The story concerns the first interplanetary flight to Mars, carrying a crew of five, and launched from Earth orbit near "The Wheel", mankind's first space station. On their long journey they encounter various dangers, both from within and without, that nearly destroy the mission.
Plot
Humankind has achieved space flight capability and built "The Wheel" space station in orbit 1,075 miles (1,730 km) above Earth. It is commanded by its designer, Colonel Samuel T. Merritt. His son, Captain Barney Merritt, having been aboard for a year, wants to return to Earth.
A giant spaceship has been built in a nearby orbit, and an Earth inspector arrives aboard the station with new orders: Merritt Sr. is being promoted to general and will command the new spaceship, now being sent to Mars instead of the Moon. As General Merritt considers his crew of three enlisted men and one officer, his close friend, Sgt. Mahoney volunteers. The general turns him down for being 20 years too old. Hearing that Mars is the new destination, Barney Merritt volunteers to be the second officer.
Right after the crew watches a TV broadcast from their family and friends, the mission blasts off. The general's undiagnosed and growing space fatigue is beginning to seriously affect his judgement: reading his Bible frequently, he has doubts about the righteousness of the mission. After launch, Sgt. Mahoney is discovered to be a stowaway, having hidden in a crew spacesuit. Their piloting radar antenna later fails, and two crewmen go outside to make repairs. They manage to get it working just as their monitors show a glowing planetoid coming at them. The general fires the engines, barely managing to avoid a collision, but the planetoid's fast-orbiting debris punctures Sgt. Fodor's spacesuit, killing him instantly. After a religious service in space, Fodor's body is cast adrift into the void.
Eight months later, the general is becoming increasingly mentally unbalanced, focusing on Sgt. Fodor's loss as "God's judgement". On the Mars landing approach, he attempts to crash their spaceship, now convinced the mission violates the laws of God. Barney wrests control away from his father, landing the large flying wing glider-rocket safely. Later, as the crew takes their first steps on Mars, they look up and see water pouring down from the now vertical return rocket. Barney quickly discovers the leak is sabotage caused by his father, who threatens his son with a .45 semiautomatic. The two struggle and the pistol discharges, killing the general. Sgt. Mahoney, who observed only the last stages of the struggle, wants Barney confined under arrest with the threat of court martial, but cooler heads prevail; Barney becomes the ranking officer.
Mars proves to be inhospitable, and they struggle to survive with their decreased water supply. Earth's correct orbital position for a return trip is one year away. While glumly celebrating their first Christmas on Mars, a sudden snowstorm blows in, allowing them to replenish their water supply. As their launch window arrives, they hear low rumbling sounds, then see rocks falling, and feel the ground shake violently. The ground level shifts during this violent marsquake. Their spaceship is now leaning at a precarious angle and cannot make an emergency blast off. To right the spaceship, the crew uses the rocket engines' powerful thrust to shift the ground under the landing legs. The attempt works and they blast off, the spaceship rising just as the Martian surface completely collapses.
Once in space, Barney and Mahoney reconcile. Impressed with Barney's heroism and leadership while on Mars, Mahoney concludes that pursuing Barney's court martial for his father's death would only impugn the general's reputation, tarnishing what previously had been a spotless military career. Better is the fiction that "the man who conquered space" died in the line of duty, sacrificing himself to save his crew.
The science and technology portrayed in Conquest of Space were intended to be as realistic as possible in depicting the first voyage to Mars. The film's theatrical release poster tagline reads: "See how it will happen ... in your lifetime!"[2]
The title Conquest of Space is from the 1949 nonfiction book The Conquest of Space, written by Willy Ley and illustrated by Chesley Bonestell. George Pal had hired Bonestall to be a technical adviser on Destination Moon.[3] This was a huge hit and Pal used Bonestall again on When Worlds Collide.
