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==Plot==
==Plot==


The first manned spaceship to visit [[Venus (planet)|Venus]], launched by the [[USA]], returns to [[Earth]] and crash lands into the sea, off a small Sicilian fishing village. The surviving crewmen are rescued by some fishermen and taken to the local hotel, where a visiting American scientist's daughter (played by Joan Taylor), a medical student, tends to them. One crewman, the ship's doctor, dies, leaving behind his notebook; the other crewman, Col. Robert Calder (played by William Hopper), survives and takes up the quest to find a specimen brought from Venus. Meanwhile, the specimen, shrouded in a jelly within its metal cylinder, washed ashore and was found by a excitable young local boy, who sold it to the visiting scientist. Overnight, however, the egg hatches a bipedal, reptile-like Venusian creature with a manlike torso, which just as quickly begins to grow. It is placed in a cage by the scientist, but shortly becomes big enough and strong enough to free itself. An apparent vegetarian, the creature attacks only when provoked. It goes on a rampage through the countryside and is captured in a net (to which it is lured by sulfur, which it eats back home on Venus), eventually taken to the city of [[Rome]], by which time it is the height of a two-story building. After escaping and killing an [[elephant]], the monster goes on a rampage. The American and Italian military authorities combine to stop the menace--which in fact is an innocent animal that is not understood--trapping it atop the [[Colosseum]], whence it loses its footing while under bazooka fire and tumbles to its death.
The first manned spaceship to visit [[Venus (planet)|Venus]], launched by the [[USA]], returns to [[Earth]] and crash lands into the sea, off a small Sicilian fishing village. The surviving crewmen are rescued by some fishermen and taken to the local hotel, where a visiting American scientist's daughter (played by Joan Taylor), a medical student, tends to them. One crewman, the ship's doctor, dies, leaving behind his notebook; the other crewman, Col. Robert Calder (played by William Hopper), survives and takes up the quest to find a specimen brought from Venus. Meanwhile, the specimen, shrouded in a jelly within its metal cylinder, washed ashore and was found by a excitable young local boy, who sold it to the visiting scientist.
Overnight, however, the egg hatches a bipedal, reptile-like Venusian creature with a manlike torso, which just as quickly begins to grow. It is placed in a cage by the scientist, but shortly becomes big enough and strong enough to free itself. An apparent vegetarian, the creature attacks only when provoked. It goes on a rampage through the countryside and is captured in a net (to which it is lured by sulfur, which it eats back home on Venus), eventually taken to the city of [[Rome]], by which time it is the height of a two-story building. After escaping and killing an [[elephant]], the monster goes on a rampage. The American and Italian military authorities combine to stop the menace--which in fact is an innocent animal that is not understood--trapping it atop the [[Colosseum]], whence it loses its footing while under bazooka fire and tumbles to its death.


==Production==
==Production==

Revision as of 21:04, 6 December 2008

20 Million Miles to Earth
50th Anniversary Edition DVD cover.
Directed byNathan H. Juran
Written byBob Williams
Christopher Knopf
Produced byCharles H. Schneer
StarringWilliam Hopper
Joan Taylor
Frank Puglia
CinematographyIrving Lippman
Carlo Ventimiglia
Edited byEdwin Bryant
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
June Template:Fy (US)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryTemplate:FilmUS
LanguageTransclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead.

20 Million Miles to Earth is a American Template:Fy science fiction film written by Bob Williams and Christopher Knopf from an original treatment by Charlott Knight.

The film was produced by Charles H. Schneer's Morningside Productions for Columbia Pictures and directed by Nathan H. Juran. As with several other Schneer-Columbia collaborations, it was developed to showcase the stop-motion animation talents of Ray Harryhausen. The film stars William Hopper, Joan Taylor and Frank Puglia, and features Thomas Brown Henry and John Zaremba.

Plot

The first manned spaceship to visit Venus, launched by the USA, returns to Earth and crash lands into the sea, off a small Sicilian fishing village. The surviving crewmen are rescued by some fishermen and taken to the local hotel, where a visiting American scientist's daughter (played by Joan Taylor), a medical student, tends to them. One crewman, the ship's doctor, dies, leaving behind his notebook; the other crewman, Col. Robert Calder (played by William Hopper), survives and takes up the quest to find a specimen brought from Venus. Meanwhile, the specimen, shrouded in a jelly within its metal cylinder, washed ashore and was found by a excitable young local boy, who sold it to the visiting scientist.

Overnight, however, the egg hatches a bipedal, reptile-like Venusian creature with a manlike torso, which just as quickly begins to grow. It is placed in a cage by the scientist, but shortly becomes big enough and strong enough to free itself. An apparent vegetarian, the creature attacks only when provoked. It goes on a rampage through the countryside and is captured in a net (to which it is lured by sulfur, which it eats back home on Venus), eventually taken to the city of Rome, by which time it is the height of a two-story building. After escaping and killing an elephant, the monster goes on a rampage. The American and Italian military authorities combine to stop the menace--which in fact is an innocent animal that is not understood--trapping it atop the Colosseum, whence it loses its footing while under bazooka fire and tumbles to its death.

Production

20 Million Miles to Earth was in production in Rome, Italy in September Template:Fy, using only William Hopper of the main cast, and in the U.S. from 30 October to 9 November of that year.[1] Rome was chosen as the location for filming because Harryhausen wanted to vacation there.[2] The working title of the film was The Giant Ymir,[3] and it has also been released as The Beast from Space. In the released version of the film, the creature is never referred to by name, as Harryhausen was concerned that audiences might confuse "Ymir" with the Arabic title "Emir".

File:Ymir4.jpg
The Ymir

Ray Harryhausen wanted the film to be shot in color, but the filmmakers were not given a budget large enough to accommodate color film. In 2007, Harryhausen worked with restoration and colorization company Legend Films to create a colorized version of the film. That version, along with the original theatrical black & white version, was released as part of a 50th Anniversary Edition of the film on July 31, 2007.[4][5]

Cast

  • William Hopper as Col. Robert Calder
  • Joan Taylor as Marisa Leonardo
  • Frank Puglia as Dr. Leonardo
  • John Zaremba as Dr. Judson Uhl
  • Thomas Browne Henry as Maj. Gen. A.D. McIntosh
  • Tito Vuolo as Police Commissioner Charra
  • Jan Arvan as Contino (government official)
  • Arthur Space as Dr. Sharman
  • Bart Braverman as Pepe

Cast notes

  • Ray Harryhausen makes an uncredited appearance as a man feeding an elephant in the zoo.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ TCM Notes
  2. ^ Cady, Brian "20 Million Miles to Earth" (TCM article)
  3. ^ TCM Overview
  4. ^ Thomas, Brian (2007-05-23). "SPECIAL 50th ANNIVERSARY DVD OF HARRYHAUSEN CLASSIC '20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH' restored for special 2-disc colorized edition". iF magazine. Retrieved 2007-05-29. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |coauthors= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ Ball, Ryan (2007-05-23). "20 Million Miles Gets Color on Disc". Animation Magazine. Retrieved 2007-05-29. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |coauthors= (help)

Template:American films