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Star Odyssey

Originaltitel: Sette uomini d'oro nello spazio
  • 1979
  • 1 Std. 43 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
2,8/10
801
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Star Odyssey (1979)
Space Sci-FiSci-Fi

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuEarth is attacked by an intergalactic villain and his army of robotic androids.Earth is attacked by an intergalactic villain and his army of robotic androids.Earth is attacked by an intergalactic villain and his army of robotic androids.

  • Regie
    • Alfonso Brescia
  • Drehbuch
    • Alfonso Brescia
    • Massimo Lo Jacono
    • Giacomo Mazzocchi
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Yanti Somer
    • Gianni Garko
    • Malisa Longo
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    2,8/10
    801
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Alfonso Brescia
    • Drehbuch
      • Alfonso Brescia
      • Massimo Lo Jacono
      • Giacomo Mazzocchi
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Yanti Somer
      • Gianni Garko
      • Malisa Longo
    • 28Benutzerrezensionen
    • 24Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos8

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    Topbesetzung21

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    Yanti Somer
    Yanti Somer
    • Irene
    Gianni Garko
    Gianni Garko
    • Dirk Laramie
    Malisa Longo
    Malisa Longo
    • Bridget
    Chris Avram
    Chris Avram
    • Shawn
    Ennio Balbo
    Ennio Balbo
    • Prof. Mauri
    Roberto Dell'Acqua
    • Norman
    Aldo Amoroso Pioso
    Nino Castelnuovo
    Nino Castelnuovo
    • Lt. Oliver 'Hollywood' Carrera
    Gianfranca Dionisi
    Pino Ferrara
    • Prison Warden
    Aldo Funari
    Cesare Gelli
    Robert Hundar
    Robert Hundar
    • Galactic Auctioner
    Filippo Perrone
    Franco Ressel
    Franco Ressel
    • Cmdr. Barr
    Massimo Righi
    Massimo Righi
    Silvano Tranquilli
    Silvano Tranquilli
    Claudio Zucchet
    • Regie
      • Alfonso Brescia
    • Drehbuch
      • Alfonso Brescia
      • Massimo Lo Jacono
      • Giacomo Mazzocchi
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen28

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    4Red-Barracuda

    An example of why the Italians aren't primarily remembered for sci-fi

    I remember when my great great grandfather was on his deathbed he said these words to me 'son, whatever you do, never watch an Italian sci-fi movie'. After receiving this sage advice I sadly turned away, only for him to weakly call me back and say 'especially if it is an Alfonso Bescia space opera, those are particularly crap'.

    I have subsequently watched several Italian sci-fi films over the years, four of which have been Alfonso Brescia efforts. I should have followed my great great grandfather's advice as watching all four Brescia films has been as much fun as being hit full on the face with a bag full of broken glass. This one like all of them feature space wars in which the villains are androids who look like Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones circa 1968. In this one we have an evil despot called Kress who uses his android army to enslave mankind; he is opposed by a small group of stereotypes and robots, who save the day. The date of this film should give you a clue that it is surfing the wave of Star Wars and to that end there is a light-saber battle where the Brian Joneses fight our heroes. Well, I say 'light-saber' but given the origins of this film, it should be no surprise to learn that technically it is a 'cardboard swords painted with fluorescent paint' battle. Interestingly the technology magazine Popular Mechanics reviewed this movie back in the day declaring it a 'dreadful trashpile'. A final note for film academics, the title this one went under in West Germany was 'Metallica'.
    3Hitchcoc

    Star Wars on a Ten Dollar Budget

    This is an effort at an outrageous space epic, where nothing is funny and the characters are about as bland and inconsequential as one can get. Once again the earth is threatened (actually it has been purchased). The population is going to be enslaved once this guy, who has a face like a hand grenade does what he does to them. The silly people of earth have to depend on some guy whom they treat badly, but who has great powers to repel the force. There are some idiotic droids, especially a male and female (for whatever reason), who provide what I guess is comic relief. The whole thing is a joke. We never really get what the powers are. We never really understand the strategies. There are, however, a group of androids who dress like Carol Channing. Now that could have been funny.
    1planktonrules

    Amateurish--almost like an Italian 1970s version of an Ed Wood film!

    The film begins with what might be the crappiest electronic music in the history of movies! Is this is shade of things to come? You betcha! "Star Odyssey" is an Italian film that features really bad acting and amazingly low production values for a sci-fi movie. I saw a dubbed version and perhaps the original was a bit better--but it's still filled with weird and cheap costumes as well as bad camera-work and these are obvious no matter the language. Additionally, the sets look like very simple rooms adorned with just a few trinkets to make it look 'space-agy'. And, one of the few outdoor sets was in a junkyard! The net effect is a film that just almost always looks really cheap--almost like an amateur production (though I did like the villain with the face that looked like a waffle). My favorite bad special effect were the weird glowy eyes--you just have to see them to believe 'em.

    The plot involves some intergalactic baddie coming to attack the earth with his silly looking robots. Much of the plot frankly confused me--probably because it was so silly and dull I had difficulty staying awake. Plus, I think the film lost a bit in translation.
    3Bezenby

    Ground control to Major Breschia, your film is crap, there's something wrong

    Winner, Academy Award, Category: "Worst Robot in a Sci-fi Film"

    Believe it or not, but I've managed to stay awake long enough through three of these Alfonso Breschia sci-fi crapfests to notice that each one of them does have a different angle. Cosmos: War of the Planets had a slight horror angle, War of the Robots was a straight forward sci-fi action flick and Star Odyssey tries to include a lot of humour. I have seen the Beast in Space but we all know the angle there is Sirpa Lane's nipples.