In May 1952 Pal announced he would make a film out of Conquest of Space.[4] George Pal bought the book's film rights at the suggestion of Ley.[5] Universal said they had a similar project, Space Island.[6]
In June 1952 it was reported that Barré Lyndon, who wrote War of the Worlds for Pal, was working on a script.[7] In January 1953 Philip Yordan was working on the script.[8] The following month Byron Haskin was named as director and Wernher von Braun would be a technical adviser.[9] James Hanlon did the final script.[10]
Bonestell, noted for his photorealistic paintings showing views from outer space, worked on the film's space matte paintings.[2] The production design of Conquest of Space was closely modeled on the technical concepts of Wernher von Braun and Bonestell's space paintings, which originally appeared in Collier's magazine and were reprinted in the 1952 Viking Press book Across the Space Frontier, edited by Cornelius Ryan.[11]
The film also incorporated concepts from von Braun's 1952 book The Mars Project, as well as material appearing in the April 30, 1954, issue of Collier's magazine, "Can we get to Mars?" by von Braun, with Cornelius Ryan. This would later be incorporated into the 1956 Viking Press book The Exploration of Mars by Willy Ley, Wernher von Braun, and Chesley Bonestell.[11] All of these books mainly feature text that is straight popular science, with no fictional characters or story line.[2] In addition, according to director Byron Haskin, "We had Wernher von Braun on the set all the time...as a technical advisor".[12][11]
Although the budget was $1.5 million, George Pal and Paramount decided not to use stars.[1] Walter Brooke turned down a five-year contract to appear in a soap opera to make the movie.[13] Eric Fleming was pulled out of the cast of My Three Angels on Broadway to appear in the film.[14]
Filming started 16 November 1954.[15]
Reception
Critical response upon release
Judgments on the quality of the film's special effects have varied. Upon the film's release, reviewer Oscar A. Godbout in his review for The New York Times praised the effects, but was disparaging of the storyline, noting "... as plots go...it is not offensive".[16]
Later critiques
Film authority Roy Kinnard says, “In examining the plethora of 1950s science-fiction movies which deal with the theme of man's journeying to other worlds in order to advance his own knowledge, George Pal’s production of Conquest of Space stands head and shoulders above the others.... [I]n a ... genre overburdened with cheap and shoddy productions that are all too deserving of scorn, Conquest of Space rises above the tide of mediocrity. ... [T]he special visual effects in Conquest ... are outstanding for their time ... and they are the well-tailored work of one of Hollywood’s most gifted craftsmen, John P. Fulton. Besides the massive, graceful spacecraft shown in this film, it was Fulton who was responsible for parting the Red Sea in the 1956 version of The Ten Commandments. ... It is true that the blue screen mattes in Conquest are crude [from our perspective] ... but this is hardly a technical flaw unique to this picture. Many productions of the 50s had difficulty with blue screen work, even multi-million-dollar spectaculars like Ben-Hur”.[17] Furthermore, science fiction film authority Thomas Kent Miller states, "Blue screen was used extensively in this epic [The Ten Commandments], and the blue line fringes are always quite evident throughout the movie. In fact, Fulton’s remarkable and iconic Parting of the Red Sea sequence is a great hodgepodge of intersecting blue fringe lines".[11]
British film critic John Baxter, in his 1970 volume, Science Fiction in the Cinema, states, “Conquest of Space ... gave [George] Pal and [Byron] Haskin an excuse to show realistic take-offs, space maneuverings, and a landing on Mars ... achieved with some flair. Drama in the shape of a religious maniac at the helm detracts little from the essential narrative, and some of the detail is clever, such as the space burial with the suited corpse sliding slowly on a long fall into the sun".[18]
Modern audiences are apt to notice the presence of matte lines. Reviewer Glenn Erickson said that "the ambitious special effects were some of the first to garner jeers for their lack of realism". Erickson correctly assesses the film as "a flop that seriously hindered George Pal's career as a producer".[19] Paul Brenner said, "Pal pulls out all stops in the special effects department, creating 'The Wheel', rocket launches into space, and a breathtaking near-collision with an asteroid".[20]The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction said "The special effects are quite ambitious but clumsily executed, in particular the matte work".[21] Paul Corupe said that often "the overall image on screen that inspires awe: the Martian landscape, the general's high-tech office, and the vastness of the cosmos. The film's budget is certainly up on screen for your entertainment, but it's just spectacle for spectacle's sake". He, too, complains of matte lines, but acknowledges, "the composites are convincing enough for the time the film was made".[22] Corupe described it as the "first big flop in Pal's career. It was a major setback that saw him abandon science fiction filmmaking for five years, including a planned sequel to When Worlds Collide"[22]The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction remarks "A truly awful film, Conquest of Space is probably George Pal's worst production".[21]
Academy Award winner Dennis Muren offers a memory of 1955: “[M]y pal Bruce and I hurried into the Hawaii Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard to see a new color movie, Conquest of Space. We were eight years old. ... ‘Reeling’ by on the giant screen, we saw a giant circular space station in orbit one hundred [sic] miles up, seemingly in orbit above me over Hollywood. Wow! And that was just the beginning. Awesome rocket ships of various shapes flew about. ... Finally, the movie ended with a skillful . . . and joyful liftoff from the desolate red surface of Mars. ...”[23][24]
Possible impact on Kubrick and 2001: A Space Odyssey
