Prisoners of the Lost Universe
Prisoners of the Lost Universe | |
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Directed by | Terry Marcel |
Produced by | Harry Robertson |
Music by | Harry Robertson |
Release date |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Prisoners of the Lost Universe is a low budget 1983 film set in a parallel universe and filmed in South Africa.[1]
Three people are transported to another world when an earthquake occurs just as the scientist is experimenting with his "matter" transmitter. The trio must escape the strange world of Vonya while dealing with a number of villains.
Plotline
Through a series of coincidences, Carrie, Dan and Dr. Hartmann all fall through a teleporter device Hartmann has invented. Transported to what appears to be a prehistoric world in a parallel universe and unable to find the Doctor, Dan and Carrie must figure out a way to get back home. Before they can do that, however, they must deal with tribes of savage cavemen, as well as a brutal warlord named Kleel who has taken a liking to Carrie and seems to be unusually well-supplied with Earth technology...
Cast
- Richard Hatch – Dan
- Kay Lenz - Carrie
- John Saxon - Kleel
- Peter O’Farrell - Malachi
- Ray Charleson - The Greenman
- Kenneth Hendel - Dr Hartmann
- Philip Van der Byl - The Manbeast
- Dawn Abraham - Shareen
- Ron Smerczac - Head Trader
- Charles Comyn - Treet
- Ian Steadman - 1st Prisoner
- Bill Flynn - 2nd Prisoner
- Danie Voges - Giant Nabu
- Myles Robertson - Waterbeast
In other media
An edited version of the film is featured in an episode of This Movie Sucks! where it is made fun of by Ed the Sock, Ron Sparks, and Liana K. It is one of the few episodes of the season where the entire show is dedicated to one full movie instead of two movies edited down into a "double feature"; though a Popeye the Sailor Man cartoon was also played for time.
Scenes from this film were used to form the introductory credits for the Film Ventures International re-release of the unrelated film The Stranger. The re-release was mocked on an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.
On May 22, 2012, RiffTrax, released Prisoners of the Lost Universe with comedic audio commentary provided by Michael J. Nelson, Kevin Murphy, and Bill Corbett.
Copyright status
Prisoners of the Lost Universe is registered as copyright to Samuel Goldwyn Company in the United States Copyright Office database.[2]
References
- ^ Mannikka, Eleanor. "Prisoners of the Lost Universe". AllMovie. Retrieved 2009-10-02.
- ^ Search on "Prisoners of the Lost Universe" (1984) or Document number V2049P932 in the United States Copyright Office database. Last accessed December 29, 2011.
External links
- Prisoners of the Lost Universe at IMDb
- Prisoners of the Lost Universe available for download from the Internet Archive