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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writer:
Robert Rodriguez (written by)
Release Date:
21 June 2007 (Israel) more
Tagline:
Fully Loaded more
Plot:
After an experimental bio-weapon is released, turning thousands into zombie-like creatures, it's up to a rag-tag group of survivors to stop the infected and those behind its release. full summary | full synopsis
NewsDesk:
(162 articles)
High Quality Poster of Jessica Alba in Machete
(From toxicshock. 5 November 2009, 11:00 PM, PST)
Jessica Alba Lays Down The Law In The First Machete Poster
(From Cinema Blend. 5 November 2009, 1:21 AM, PST)
User Comments:
"I want to eat your brains... and gain your knowledge." more (208 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Rose McGowan | ... | Cherry Darling | |
| Freddy Rodríguez | ... | Wray (as Freddy Rodriguez) | |
| Josh Brolin | ... | Dr. William Block | |
| Marley Shelton | ... | Dr. Dakota Block | |
| Jeff Fahey | ... | J.T. | |
| Michael Biehn | ... | Sheriff Hague | |
| Rebel Rodriguez | ... | Tony Block | |
| Bruce Willis | ... | Lt. Muldoon | |
| Naveen Andrews | ... | Abby | |
| Julio Oscar Mechoso | ... | Romy | |
| Stacy Ferguson | ... | Tammy | |
| Nicky Katt | ... | Joe | |
| Hung Nguyen | ... | Dr. Crane | |
| Cecilia Conti | ... | Paramedic Cecil | |
| Tommy Nix | ... | Paramedic Nixer |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Grindhouse Presents: Robert Rodriguez's Planet Terror (USA) (DVD title)
Project Terror (USA) (working title)
Robert Rodriguez's Planet Terror (USA) (complete title)
more
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
105 min (international version) | 95 min (original release)
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
SDDS | DTS | Dolby Digital
Certification:
Philippines:R-13 | UK:18 | Singapore:R21 | Netherlands:16 | Finland:K-18 | Spain:18 | Sweden:15 | Italy:VM14 | Canada:16+ (Quebec) | USA:Not Rated | Ireland:16 | Brazil:18 | Japan:R-15 | South Korea:18 | Portugal:M/16 | New Zealand:R16 | Germany:18 (JK/SPIO) (special edition DVD) | Germany:18 (cut) (DVD version) | Canada:18A (Canadian Home Video rating) | France:-12 | Ireland:18 (DVD rating) | Argentina:16 | Australia:MA | Peru:18
Filming Locations:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen refused to give Josh Brolin an audition for the role of Llewelyn in their movie No Country for Old Men (2007), so he asked director Robert Rodriguez to help him shoot an audition tape while Brolin was filming his Grindhouse (2007) segment (Planet Terror (2007)) for Rodriguez. Rodriguez shot and Quentin Tarantino directed the tape, which was shot in a $950,000 digital camera. Marley Shelton, who was playing Brolin's character's wife in Grindhouse, agreed to read the lines for Llewelyn's wife Carla Jean (eventually played by Kelly Macdonald). more
Goofs:
Continuity: In the hospital scene where Wray is searching for Cherry, he finds her by seeing her right boot next to her hospital bed. The infected tore off and took her right leg along the roadside, the leather boot was still on it. more
Quotes:
[first lines]
Skip:
Real pretty tonight, Holly.
[two girls are kissing]
Skip:
Goddammit, girls - if you're gonna do that shit, do it onstage!
[walks away]
Skip:
Smokin' hot. Whew!
more
Movie Connections:
References From Beyond (1986) more
Soundtrack:
Cherry's Dance of Death more
FAQ
What are the differences between the theatrical version and the unrated extended version?Robert Rodriguez is listed as "Man" in the credits. Where is he in the movie?
A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS
more
more (208 total)
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Planet Terror, before becoming it's own movie-animal of sorts as a stand-alone feature released in most parts of the world (and on DVD), was a slightly shorter, near-perfect first part of a double-bill of the Rodriguez/Tarantino double-feature Grindhouse. Not to sound like I'm in a rocking chair rambling like it's old times (and it's not even a year since its North American release), but Grindhouse contained in it two features that just very simply, quickly tapped into that genuine spirit of B-movies out there, the art and power of sleaze and trash that might not be that when done right. And also as a treat, each film showcases, in all fetishized and stupendous glory, the skills of the respective filmmakers (this goes as well for the directors of the 'trailers' that ran between the two films). For Tarantino it's stylized long-shots, intellectual-cum-vapid dialog, and a penchant for bad-ass ladies and some sick violence.
For Rodriguez, it's what we've come to see as a sort of mix between his Mariachi films and From Dusk till Dawn: slam-bang action, truly absurd twists with the occasional shock factor (in this case the "accidental" death of a child), and raucous humor from dialog that, in its own right, is probably just as self-consciously clever as QT's. On its own, and in its extended and unrated cut form, as recently watched on DVD, Planet Terror luckily doesn't suffer as much from the added footage as Death Proof nearly did. There isn't some big block of specific scenes stuffed back in from the original cut, however the bits that are noticeable for those who are aware of the original 90 minute version- i.e. waking up at night to see the green-tinted moon, the extra bit at the police station, some extras at the hospital- don't really add much at all to the proceedings to make it any better as it is.
For what it's worth though, to those who will seek it out having not had the luck- as imposed by the what seems to be ironic monacher after the Machete trailer "Brought to you by your friends at the Weinstein Company!"- Planet Terror is a kick-ass, take-no-prisoners zombie flick, filled with enough ballsy attitude for two B-movies that deserve to get immediately dusted off and played to packed audiences of sick f***s who cant get enough of gruesome, over-the-top horror violence and tongue-in--so-deep-it's-breaking-the-cheek dialog. A simple premise is that a noxious gas is let loose by a military group, somehow in some deranged plot involved with a post Bin-Laden atmosphere, and it creates total havoc on a small Texas town over one night. And over this one night a go-go dancer, a crafty but vulnerable nurse, a Chicano who's "got the devil in im'", a BBQ maestro, and some various tag-alongs and police officers bind together to fight the combat the infectious plague.
Made with panache and visual as well as verbal wit (maybe funniest is how a sex scene is so hot it burns up the screen, literally, and when the scene comes back on the place is on fire!), Rodriguez has a nifty little classic of a comedy almost in the guise of an action film inspired by both Fulci and Carpenter (however much better than the former would ever produce). Watch it friends!