Mission Mars (film)
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''Mission Mars'' is a
1967 Events January * January 1 – Canada begins a year-long celebration of the 100th anniversary of Confederation, featuring the Expo 67 World's Fair. * January 5 ** Spain and Romania sign an agreement in Paris, establishing full consular and ...
American
science fiction film Science fiction (or sci-fi) is a film genre that uses speculative, fictional science-based depictions of phenomena that are not fully accepted by mainstream science, such as extraterrestrial lifeforms, spacecraft, robots, cyborgs, interstellar ...
. It was produced by Everett Rosenthal, with a screenplay by Mike St. Clair from a story by
Aubrey Wisberg Aubrey Lionel Wisberg (October 20, 1909 – March 14, 1990) was a British-American filmmaker. Biography Born in London, Wisberg emigrated to the United States in 1921, attended New York University and Columbia University, and married B ...
, and directed by Nick Webster.


Plot

The United States launches three astronauts on a mission to land on Mars at around the same time that the Soviet Union launches its own secret Mars mission. On their way to Mars, the American astronauts encounter the drifting bodies of two Soviet cosmonauts, who they realize must have been buried in space. The American spacecraft lands safely on Mars, albeit farther away than planned from its accompanying supply capsule. The astronauts set out toward the supply capsule, leaving a line of balloons to mark their trail. They discover that there is a hole burned into the supply capsule's hull and that the balloons have been removed. They also discover a third cosmonaut, standing frozen in a state of suspended animation, who revives once brought inside the American spacecraft. The astronauts then encounter a strange creature (called a "Polarite"), which threatens them but which they neutralize by firing beam weapons at its single red eye. Ground controllers advise the astronauts that the Polarites seem to be robots controlled by an external influence. An alien sphere appears on the Martian surface; when Duncan, one of the astronauts, approaches the sphere he is dragged inside by a mysterious force and killed. The sphere is emitting a force field which prevents the American spacecraft from taking off. An attempt to escape by using booster rockets from the supply capsule fails. The cosmonaut tells the Americans that the sphere can be deactivated by destroying a disc inside it. Nick Grant, the American geologist-astronaut, volunteers to do so and succeeds at the cost of his life. Col. Mike Blaiswick, the surviving American astronaut, and the Soviet cosmonaut escape Mars in the American spacecraft and learn that Blaiswick's wife is pregnant.


Cast

*
Darren McGavin Darren is a masculine given name of uncertain etymological origins. Some theories state that it originated from an Anglicisation of the Irish first name Darragh or Dáire, meaning "Oak Tree". According to other sources, it is thought to come from ...
: Col. Mike Blaiswick * Nick Adams: Nick Grant * George De Vries: Duncan * Michael DeBeausset: Cliff Lawson * Heather Hewitt: Edith Blaiswick * Shirley Parker: Alice Grant


Reception

Science fiction scholar
Gary Westfahl Gary Wesley Westfahl (born May 7, 1951) is an American scholar of science fiction. He has written reviews for the ''Los Angeles Times'', ''The Internet Review of Science Fiction'' and Locus Online. He worked at the University of California, River ...
stated in his book ''The Spacesuit Film'' that ''Mission Mars'' "devolves into a conventional monster movie." Writing for '' The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'', Westfahl found the Martian plants to be strikingly bizarre and the low-budget film to be of about average quality for science fiction films of the era. Writer Thomas Kent Miller commented in ''Mars in the Movies: A History'', "The last 50 minutes of this 90-minute movie about the first trip to Mars would have made ''a wonderful episode'' of the original 1960s '' Outer Limits''  ... But as a theatrical movie, it's beyond awful (as bad as the same director's ''
Santa Claus Conquers the Martians ''Santa Claus Conquers the Martians'' is a 1964 American science fiction comedy film directed by Nicholas Webster, produced and written by Paul L. Jacobson, based on a story by Glenville Mareth, that stars John Call as Santa Claus. It also feat ...
'')." Miller cited the special effects as interesting. '' TV Guide'' gave the movie one out of five stars. While it liked the ending, and the use of a non-humanoid alien, it found the movie overall to be plodding, dull and amateurish.


Production

The movie includes stock footage of Cape Kennedy. It was the first movie to be made at Miami's Studio City Complex. It was also released in the UK as ''Murder in the Third Dimension''.


References


External links

* {{IMDb title, 0063311, Mission Mars 1960s science fiction films 1967 films 1960s English-language films American science fiction films Films about astronauts Films directed by Nicholas Webster Films shot in Florida Films with screenplays by Aubrey Wisberg Mars in film Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films 1960s American films English-language science fiction films