Fantastic Planet (1973) Czechoslovakia
Fantastic Planet Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:René Laloux
Studio:Anchor Bay
Producer:Anatole Dauman, André Valio-Cavaglione, Simon Damiani
Writer:René Laloux, Roland Topor, Stefan Wul
Rating:4
Rated:PG
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:6305307156
UPC:0013131070293
Price:$14.98
Genre:Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Release:1999-02-16
IMDb:0822808
Duration:72
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 1.0
Languages:English, French
Subtitles:English
Features:Letterboxed
Subtitled
René Laloux  ...  (Director)
René Laloux, Roland Topor, Stefan Wul  ...  (Writer)
 
Janet Waldo  ...  
Barry Bostwick  ...  
Nora Heflin  ...  
Jean Valmont  ...  
Sylvie Lenoir  ...  
Jennifer Drake (III)  ...  
Hal Smith  ...  
Hubert de Lapparent  ...  
Monika Ramirez  ...  
Cynthia Adler  ...  
Olan Soule  ...  
Mark Gruner  ...  
Jean Topart  ...  
Marvin Miller  ...  
Jennifer Drake  ...  
Eric Baugin  ...  
Boris Baromykin  ...  Cinematographer
Summary: Based on French science fiction novelist Stefan Wul's Oms en Serie ("Oms by the Dozen"), René Laloux's La Planète Sauvage (its title changed to Fantastic Planet for the U.S. release) paints an animated tale of humans kept as domesticated pets by an alien race of blue humanoid giants called Traags. The story takes place on the Traags' planet Ygam, where we follow our narrator, an Om called Terr, from infancy to adulthood, when he escapes his subjugation with a Traag learning device with which to educate the savage Oms and incite them to revolt. As a French-Czech coproduction, this story had much resonance for its makers as an allegory of Czechoslovakia's invasion by Soviet troops in the late '60s, and had to be completed in Paris due to political pressure. While the story does not distinguish itself in the annals of science fiction, the imagination invested in the surreal backdrops, with its eerie creatures and landscapes, does. The animation technique--moving paper cutouts across backgrounds--contributes to the overall feeling of other-worldliness. Fantastic Planet won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival in 1973. Included on the DVD are three early short subjects by Laloux showing his evolution toward Fantastic Planet. You have your choice of audio: French with English subtitles, or English with English subtitles. But choose the latter so you can see how much the subtitles are cheating you. --Jim Gay