Approximately ten years following the 1955 release of Conquest of Space, the film director Stanley Kubrick began planning his next film project following his critical and popular hit Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. The follow-up would become 1968's 2001: A Space Odyssey. While Kubrick planned his space epic, he made a point of viewing virtually all science-fiction movies to understand what the genre had done before, and also to learn what tropes to avoid.[26][27][28]
Principally, Kubrick was on the lookout for particular and specific images and themes that referenced or reflected the infinity of space—its inherent magic and beauty—in other words, its ability to spark a sense of wonder. Of the myriad early science-fiction productions that Kubrick must have viewed, most were certainly earthbound B movies that shied away from the sorts of expensive special visual effects and matte paintings that would ordinarily inspire awe or wonder in casual audiences. Kubrick’s goal was to create a space tale that was thought-provoking and that included numerous images that were truly awesome (in the proper sense of the word); thus, it was his intention “to pull out all the stops”.[29]
According to genre film authority James Roman in his Bigger than Blockbusters: Movies that Defined America:[30] “Articulating his vision about the infiniteness of space, Kubrick use[d] America’s Apollo space program as a means to embark from. [The program’s] goal was to land humans on the Moon and return them safely to earth. . . . [W]hile the American space program [clearly] influenced Kubrick's work, it did not provide him with the material he needed to visualize space travel and with the technology of the future. A 1955 film, George Pal’s Conquest of Space provided Kubrick with a sense of direction in his . . . pursuit of this imagery. [For example,] in Pal’s film there is [the center-piece] rotating wheel or earth station that Kubrick adapts to 2001, and he creates a poetic image of it floating and rotating in space . . . .” The goal of this exercise of viewing dozens of earlier science-fiction movies had little to do with plot elements; Kubrick simply ignored Conquest of Space's highly-criticized story line and character development and instead focused on the film's remarkable design. He sought high-quality, well-crafted images that would stimulate himself and his creative staff to reach higher to find the look and design of his own film.[31]
Furthermore, the genre film authority Roy Kinnard also suggests strongly in his 1979 Fantastic Films article, “Conquest of Space: A New Look at an Old Classic”, that the visually arousing design of Kubrick’s 2001 was influenced by Conquest of Space. He says, “...the most interesting aspect of Conquest [is] its startling parallels with Stanley Kubrick’s epic 1968 production. It is a well-known fact that before he began work on 2001, Kubrick watched virtually every science fiction film ever made, and it is not unreasonable to assume that he not only saw Conquest, but also found quite a bit of inspiration in it.” Then Kinnard points out a number of similarities between the two films (illustrated with photo stills from the movies)—some obvious and others not so obvious. For example, the same space station wheel in both pictures noted by Roman (above) as well as a number of set pieces.[26]
Regarding Kinnard’s expression “quite a bit of inspiration”, insofar as the film’s two-minute title sequence was designed by Paramount’s consummate special visual effects professionals to stimulate our senses, especially sight and hearing, by concentrating evocative imagery of space and nebulae within the titles so as to induce an impression of “the infiniteness of space,” it may be that that sequence in part satisfied and fulfilled Kubrick’s requirements.[32][33] It may be that a description of the scene may help some people visualize its expansiveness and expressiveness. Many things happen at the same time during the titles,[33] which are cataloged here in footnote No.36.[34][35]
Additionally, the frontispiece illustration to the introduction of Douglas Brodie’s 2015 Fantastic Planets, Forbidden Zones, and Lost Continents shows a photo still of an astronaut floating in space from Conquest juxtaposed with an equivalent image from 2001 and bears the caption: “The highest form of flattery: As in other genres, science fiction filmmakers often include homages to earlier works. An ultra-realistic image of likely future travel from George Pal’s Conquest of Space (1955) would be almost precisely referenced in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).”[36]
^Rattigan Script Stirs Anglo-American Project; Downs 'Dog's Life' Lead
Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 16 Sep 1949: 27.
^GEORGE PAL PLANS NEW FILM ON SPACE: Science-Fiction Producer May Do Movie on Satellite That Hangs Out in Universe
By THOMAS M. PRYORS New York Times 21 May 1952: 22.
^Kinnard, Roy. “A New Look at an Old Classic: Conquest of Space” in Fantastic Films: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in the Cinema, Volume 2, Number 2. Chicago: Blake Publishing Corp., June 1979
^Baxter, John. Science Fiction in the Cinema. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1970.
^Muren, Dennis. “Foreword” in Modern Sci-Fi Films FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About Time Travel, Alien, Robot, and Out-of-This-World Movies Since 1970 by Tom DeMichael. Milwaukee, WI: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books, 2014.
^Miller, Thomas Kent. Mars in the Movies: A History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2016. p. 64 ISBN 978-0-7864-9914-4.
^ abKinnard, Roy. “Conquest of Space: A New Look at an Old Classic” in Fantastic Films Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 48-53. 1979.
^Roman, James. Bigger Than Blockbusters: Movies That Defined America. Westport, Connecticut, London. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 153. 2009.
^Miller, Thomas Kent. Mars in the Movies: A History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, pp. 53-70. 2016. ISBN 978-0-7864-9914-4.
