1
The Inspector General (1949 Color Musical Comedy film)
1:41:54
2
Glorifying the American Girl (1929 Pre-Code Musical Comedy film)
1:34:04
3
The Old Barn (1929 Talkie Film)
20:19
4
The Dance of Life (1929 American Pre-Code Musical film)
1:51:35
5
Big News (1929 American Pre-Code film)
1:06:17
6
The Bees' Buzz (1929 "Talkie" Comedy film)
19:33
7
Hook, Line and Sinker (1930 Pre-Code Slapstick Comedy film)
1:14:41
8
Abraham Lincoln (1930) Pre-Code Biographical film
1:24:39
9
Hot Curves (1930 Pre-Code) Comedy Drama film
1:03:41
10
Half Shot at Sunrise (1930 Pre-Code Comedy film)
1:18:02
11
The Bat Whispers (1930 American Pre-Code mystery film) (widescreen)
1:23:48
12
The Royal Bed (1931 Pre-Code Satirical Comedy film)
1:12:11
13
The Black Camel (1931) Charlie Chan Mystery Film
1:10:52
14
Mr. Robinson Crusoe (1932) Comedic, Adventure Movie
1:10:31
15
The Thirteenth Guest (1932 Pre-Code Mystery Comedy Thriller film)
1:08:48
16
Bird of Paradise (1932 Pre-Code Romantic Adv. Drama film)
1:22:42
17
The Kennel Muser Case (1933 American Pre-Code mystery film)
1:13:06
18
Deluge (1933 American Apocalyptic Sci-Fi film)
1:06:04
19
The Lost City (1935 Independent Sci-Fi movie Serial)
3:13:25
20
My Man Godfrey (1936 Colorized Screwball Comedy film)
1:34:14
21
Nothing Sacred (1937 Technicolor screwball comedy film)
1:13:22
22
Gulliver's Travels (1939 Animated Musical Fantasy film)
1:16:22
23
Made for Each Other (1939 American Romantic Comedy film)
1:32:49
24
Holt of the Secret Service (1941 Columbia film Serial)
4:35:54
25
Zorro's Black Whip (1944 Republic Pictures Movie Serial)
2:23:09
26
Captain America (1944 Republic 15-chapter Movie Serial)
4:02:18
27
Till The Clouds Roll By (1946 American Technicolor Musical film)
2:15:08
28
The Stranger (1946 American Thriller film noir)
1:34:58
29
The Chase (1946 American film noir)
1:24:43
30
Angel and the Badman (1947 American Western film)
1:39:33
31
My Favorite Brunette (1947 American romantic comedy film)
1:27:20
32
The Amazing Mr. X (1948 American Horror Thriller film noir)
1:17:34
33
My Dear Secretary (1948 American Comedy film)
1:34:22
34
Africa Screams (1949 Abbott & Costello Comedy film)
1:19:07
35
Quicksand (1950 American film noir)
1:19:02
36
Cyrano de Bergerac (1950 American Adventure Comedy film)
1:52:52
37
D.O.A. (1950 American film noir)
1:23:24
38
The Jackie Robinson Story (1950 biographical film)
1:16:45
39
Father's Little Dividend (1951 American Comedy film)
1:21:16
40
Royal Wedding (1951 American Musical Comedy film)
1:31:37
41
Kansas City Confidential (1952 American film noir)
1:39:16
42
Indestructible Man (1956 Crime Horror Sci-Fi film)
1:11:02
43
The Screaming Skull (1958 American horror film)
1:08:01
Teenagers from Outer Space (1959 Independent Sci-Fi Cult film)
1:25:28
45
The Bat (1959 American Crime-Mystery Thriller film)
1:21:35
46
House on Haunted Hill (1959 Crime, Horror, Mystery film)
1:14:49
47
The Little Shop of Horrors (1960 American Horror Comedy film)
1:11:49
48
Carnival of Souls (1962 Independent Horror film)
1:22:59
49
McLintock! (1963 American Western Comedy film)
2:06:47
50
Night of the Living Dead (1968 American Independent Horror film)
1:35:31
51
Virus (1980 Japanese Sci-Fi Film)
2:36:13

Teenagers from Outer Space (1959 Independent Sci-Fi Cult film)

3 months ago
62

The film was produced, written, and directed by Tom Graeff and stars David Love, Dawn Bender, Bryan Grant, Harvey B. Dunn, Tom Graeff, and King Moody. Teenagers from Outer Space was distributed theatrically by Warner Bros. on a double feature with Gigantis the Fire Monster, the English-dubbed version of the 1955 Japanese giant monster film Godzilla Raids Again.

