were indeed angry, cinema patrons had every
right to be even angrier at the sanctimonious claptrap that Melchior tries to
foist on them in the name of entertainment.”
—Dennis Fischer in Science Fiction Film Directors 1895–1998
Enthusiast.
“The Angry Red Planet is possibly the definitive pre–Jet
Propulsion Lab Martian adventure. It is the story of a Mars we once dreamed
of—the old Mars before JPL’s cameras, the microbiologists, and astrophysicists
demonstrated how barren a world it really is.”
—Bob Skotak in the article “The Angry Red Planet” in Filmfax
magazine number 17, November 1989
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