Earth sends a five-man team to explore the frozen planet Uranus, only to find a temperate forest and sultry women from their past on it, courtesy of an alien brain with evil designs.Earth sends a five-man team to explore the frozen planet Uranus, only to find a temperate forest and sultry women from their past on it, courtesy of an alien brain with evil designs.Earth sends a five-man team to explore the frozen planet Uranus, only to find a temperate forest and sultry women from their past on it, courtesy of an alien brain with evil designs.
- Svend
- (as Louis Meihe Renard)
- Colleen
- (as Bente Juel)
- Alien Brain
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIt was noted that certain plot elements bore a striking similarity to plot elements from Polish writer Stanislaw Lem's (at the time) recent 1961 novel "Solaris." That novel would later be the basis of authorized films including a TV-Movie (Solaris (1968)) in 1968, a cinema version by Andrei Tarkovsky in 1972 (Solaris (1972)) (both from the Soviet Union) and an American production (Solaris (2002)) in 2002.
- GoofsGiven the length of time it would have taken a flight to Uranus to occur, let alone the time it would have taken once the crew is "frozen" by the alien for the apple to have shriveled to that degree, the crew members would have had substantial beard growth.
- Quotes
Vocalist: [sung over end credits] # Journey to the Seventh Planet. Come to me. Let your dreams become reality. I wait for you. Somewhere on the seventh planet out in space, you and I will find a magic place like lovers do. And while we're up above, we'll touch the star that we have wished upon. There our love will take wings and go on and on. Mm-mm, journey to the seventh planet in your heart. Let a spark of love begin to start for us, to share forever. Seventh planet, seventh heaven, if you learn to care, our love will be beyond compare. #
- Alternate versionsU.S. distributer had original Danish "special effects" edited out of the film and replaced due to poor quality.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Journey to the Seventh Planet (1969)
- SoundtracksJourney to the Seventh Planet
By Jerry Capehart and Teepee Mitchell (as Mitchell Tableporter)
Sung by Otto Brandenburg
And against this kind of mind control, what can one do? If a character is powerful enough to warp your sense of Reality, then how can you truly fight it? We get a full throttle effect by showing a full length movie in which the outcome is really decided immediately, only no one knows it.
The super formidable enemy, the one you must rely solely on God's graces, or luck, to beat, is the one who controls all you perceive and conceive, the one whose control over what you see, hear, sense, is completely contrived by this foe.
We go through a series of adventures, and the characters seem totally out of control, but that's because they have no idea what Reality is any more. They go through total Chaos.
And the ending, which I won't spoil, leaves the audience in total Chaos, but also explains that indeed, there is nothing to be done but rely on luck if your perceptions are out of your control.
Overlooked film. It actually is better than many of the later ripoff versions which tried to be too contrived in modernism, by that I mean that the later films wanted to establish that SOME humans were superior enough to overcome this obstacle, which is flat out silly. If you have no direction and no vector, you are totally helpless to change your situation. This film goes under the old school of Credibility premise instead of the 1970s contrived "Man is God" premise.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Viaje al séptimo planeta
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $74,600 (estimated)