The Day the Earth Stood Still

1951

Action / Drama / Sci-Fi

36
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 95% · 59 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 87% · 25K ratings
IMDb Rating 7.7/10 10 88588 88.6K

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Plot summary

An alien and a robot land on Earth after World War II and tell mankind to be peaceful or face destruction.

Director

Top cast

Sam Jaffe as Professor Jacob Barnhardt
Carleton Young as Colonel in Jeep
Louis Jean Heydt as Airforce Captain looking perplexed
Frances Bavier as Mrs. Barley
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
847.51 MB
968*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
Seeds 11
1.64 GB
1440*1072
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
Seeds 93

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Xstal 8 / 10

The Altruistic Alien...

A spacecraft makes its way towards the earth, it's like a saucer with a rounded, curving girth, when it lands, a man descends, he comes in peace, wants to make friends, and then he's shot, because of difference, we're averse. A robot then appears and shows its power, disintegrating weapons, with its glower, but the alien assailed, gets the giant to curtail, though the sentiment is clear for all to see. It's not too long before the foreigner has gone, assimilating to a world gone wrong, finding out about mankind, finding out how we're so blind, to trajectories that lead to our extinction.I don't think the message is any different all these years later, just more pertinent.
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Reviewed by Movie_Muse_Reviews 7 / 10

The first science-fiction film with a very clear message

It's not unfair initially to dismiss "The Day the Earth Stood Still" as sci-fi pulp from an era full of it, but the film's anti-war message given the Cold War context it was released in makes it nothing short of a classic. Its commercial exterior featuring posters with Gort the space robot pales in comparison to the social/diplomatic values it preaches at its core. Sure, it's not all that suspenseful or riveting for science-fiction, but it represents one of the first pop culture films to reflect important moral values.

Borrowing from the lucrative UFO alien movies before it, TDTESS begins with a flying saucer landing in the Washington mall and producing an alien with a human appearance named Klaatu (Michael Rennie) and his robot protector Gort, a goofy-looking man in a shiny suit with the ability to disintegrate anything with a beam from his eye. For starters, Klaatu is greeted by military bullets that destroy a gift he intended for the president that would give us the ability to study life on other planets. That's the example of the strict satirical tone taken by writer Edmund H. North (based on the short story by Harry Bates).

Despite humorous special effects and the cheesy running and screaming you see in pulp alien invasion movies, TDTESS manages to expose many of our flaws including our fear of the unknown and our propensity to resort to violence. It warns of the dangers of nuclear energy and outwardly scorns war. In the beginning years of the Cold War, such a message getting out to the public is an accomplishment that must be lauded.

TDTESS isn't only good for its messages, though it certainly is what makes the film stand out. Rennie is a terrific Klaatu. He's intriguing, friendly but also very frank, winning our sympathies but still convincing us of his other-worldly nature. The relationship he develops with the young Bobby Benson (Billy Gray) is the film's most interesting subplot next to Klaatu helping a scientist out with an equation that will lead to interplanetary travel.

Rarely does a film become a classic solely because of its message, but TDTESS certainly does. It's so frank, but speaks such an undeniable truth that in the form of cheaply made science- fiction, resonates in a way that straighter films can't. That's the beauty of the genre and why TDTESS is its first classic. ~Steven C

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