IMDb > Queen of Outer Space (1958) > IMDb user comments

IMDb user comments for
Queen of Outer Space (1958) More at IMDbPro »

Filter: Hide Spoilers:
Page 1 of 5:[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [Next]
Index 45 comments in total 

17 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
A side-splitter, 24 February 2002
5/10
Author: frankfob from California

To the ranks of "Go ahead, make my day", "Badges? We don't need to stinkin' badges" and "You had me at hello," can now be added "Men cannot liff vizout vimmin," uttered dreamily by renowned philosopher Zsa Zsa Gabor in this no-budget sci-fi "epic". Everybody involved seems to be having a good time, with the exception of lead Eric Fleming, who goes through the movie with a "when this is done I'm gonna strangle my agent" look on his face, but it's a fun movie to watch. Director Ed Bernds made his name at the helm of some of the better Three Stooges shorts--including "Micro Phonies", considered by many Stoogephiles to be the team's best--so you know he couldn't have been taking this thing seriously while he was making it. (I've always wondered, however, how a writer with the stature of Ben Hecht--credited with the story--got involved in a project like this. Then a few years ago I read an article that said Hecht got loaded at a party one night and started spinning a yarn about a spaceship that crash-lands on a planet of beautiful, horny women. Somebody who heard that story passed it on to someone else, and eventually it became "Queen of Outer Space." Hecht sued the producers when he heard it was being made into a film, and as part of the settlement he got a story credit.)

It's still a fun movie, although by no standards could it be considered a good one. Just appreciate it for what it is--a chance for '50s teenage boys to see lots of tall, beautiful, leggy women running around in skimpy outfits and short skirts, for one thing--sit down with a six-pack and a pizza and have a good time.

Was the above comment useful to you?

14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-
Guilty Pleasure, 20 July 2004
Author: random_ax from chicago



I saw this film on late night TV as a youth and thought it was the coolest movie I had ever seen. Of course at that time, the coolest movie I'd ever seen was usually the most recent one. But there was something eerie and scary and exciting and fun about QOOS...... the hideous queen with her mask, the statuesque women of Venus, the death ray, the giant spider-beasts..and Zsa Zsa.

Of course, now I see the film for the campy delight it is and was intended. It's so-bad-it's-good and I own a copy of it and watch it when I need a laugh. The lines from the wolfish astronaut is so brutally oafish that I can't believe it was delivered with a straight face.

Was the above comment useful to you?

13 out of 15 people found the following comment useful :-
Queen of more than Outer Space, 8 March 2000
Author: Jamie Moffat (jamie_moffat@hotmail.com) from Melbourne, Australia

"Vimmen cannot be happy vizout man!"

Thus spake Zsa Zsa Gabor, the most unlikely sci-fi heroine of the fifties. And I guess she'd know. Swanning around the Venutian landscape trailing yards of tulle - she has apparently learned nothing from Isadora Duncan's grisly demise - its up to Zsa Zsa to save the earth from obliteration from what appears to be a ready-to-assemble treehouse.

If logic were the order of the day here it would be patently obvious from this that we're all a-goner. Happily, logic has nothing to do with it; the Venus La Gabor inhabits bears no resemblance to anything in our solar system.

Not for the first time in movie history - I'm thinking "Fire Maidens from Outer Space" here - Venus turns out to be the province of buxom, slightly past their prime showgirls, and there's nary a man in sight. Why? Well, once upon a time the men folk started a nuclear war which caused many of the women, including the planet's ruler, to suffer hideous facial scars. Suitably stung, the men were banished to a nearby satellite; meanwhile the queen wears a stupid mask and the women evidently pass their time doing their hair. In each coif there's never a strand out of place, and somewhere on Venus somebody's doing a roaring trade on fire-engine red lipstick.

Things get sticky when a whole lot of Earth astronauts land on Venus, bringing with them the sets and props for "Forbidden Planet". (Even Anne Francis' gowns get a second outing from the #2 Venus babe. No hand me downs for Zsa Zsa though!) The women are at first hostile, but the natural order is restored when Zsa Zsa takes the helm, and long before the fadeout all is goo eyes and closed mouth kissing. The men are asserting their superiority, the women are all "dames", no doubt scuttling back to the kitchen, and those who showed even the smallest trace of backbone - ie the baddies - are all safely dead.

Its hard to say whether Zsa Zsa thought this was her big break or whether she knew how hilarious the whole thing is. At any rate she dominates the proceedings, which is no mean feat seeing as she has some of the silliest sets, dialogue and special effects to compete with. People who claim that Marilyn Monroe was never given a chance to extend her dramatic range might consider taking up Zsa Zsa's cause as well. I can see her now in a 1956 remake of "Mildred Pierce" in bright, bright Technicolor.

