The Man from Planet X
6.7 /10 3 Votes
Director Edgar G. Ulmer Initial DVD release February 20, 2001 Duration | 5.8/10 IMDb Genre Horror, Romance, Sci-Fi Budget 50,000 USD | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Release date March 9, 1951(San Francisco)April 7 (NYC)April 27 (general) Cast (John Lawrence), (Enid Elliot), Raymond Bond (Prof. Elliot), (Dr. Mears), (Tommy the Constable), David Ormont (Inspector Porter)Similar movies Devil Girl from Mars, Invaders from Mars (1953 film), , Under the Skin Tagline The WEIRDEST Visitor the Earth has ever seen! |
the man from planet x 1951 trailer
From his observatory, Scottish professor Elliot (Raymond Bond) keeps close watch on Planet X, whose orbit is coming close to Earth. During the planets approach, an alien ambassador appears but falls prey to maniacal scientist Dr. Mears (William Schallert). Returning the distinct lack of hospitality, the extraterrestrial uses his otherworldly powers to turn those he encounters into mindless drones. Elliot tries to stop the creature before everyone is turned into a zombie.
Contents

The Man From Planet X is a 1951 American science fiction film. starring Robert Clarke, Margaret Field and William Schallert. It was directed by Edgar G. Ulmer.

While watching for a planet that may collide with earth, scientists stationed in Scotland are approached by a visitor from outer space.
Plot
A spaceship from a previously unknown planet lands in the Scottish moors, bringing an alien creature to earth near the observatory of Professor Elliot (Raymond Bond), just days before the planet will pass closest to the earth. When the professor and his friend, American reporter John Lawrence (Robert Clarke), discover the creature, they help it when it is in distress and try to communicate with it, but fail. They leave, and the alien follows them home. A colleague of the professor, the unscrupulous and ambitious scientist Dr. Mears (William Schallert), discovers how to communicate with the creature and tries to get from it by force the formula for the metal the spaceship is made of. He shuts off the aliens breathing apparatus and leaves it for dead, telling the professor that communication was hopeless.
Soon, Lawrence discovers that the alien is gone, as is the professors daughter, Enid (Margaret Field). Tommy, the village constable (Roy Engle), reports that others from the village are missing as well. Lawrence takes the constable to the site where the spaceship has been, but it is no longer there. With more people now missing – including Mears – the phone lines dead and the village in a panic, they get word to Scotland Yard by using a heliograph to contact a passing freighter.
When an Inspector (David Ormont) and sergeant fly in and are briefed on the situation, it is decided that the military must destroy the spaceship. Lawrence objects that doing so will also kill the people who are under the aliens control. With the mysterious planet due to reach its closest distance to the earth at midnight, Lawrence is given until 11:00 to rescue them. He sneaks up to the ship, and learns from Mears that the alien intends the ship to become a wireless relay station in advance of an invasion from its home planet, which is dying. Lawrence orders the enthralled villagers to leave and attacks the alien, shutting off its breathing apparatus, then escapes with Enid and the professor. Mears, however, returns to the ship and is killed when the military destroys the ship, just before the planet approaches and then recedes back into outer space.
Cast
Cast notes
Production
The film went into production on December 13, 1950 at Hal Roach Studios in Culver City, California and wrapped principal photography six days later. To save money, the film was shot on sets for the 1948 Ingrid Bergman film Joan of Arc, using fog to change moods and locations.
Similar Movies
Edgar G Ulmer directed The Man from Planet X and Beyond the Time Barrier. The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951). Devil Girl from Mars (1954). Robert Clarke appears in The Man from Planet X and The Astounding She-Monster. Margaret Field appears in The Man from Planet X and Captive Women.
In popular culture
References
The Man from Planet X WikipediaThe Man from Planet X IMDb The Man from Planet X themoviedb.org