(Possible inspiration for Plan 9 from Outer Space?)
For the very few who might not know, the saga begins with Bela Lugosi. Bela was down on his luck at the back end of a career which began with much promise but had fizzled. Bela was a drug addict and Ed Wood became his friend and dreamed of creating a movie starring the veteran actor. He succeeded with the movie Bride of the Monster which starred Bela alongside Tor Johnson as a mute named "Lobo". Wood had used Bela in his autobiographical movie Glen or Glenda also, but his role was more symbolic. By the time of Plan 9, Bela Lugosi had passed away. But Wood had footage of the old star and used this stuff as a jumping off point for a movie about grave robbers from space using dead bodies to presumably conquer mankind. The movie was a weird blend of science fiction and horror, and as we all know epic unintentional comedy.
Wood tries to make hay on the flying saucer craze of the 50's as well, using model kits to populate his cinematic skies with attacking spacecraft. He also cast Vampira, a well-known movie host who had just been let go from that position. She never spoke but her singular look is one of the best things about Plan 9. Tor Johnson is back as a police officer and even gets to talk a little bit (his only lines in any Ed Wood movie he was in) before he killed and turned into a very threatening yet cuddly zombie. Our doughty hero is Geoffrey Walcott, an actor who would go on to have an actual mainstream career in spite of Plan 9. Sprinkle in small parts for veteran actors like Lyle Talbot and Tom Keene among a gaggle of relative amateurs and in Wood's mind you had the makings of a classic.
(What a pair!)
Watching the movie again (I've seen it countless times) I was once again delighted by the humor which leaps from the screen. Cops slinging guns around with aplomb, prissy aliens getting in a snit, and he-man heroes trying to save both the girl and humanity are all part of a pageant which entertains relentlessly. Ed Wood might have made some bad movies (and he did) but he was diligent and sincere, so one is forced to take him at his word. Watch Plan 9 form Outer Space with the same seriousness Wood brought to it and it won't get better, but it will impress.
Rip Off
About 30 years ago Channel 4 in the UK had a season of "films so bad they're good" and one of the films was Plan 9 From Outer Space which is how I first saw this film. The idea of the season was amusing at first but the films were utterly dreadful and the novelty quickly wore off for me.
ReplyDeleteMovies which are "so-bad-they're-good" are a hard find. They cannot be made intentionally, which more than a few folks try to do. The intention of the filmmaker must be earnest, and that honest effort and the resulting awfulness give the movie a charm it might otherwise lack. Wood tried his best, and that's what we got...for better or worse.
DeleteIt's amazing how Ed put together these "ensemble" casts for his movies. I mean, where would we be without Tor Johnson's visage in the history of horror? I agree, Plan 9 isn't Ed's worst film. He had plenty of other full-on stinkers.
ReplyDeletePeople who label this the worst movie ever made have not seen that many movies.
DeleteHa! Agreed! Ed Wood as scapegoat!
ReplyDelete