For the time being, enjoy what's on offer. "I hate zat qveen!" snaps our star.

Ah, but how the queens love you Zsa Zsa.

Was the above comment useful to you?

10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
A Camp Classic, 29 September 2003
Author: Brian Washington (Sargebri@att.net) from Los Angeles, California

This is definitely a camp classic. The fact that Zsa Zsa Gabor tries to play this film as straight drama is worth a look at it alone. Also, this film is populated with a bunch of women who probably came straight off of a Las Vegas showroom and make Pamela Anderson look like Katherine Hepburn. Also, the special effects are some of the worst since the heyday of Ed Wood. This film definitely is one of those that fall into the category of being so bad that its funny.

Was the above comment useful to you?

11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-
Outrageous 1950s Sci-Fi, 12 July 2005
Author: mrb1980 from Arizona

When one starts watching this movie, one gets a feeling that this might be a fairly serious, good sci-fi film...then the rocket lands on Venus, and all credibility simply vanishes. First, we all know that Venus is shrouded in poisonous clouds and has a surface temperature that will melt lead, right??? Well, in this movie, Venus looks like a discount store with lots of potted tropical plants strewn around, and the intrepid astronauts never even break a sweat. The astronauts are then captured by a patrol of women in high heels (who also shout "Bagino!" over and over), and the familiar "men-encountering-love-starved-female-civilization" plot begins.

The movie does have some interesting twists: The deadly "Beta Disintegrator" with which the evil queen is planning to destroy earth; the queen's advanced acne-like skin condition; gloriously saturated color photography; Paul Birch as the bookish scientist who is uninterested in the nubile Venusian women; and of course Zsa Zsa Gabor, who gives an interesting performance as the Chief Scientist on Venus (!).

This movie is outrageously male-chauvinistic (even for the 50s) and has some of the dumbest dialogue in the cosmos. For those reasons--and to see Gabor in her most ridiculous role--you should watch this. However, I doubt that you'll want to watch it more than once.

Was the above comment useful to you?

8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Fans Have Debated for Years Whether This Film Was Intended As A Parody or Not., 2 February 1999
Author: H. David Schleicher from Burlington, NJ

"Queen of Outer Space" has been unkindly described as a deliberate parody of sci-fi cliches, but the director wasn't in on the joke.

Fans have been debating for years just what the intentions of Ben Hecht and Charles Beaumont were in penning this much-reviled space adventure. Surely both writers were capable of much better work. Surely Zsa Zsa Gabor as a Venusian space maiden was a piece of casting nobody expected to be taken seriously. Surely director Edward Bernds must have known the score. This is the man who directed the Three Stooges. He knows a joke when he sees it! Yet, in interviews, Bernds insists that the film was intended to be taken straight.

Even a casual examination of the finished product makes this hard to believe. The first half of the film seems to be skewering the stereotypical male/female relationships found in pulp sci-fi cinema of the day. But after the captain rebuffs the evil queen's advances and the plot turns to action, the film starts taking itself seriously and its sense of goofy fun dissipates quickly.

But, in fairness to Bernds: if he wasn't in on the joke, neither were any of his cast, who perform with earnest sincerity throughout.

Although the film was made by Allied Artists (Monogram after their name change), some expense seems to have been spent on it: it's in color & Cinemascope and the sets, although gaudily and colorfully fake, are extensive. Perhaps most tellingly, AA released it as a single feature, clearly a sign of confidence (or misplaced optimism) in those days where double-features were standard for B-films.

In hindsight, the question of deliberate parody may never be answered. Because of the film's reputation, those involved in the production were undoubtedly anxious to rewrite history to salvage their professional reputations.

Favorite scene: Zsa Zsa's attempt to impersonate the queen by donning her mask and issuing orders in her imperious and distinctive Hungarian accent, then being shocked when the ruse fails.

Was the above comment useful to you?

8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Hilarious cliche-ridden sci-fi fun, 23 October 1998
Author: David Elson from New York, NY

Steve Rhodes (newsgroup review) sums it up best when he says, "'Queen of Outer Space' is a parody of science fiction films. Whether it meant to be so at the time is another question." This is prime material for MST3K (very similar to "Fire Maidens from Outer Space"), but they might be avoiding "Queen" because it almost makes fun of itself. It reeks of cardboard sets, silly dialogue, and more phallic symbols, hot babes, and sexual innuendo than you can wave a stick (or laser gun) at. The astronauts ride in Lay-Z-Boy chairs and Zsa Zsa Gabor is a real treat. Never taking itself seriously, it's the "Austin Powers" of the sci-fi genre.

Was the above comment useful to you?

