Fire Maidens from Outer Space explained

Fire Maidens from Outer Space
Director:Cy Roth
Producer:Cy Roth
Writers:-->
Screenplay:Cy Roth
Story:Cy Roth
Starring:
Narrators:-->
Cinematography:Ian D. Struthers
Editing:Lito Carruthers
Production Companies:Criterion Films
Distributor:Eros Films
Runtime:80 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Fire Maidens from Outer Space (US: Fire Maidens of Outer Space) is a 1956 British independent black-and-white science fiction feature film. It was written, produced and directed by American filmmaker Cy Roth as a collaboration between Cy Roth Productions and Great Britain's Criterion Films, and distributed in the UK by Eros Films and in the USA by Topaz Film Co.. The film stars Anthony Dexter, Susan Shaw, Paul Carpenter and Jacqueline Curtis. There were 13 additional "fire maidens". The music score features cues excerpted from the opera Prince Igor by Alexander Borodin.

Many film critics have dubbed the film the "worst movie ever made".

Plot

The discovery of an Earth-like atmosphere on the 13th moon of Jupiter leads to the sending of a crew of five male astronauts, armed with handguns, to investigate. On the moon, they rescue Hestia, a beautiful girl, who is being attacked by a monster. They subsequently discover New Atlantis, a dying civilization, a remnant of the original Atlantis who escaped when that continent sank. There are only seventeen people left, all women save for a single elderly man, Prasus, whom the girls revere as "father". Prasus hopes the spacemen will stay and help him destroy the monster, which is a slender, male hominid creature, around six feet tall with dark, pitted skin, impervious to bullets, and described as a "man with the head of a beast".

Luther Blair learns from Hestia, however, that Prasus rules New Atlantis as a tyrant and wants to keep the earthmen there to mate with the girls. Duessa, one of the women, overhears Blair and Hestia conspiring to escape and encourages the other fire maidens to bind her and sacrifice her. The monster, which lurks outside the city's walls, breaks into the city and kills Prasus along with Duessa. It is killed by the earthmen, and the remaining women decide to let them return to Earth. Hestia returns with them, and the astronauts promise to send spaceships back with husbands for the rest.

Cast

Production

The Monthly Film Bulletin review credits Lito Carruthers as editor, and Scott MacGregor as assistant director.[1] However, MacGregor is credited onscreen as production and art supervisor, John Pellatt receives screen credit as assistant director, and Lito Carruthers is credited as Lighting Cameraman (Director of Photography). The actor playing the creature wears dark, tight-fitting clothing without clearly visible zippers, but with cork-blackened hands and feet and a grotesque dark head mask which appears to have been modeled on Rondo Hatton. Carruthers' contribution to the film has not been confirmed.

Reception and reputation

In a contemporary review of Fire Maidens from Outer Space (1956), The Monthly Film Bulletin stated: "Even the most dedicated connoisseurs of the artless are likely to find this British attempt at science-fiction something of a strain on their patience."[2]

From retrospective reviews, Halliwell's Film and Video Guide describes the film as "a strong contender for the title of the worst movie ever made, with diaphanously clad English gals striking embarrassed poses against cardboard sets".[3]

In Phil Hardy's book Science Fiction (1984), a review described the film as "a bottom-of-the barrel piece of British Science Fiction", and that "the film's one claim to fame is its extensive use of classical music (mostly Borodin) as background music, a trick that Stanley Kubrick deployed with far more aplomb in 2001: A Space Odyssey".

The DVD Talk website stated Fire Maidens from Outer Space "may be among the worst-ever professionally produced science fiction films"[4]

In November 1992, Fire Maidens of Outer Space was featured as an episode of the movie-mocking television show Mystery Science Theater 3000.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20151208205345/http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/DetailView.aspx?s=&Movie=53843 "Detail: 'Fire Maidens of Outer Space."
  2. "Fire Maidens from Outer Space."
  3. Walker 1999, p. 287.
  4. http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/61441/fire-maidens-of-outer-space/ "Fire Maidens Of Outer Space."