Earthbound (1981 film) explained

Earthbound
Director:James L. Conway
Producer:Michael Fisher
Cinematography:Paul Hipp
Editing:Michael Spence
Music:Bob Summers
Distributor:Taft International Pictures
Runtime:94 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Earthbound is a 1981 American science fiction comedy film directed by James L. Conway. It received limited theatrical release after being rejected as a television pilot.

Plot summary

When a family of benevolent humanoid aliens is stranded in the Midwestern United States after their spaceship crashes, a kind innkeeper (Burl Ives) and his grandson (Todd Porter) take them in. Once word gets out that aliens have landed, Sheriff De Rita (John Schuck) and Deputy Sweeney (Stuart Pankin) prove unable to handle the crowds. A government agent (Joseph Campanella) arrives, who wants to assure that the aliens cannot intermingle with humankind.

Production

Parts of the film were shot in Park City, Utah.[1] The movie was developed as a TV pilot, and released theatrically when the networks showed no interest. John Schuck stated that while the area where the movie was shot was beautiful, the two-week production of the film was rushed and the script was lacking. He also felt the 16-mm filming did not lend itself to a theatrical release.[2]

Reception

In Creature Feature, the movie received 2 out of 5 stars, finding the direction lacking.[3] The show was cited as one that had potential, but was not picked up as a series in Starlog.[4]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: D'Arc. James V.. When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah. 2010. Gibbs Smith. Layton, Utah. 9781423605874. 1st.
  2. Warren, B (January 1989) Starlog #138 John Schuck: Klingon of a Thousand Faces
  3. Stanley, J. (2000) Creature Feature:3rd Edition
  4. Goldberg, L. (December 1991) Starlog #173 The Sci Fi TV You Didn't See.