9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-
My favorite movie of all time, 16 April 2000
10/10
Author: toto-24 from Portland, Oregon

This truly is my favorite for sheer enjoyment. This was featured on a low-budget TV station (WOR) back in NYC in the early 1960's. It could be shown up to 20 times a week and we watched it EVERY time. It has everything: the 1958 view of life in 1984, space catastrophe, sex (well, sort of), Zsa Zsa, a man-hating queen with a shocking secret, babes in short togas, and the funniest plot ever. It's colorful, hysterical and they even throw in an animated monster for a mercifully short period of time.

Any line of Zsa Zsa's (the chief scientist of Venus) is quotable. The best moment in the show happens when she tries to impersonate the Wicked Queen and they briefly fall for it, accent and all!

Don't miss it!

Was the above comment useful to you?

5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
Boccino ! Boccino ! (Little green men !) Dahling ! ... (Possible spoilers), 20 July 2004
Author: peter-m-koch from NYC, NY, USA

*** This comment may contain spoilers ***

According to Marc Scott Zicree's "Twilight Zone Companion", screenwriter Charles Beaumont wrote the screenplay of this film as a spoof, problem was, (according to Beaumont)too many people who worked on the film didn't seem to realize it. Perhaps Zsa Zsa Gabor, who played her role in it as straight drama, as noted in another comment, is an example of this.

The scene near the beginning, in which the girlfriend of one of the astronauts watches his rocket take off, after a passionate goodbye clinch with her man, wearing deep red lipstick and a bright green dress, which billows "dramatically" around her from the wind of the takeoff, is reminiscent of the famous and iconic scene of Marilyn Monroe with her skirt billowing up around her while standing on the subway grating, in "The Seven Year Itch".

The surface of "Venus", seen spinning at, and rushing up to, the rocket right before it crashes, is really a photograph of the moon taken from one of the larger Earth-based telescopes - one at Lick Observatory, perhaps ?

The "beta disintegrator" the Queen intends to use to destroy the Earth reminds me of a giant kid's beanie with a propeller on top. The image of Earth as seen from Venus that appears in the weapon's view screen is of fair quality, and may even include some cloud cover.

Like "World Without End", I think this film may have been shown on TV laterally compressed, to fit the wide screen image into a narrower TV screen format without losing any of it. In the case of "World Without End", it made my dad ask me if I'd been fooling with the knobs on the back of the set, when I watched it on TV. Cue the "Outer Limits" control voice :

"There is nothing wrong with your television set ..."

The big fight near the end, which seems to consist of almost the entire cast shoving each other about in an annoyed, girlish way, is what Stephen King referred to in his novel "Christine" as a "pushy pushy" : an expression of annoyance without any serious intent or attempt to inflict harm.

The friend who mentioned this to me, once saw "Queen" on a double bill with the original "Attack Of The Fifty Foot Woman" in a NYC revival cinema. She remarked that the audience was almost as much fun as the film, as it consisted mostly of gay male couples doing Zsa Zsa Gabor impersonations all over each other !

Was the above comment useful to you?

4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Several reasons to love "zat Queen", 4 July 2007
10/10
Author: StacheHunter (StacheHunter@aol.com) from United States

1. This is finally out on DVD, and looks great in all it's Cinemascope and color-saturated glory! 2. Zsa Zsa is the "most intelligent scientist on Venus". Marvel at her ability to carry out lab experiments while wearing a gauzy peignoir. She's tops at flower arrangement also. 3.Check out Joi Lansing's amazing 50's "space outfit" in her all too brief scene before the main titles appear...absolutely fabulous, and she's an Earthling! 4. Laurie Mitchell's makeup under the mask appears to be Technicolor oatmeal. Or maybe it's spackle. 5. Wonder at the total square that is Eric Fleming's head. This guy has the most aggressive jawline in all of film history and it's no special effect. 6. The industrious/cheap use of sets, props, and costumes from "Forbidden Planet", "World Without End", and "Flight to Mars". I mean,really...they were just lying around! 7. How can you not love that giant spider/insect/piñata that's literally pushed out of it's hole onto an actor? It probably ended up in a dumpster, which is very, very sad. 8. Use the pause/frame feature on your DVD to slowly go through the climatic battle around the Beta Disentegrator. Not only can you see the awesome power of this cardboard weapon, but the participants of the battle are all laughing their heads off. 9. "I hate zat queen!". Where was Zsa Zsa's Oscar for delivering this line with such utter nonchalance? There is no justice in Hollywood.

Ultimate camp-fest from an era long gone, not to be missed by anyone!

Was the above comment useful to you?


Page 1 of 5:[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [Next]

Add another comment


Related Links

Plot summary Ratings Newsgroup reviews
External reviews Plot keywords Main details
Your user comments Your vote history