In the film, a young alien named Derek abandons his crew to search for a new life on Earth, while one of his crewmates is sent to find him as they attempt to eradicate human life in order to farm Earth with giant lobster-like livestock they call Gargons.

Plot
A flying saucer arrives on Earth while searching for planets suitable to raise "Gargons", a lobster-like but air-breathing monster that is a reserve food supply on their home planet. Crewman Thor shows his alien contempt for Earth's creatures, by needlessly vaporizing a dog named Sparky with a disintegrator ray gun.

Another crew member by the name of Derek, discovers an inscription on Sparky's dog tag and fears the Gargons might destroy Earth's native inhabitants. This makes the other aliens scoff at the thought. Being members of the "supreme race", they disdain "foreign beings", no matter how intelligent; they pride themselves that "families" and "friendships" are forbidden on their world. Derek reveals an ancient book and turns out to be a member of an underground rebellion, that commemorates the more humane periods of their world's history, before they became mechanized slaves.

Cast
David Love as Derek
Dawn Bender as Betty Morgan
Bryan Grant as Thor
Harvey B. Dunn as Gramps Morgan
Tom Graeff (billed as Tom Lockyear) as Joe Rogers
King Moody as Spacecraft Captain
Ralph Lowe as Morro, Spaceship Crew
Bill DeLand as Sol, Spaceship Crew
Billy Bridges as Motorist picking up Thor
Sonia Torgeson as Alice Woodward
Jim MacGeorge as Detective Mac
Frederick Welch as Dr. C.R. Brandt, MD
Helen Sage as Nurse Morse
Gene Sterling as The Alien Leader
Sol Resnick as the Junior Astronomer
Don Chambers as the Senior Astronomer
Carl Dickensen as Gas Station Attendant
Ursula Hansen as Hilda, Simpson's Secretary
James Conklin as Professor Simpson

Production
Teenagers from Outer Space was filmed on location in and around Hollywood, California, in the fall of 1956 and winter of 1957. With a number of tell-tale landmarks like Bronson Canyon in Griffith Park and Hollywood High School, which gives away the film's otherwise generic location. One notable aspect of the film is that it was largely the work of a single person, Tom Graeff, who, in addition to playing the role of reporter Joe Rogers, wrote, directed, edited, and produced the film, on which he also provided cinematography, special effects, and music coordination. Producers Bryan and Ursula Pearson ("Thor" and "Hilda") and Gene Sterling ("The Leader") provided the film's $14,000 budget, which was less than shoestring even by the standards of the day.

Cost-effective measures
According to Bryan Pearson, the crew employed many guerrilla tactics in order to cut costs. Director Tom Graeff secured for free the location used for Betty Morgan's house by posing as a UCLA student (which he had attended and graduated from 5 years earlier). The older woman who owned the house even let the crew use her electricity to power their equipment.

Other cost-cutting measures did not work as well: The aliens' costumes were simple flight suits clearly decorated with masking tape, dress shoes covered in socks, and surplus Air Force flight helmets. The use of stock footage, in lieu of real special effects and pre-Spielbergian "looking" shots that replaced actual visuals of the invading alien spaceships, seriously undercut the film's ending. Props included a single-bolted-joint skeleton re-used for every dead body seen on screen, a multi-channel sound mixer that was not camouflaged (clearly bearing the label "Multichannel Mixer MCM-2") as a piece of alien equipment, and a dime store Hubley's "Atomic Disintegrator" toy as the aliens' disintegrator ray gun.

Release and legacy
In June 1958 Bryan Pearson, who invested $5,000 in the production with his wife Ursula, took Graeff to court in order to gain back the original investment and a percentage of any profits. The Pearsons had learned that Graeff had allegedly sold the film (originally titled The Boy From Out of This World),[9] which did not happen until early 1959. He heard nothing more on their investment or a percentage of profits to which they were entitled. The legal dispute dragged on for a year. Pearson received his $5,000 investment, but the judge ruled there was no profit to share.

Loading comments...