Okay so today's review will be of Sid Pink's "Journey to the Seventh Planet" (1962), you may remember Sid Pink from "Reptilicus" (1961). Both films "Reptilicus" and "Journey to the Seventh Planet" were almost entirely filmed in Danish territories, with Danish crew. As for the plot it draws a lot of similarities with The Twilight Zone TV series, it has a rather same way of dealing with the protagonists' deepest fears and biggest desires with a sci-fi layout, making this film feel like an hour long episode of The Twilight Zone which isn't bad at all, because for me The Twilight Zone is the best TV series ever conceived. "Journey to the Seventh Planet" came out with the sci-fi boom of the 60's making it blend with the croud and get to be little known, although it is really creative like in the use of stop-motion animation to change the landscape of Uranus and with the "giant-rat-cyclops monster". I haven't what happens in the film so here it goes: It starts with a narration saying that the UN is the sole governor on Earth and the year is 2001, space exploration has gone far and has now reached the seventh planet, (they don't try to say Uranus a lot because it doesn't sound well if you get what I mean), and a group of five men are sent to investigate large radiation signs coming from there. When they arrive they find out it's not different from Earth at all, but after noticing odd stuff like rootless plants and other things, they figure that the place is built on their memories. Later in the film, almost in the end, we get to know that the omnipotent being that controls Uranus and reads the astronauts' minds is a giant alien brain capable of creating matter from memories or thoughts that dwell in men's mind, like for example creating women from their past to distract them. After a showdown involving a giant spider and the death of one man, the brain is finally destroyed and men leave in a desperate hurry. Well there's nothing else to say, I guarantee that it will leave you satisfied, give it a watch.Pretty good flick:
7/10
