Matrixston
Wow! Such a good movie.
Beystiman
It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
SpunkySelfTwitter
It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.
Guillelmina
The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
azathothpwiggins
KILLERS FROM SPACE opens w/ a literal bang, as an atom bomb test results in the requisite mushroom cloud. Dr. Doug Martin (Peter Graves- IT CONQUERED THE WORLD, BEGINNING OF THE END) is along for the ride in one of the aircraft. Oh dear! Something goes haywire, and down they go! The wreckage is located, but where's Dr. Martin? His wife is worried sick! Some time later, Martin simply walks onto his base, w/ no visible signs of injury, save for one mysterious scar! Paul begins seeing visions of floating eyeballs! After a confusing time, including involvement by the FBI, Martin starts to recall what happened to him, thanks to a jolt of truth serum. He tells a story about his having been abducted by a group of pop-eyed aliens. No, honestly, these guys all have cookie monster's spare peepers! They also wear the Phantom's extra outfits... and mittens! They're up to no good, planning an invasion! There are even some "giant", superimposed lizards and bugs running around, apparently filmed at the local zoo's reptile and insect exhibits. Will anyone believe Paul, before it's too late? The problem w/ this movie is that it's an alien invasion movie without an invasion, or any real action of any kind. It just sort of drags along, grinding to a halt whenever something remotely interesting seems to be about to occur! A true rubber mallet to the forehead! A pain lover's dream! Co-stars schlock regular, Frank Gerstle (THE ATOMIC BRAIN, THE WASP WOMAN) as Dr.Curt Kruger...
Robert J. Maxwell
"Killers From Space" seems to attract a lot of negative reviews but I'm not sure why. It's not that bad, as cheesy, sleazy, poorly acted, and egregiously written science fiction movies go.The first thirty five minutes, in fact, have nothing to do with aliens or space anyway. It's a anti-communist spy plot. The remaining eighty minutes or so owe something to "Plan Nine From Outer Space." A scientist, Peter Graves, manages to survive a calamitous airplane crash after an atomic bomb test. He shows up in perfect health and evidently unchanged except for a new surgical scar over his heart. He's all set to go back to work. But the other high muck-a-mucks in the atomic bomb business claim he's acting strangely. That's an example of poor writing because, in fact, he's his usual self -- earnest, loving towards his wife, and friendly. Someone points this out to Graves' superior, played by Frank Gerstle, the only other recognizable face in the cast. Gerstle's riposte: "How do you disprove that scar?" I, for one, don't know. How DO you "disprove a scar"? Another interesting dilemma arises when the Air Force colonel sternly orders Graves to go home and relax. How can you relax when someone is ordering you to do it? That's known as a double bind. The logical paradox would have been clearer if the colonel had ordered Graves to be spontaneous. If Graves were then to be spontaneous, he would be following an order to do so and would therefore not be acting spontaneously.But enough of these rational caprices. Graves discovers that he's been saved by aliens who retrieved his body from the crash site, then hypnotized into digging up all sorts of classified information and delivering it to the aliens in the cave where they're hiding out, preparing to take over the world. Graves demurs. "You're asking me to betray three billion people." The writers didn't do any homework. In 1954, the world's population was a bit less than one billion. Today it's about 6.3 billion. (In 40 years it's estimated at 12 billion, something to think about when it comes to taking over the world.) The aliens are dressed in black sweat suits with hoods and have ping pong balls for eyes. That's pretty curious in itself. The director was Billy Wilder's brother and the story was written, I think, by Billy's nephew. Couldn't they have done better with the aliens? It would have been an improvement if, instead of trying to make them look strange and failing, they had simply used ordinary actors in ordinary period clothing.But -- even that problem is small compared to another that the film must prompt in the mind of any thoughtful viewer. Where did these aliens learn to speak English? Did they learn it from watching other cheap movies about aliens from space? It's a reasonable question because they speak the same in every such movie. There are only American accents to begin with, devoid of any regionalisms. No alien has ever said anything like, "I weren't listening," as a resident of Appalachia or Yorkshire might. No, their English is always standard and even includes a few multi-syllabic words. Yet none of them has learned to use CONTRACTIONS. "You are very clever," they say. or, "We have anticipated that." They always separate the pronoun from the verb. Whatever their information source, it was not a class in colloquial English.It's a tawdry film. It's the kind of thing that writers and directors might have pumped out overnight on a major dexedrine binge, recklessly and heedless of logic or art. It could have been better, and maybe even less expensive, had any of the elements shown any talent. As it is, there's not a touch of originality in it.
TheUnknown837-1
With the exception of John Frederick (credited at John Merrick) every single cast member of "Killers from Space" seems unenthusiastic, tired, and unhappy having to mumble their banal dialogue and ham their way to a paycheck. That's really all they can do in a production as dimwitted and ultimately doomed as this one. It is one of countless Z-grade horror/science-fiction flicks from the days of yesteryear and is just as unbearably bad as say "Creature from the Haunted Sea," "Plan 9 from Outer Space" and "The Phantom from 10,000 Leagues."I am giving this film a half-star (2 out of 10 on the IMDb scale) simply because there is a saving grace, which I mentioned at the beginning of my uncharacteristically terse review. Our antagonist is a ninja-suited, humanoid alien with eyes the size of small dinner plates who mutters in a chilling voice "We come from a planet yet unknown to you" and who barks at Peter Graves "Stay where you are!" when he tries to run before activating a cheap light ray gun that stuns him. Frederick is the movie's saving grace because he seems suited and enthusiastic for his part and darn it, he did a more than fine job.Too bad the part and the actor wasn't in a better picture. "Killers from Space" is Not Rated by the MPAA and there is no need to. The graphically-enlarged lizards and aliens with Nazi-like salutes are unlikely to frighten, only tire out.P.S. this is the shortest review I've written in probably over a year! (I hadn't much to say that I hadn't already said before)
Alberto Paino Henriquez Sanchez
Well, It Seems That Anyone That Knows About This Movie Bought The 50 Movie Pack That I Own: "Sci-Fi Classics" by Mill Creek Entertainment, Or They Watched It OnlineThe Plot Couldn't Be More Cliché, The Beginning Is Shameless Stock Footage (Of Airplanes) From Another Films, Then The Protagonist (Peter Graves) Crashes He's Airplane and Survives, Later He Discovers That He It's Alive Because Of Aliens and Those Aliens Want To Take Over The World And He Has To Stop Them.Same B-Movie StuffBut Actually when I Saw it I Thought it Was A Little Funny Movie, I'm Not Saying That This is An Excellent Movie But It is Entertainment (In a B-Movie Way).It is an Underground Super low budget sci-fi movie from the 50's, but isn't that great? I love B-Movies and This is the perfect sample of a B-Movie.The First Time I Saw It was at 6:00am and I was kind of Tired, The Movie Had an Hypnotizing Impact On me that made me Like it...Good Cheesy Fun!So If You Are Curious Enough Forget The Bad Comments Or Ratings and Give It A Watch!