    It does matter how he approaches these films, they are all miserable failures featuring the same sets, the same extras in blonde robot wigs, the same uniforms for the good guys (I hope they at least washed them - I wouldn't fancy getting Antonio Sabato's sweaty hand-me-downs), the same Yanti Somer, the same space battle footage and the same sense that even Breschia himself was not remotely interested in what he was creating. Let's dive in!

    Or not, as the whole first half of the film seems to have been cut and pasted together as some key scenes seem to happen after other stuff has occurred. Basically, an alien that looks like he's fallen asleep on an electric fly swatter has bought Earth, and instead of making contact he just starts gathering together loads of humans for slavery. This enrages campy Earth leader Franco Rassell, who orders a crack team of human jerks to get together to sort out this intergalactic chugnut.

    This lot includes Han Solo type Gianni Garko, who can hypnotise people and gets into a fistfight with Nello Pazzafini (in the confusing footage we see the fight first, then the reason it started later), Yanti Somer, ex-lover of Garko and niece of elderly scientist Ennio Balbao, who is trying to figure out some way to penetrate the weird substance surrounding the enemy spaceship (more confusing footage). There's Han Solo type Chris Avram and Melissa Longo, who is guess is supposed to be Chewbacca? Throw in a guy with ADHD and a pompous military guy and we're good to go...except for the two suicide-pact robots they pick up from a seventies scrapyard.

    The fact that Tilt and Tilly have more character than everyone else shows you how bad this film is. They had a suicide pact but can't remember how (it's because they couldn't shag), and they bicker, complain, write poems to each other and wonder how the blonde-wig robots aren't attacking them. There's also this other robot which is like some child in a Halloween costume wandered on set or perhaps is a dwarf slave Breschi was humiliating for sexual purposes.

    All this crapness is lost like tears in rain as the whole things just devolves into the same endless laser battles, light-sabre (pound shop version) battles, and worst of all, the interminable space battle at the end. That battle doesn't quite last as long as the one in War of the Robots, but...that's about the only good thing I can say about it.

    The version I watched did have an ending, although it did cut off a guy at the end mid-sentence, so that was good.

    What happened to you Gianni Gark - you used to be Sartana! What happened to you Ennio Balbao - you used to be a Mafia Don! Yanti Somer - you have no excuse - you were in the last two as well!
    2junk-monkey

    It's the alphabet Jim, but not as we know it.

    This is the third "Al Bradly" movie I have watched in the last couple of weeks and like the other 2 (Cosmos: War of the Planets and The War of the Robots) uses many of the same sets, costumes, cast and effects shots. And like the other two it is total and unmitigated crap from start to finish. The weirdness start in the credits when after the "Stars" the rest of the cast in listed in "Alphabetical Order". I don't know what kind of scary arsed alien alphabet they were using but it wasn't the ABC I was taught at school.

    The plot is straight out of a 1920s pre Hugo Gernsback Scientifiction pulp with strutting heroes, mentally superior super-scientists (complete with beautiful niece), cute robots, an alien overlord intent on enslaving the human race etc. etc.

    The Alien overlord shows his superiority over the puny humans by unleashing a short montage of Black and White footage of buildings being destroyed in World War 2 - a bit alarming coming in the middle of a colour SF movie. Meanwhile the Earth Government suppress the news that entire cities are being wiped off the face of the planet and turn to the only man who can stop the aliens reducing the earth to radioactive doo-doo and enslaving all the black people he can find.

    That isn't a joke on my part - the only shots of aliens enslaving people has them rounding up some "African Natives" - though the translators, probably conscious of this blatant bit of racial stereotyping, do go out of their way to get characters to tell each other that other races are getting lifted in vast numbers too.

    So confident are the powers that be in their chosen Super-scientist saviour he has to illegally assemble his team of Super-scientist helpers by stealing spaceships and springing them from Jail.

    Even weirder is the sequence about three quarters through the movie in which three scenes that should have been at the start of the flick turn up in no apparent order (Though this may just be on the DVD copy I own -part of a 20 movie box set called Space Quest) when we see the gambler hero in the casino, the auction where "Sol 3" is bought by the Alien, and a scene in the Human control room where the High Command take a break from their "who has the gayest moustache" contest long enough to realise that the Earth is utterly screwed.

    Aimed at a target audience of retarded 7 year olds.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Star Odyssey is one of the four low-budget Italian space opera movies produced in the wake of Star Wars by Italian director Alfonso Brescia (under the pseudonym Al Bradley). This is the fourth and final film in Alfonso Brescia's sci-fi series, with the others being Cosmos: War of the Planets (a.k.a. Year Zero War in Space), Battle of the Stars (a.k.a. Battle in Interstellar Space), and War of the Robots (a.k.a. Reactor).
    • Patzer
      During the opening credits, a list of cast members with lesser roles states "In alphabetical order". The names are not in alphabetical order, by either first or last name.
    • Zitate

      Tilk (Male Robot): Great integrated circuits! What's that thing? Look Tilly! A prehistoric cave robot!

      Tilly (Female Robot): I've never seen anything so ugly.

      Tilk (Male Robot): They say creatures like this shouldn't be allowed to run around loose. They ought to be kept in zoos.

      Tilly (Female Robot): Now Tilk, that's just prejudice. He has as much right to activate as we have, even if his tin is a different color.

    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Muchachada nui: Folge #2.13 (2008)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 26. Oktober 1979 (Italien)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Italien
    • Sprache
      • Italienisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Captive Planet
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Nais Film
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 43 Minuten
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono

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