^Roman, James. Bigger Than Blockbusters: Movies That Defined America. Westport, Connecticut, London. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 153. 2009.
^Roman, James. Bigger Than Blockbusters: Movies That Defined America. Westport, Connecticut, London. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 153. 2009.
^Clarke, Arthur C. The Lost Worlds of 2001. New York. New American Library, Inc. pp. 100-106. 1972.
^New York Times movie review, "Special Effects Show 'Conquest of Space'", May 28, 1955. "There is very little doubt about who should receive a generous amount of credit and praise for Conquest of Space, yesterday's science-fiction entry at the Palace. They are the special effects artists, John P. Fulton, Irmin Roberts, Paul Lerpae, Ivyle Burks and Jan Domela. In telling the fanciful tale of man's first trip to Mars, they created top-flight effects such as "the wheel," a self-contained station orbiting about earth [and] rocket flights in space [a concentration of which enhance the film’s title sequence] . . . . These facets of the Paramount production—and fortunately they are many and frequent—are much to marvel at . . . ."
^ abMiller, Thomas Kent. Mars in the Movies: A History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, p. 66. 2016. ISBN 978-0-7864-9914-4.
^It is possible that the visual style and impact of the title sequence could impact some individuals from the first frame of film. Back in the mid-1950s, movie screens had curtains in front of them. When the lights went down and the movie started, the audience could see the Paramount mountain logo through the sheer curtains as they were being drawn. Then, with the first frame of the film there started a 2-minute sensory experience.
It may well be that primed or serious film viewers could watch this movie’s opening and experience the common, wonderful involuntary spine-tingling sensation (probably triggered by the release of endorphins, oxytocin, and serotonin) that this viewer did. [Ponti Crystal. https://www.good.is/Health/asmr-tingly-brain-orgasms].[Miller, Thomas Kent. Mars in the Movies: A History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, pp. 66. 2016. ISBN 978-0-7864-9914-4.]
While the Paramount logo appears for five seconds and while it is dissolving into the first frame of the picture, the martial score of Nathan Van Cleave begins with a crash of cymbals and a rising fanfare of expressive horns. The first frames of film show the spectacle of a blanket of stars and nebula not like any starscape I had seen before or since (no, not even Forbidden Planet, 2001, or Star Wars). Space has never been so black, nor the stars so scintillating. The scattered and crystalline disk of the Milky Way, glowing across the entire VistaVision-shaped screen, is a blend of purples and blues and blacks that stunned me, so I felt that I was looking into infinite space. Toward the top of the frame, small in the distance and drifting slowly in front of the stars, is the white circular von Braun-inspired space station that is at the heart of the story. It is at once spinning and orbiting the earth whose blue disk fills the bottom quarter of the screen. Also, in the distance but somewhat to the left and closer to the camera is a white spaceship with broad wings and globular fuel tanks. As these images appear, Van Cleave’s score becomes quiet and eerie with the music gently rising and falling in pitch and blending with a subtly ethereal chorus, all underscoring the impossibility of seeing these images. At the exact moment these frames begin, a man’s deeply sonorous voice narrates emphatically:
“This is a story of tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, when men have built a station in space, constructed in the form of a great wheel—
[Dissolve into a closer view of the station and ship in the same relative configuration.]
—and set a thousand miles out from the earth, fixed by gravity, and turning about the world every two hours, serving a double purpose: an observation post in the heavens, and a place where a spaceship can be assembled—
[Dissolve into a closeup of the space ship (stage left) with the space station turning in the distance (stage right).]
—and then launched to explore other planets, and the vast universe itself, in the last and greatest adventure of mankind—a plunge toward the—
[At this point the narrator abruptly stops speaking; the silence is almost tactile, and the picture quick- dissolves into a closeup of the rocket motors blasting, filling the screen with sparks and pushing the ship out of the screen to the left. Another quick-dissolve as the rocket soars across the middle of the screen away from the camera so that in an instant its size diminishes by half and then it disappears, dissolving into the stars just as the bright sparkling yellow and outlined film title “Conquest of Space” sails into view appearing as though from infinity and quickly filling the screen while the narrator breaks his seemingly long silence and speaks emphatically, all the while the score soaring majestically with lots of horns and percussion.]
—CONQUEST OF SPACE!”
[Now the opening credits roll superimposed over those amazing stars using the same yellow font as the title and the music quickly changes from quietly eerie to fully martial. The card “Directed by Byron Haskin” dissolves into another outstanding view of the ship and turning station hanging in space, and then we dissolve into the interior of the station.]
All this takes exactly two minutes and was only the beginning of this steadfastly visual motion picture.
^Miller, Thomas Kent. Mars in the Movies: A History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, pp. 66. 2016. ISBN 978-0-7864-9914-4.
^Brodie, Douglas. Fantastic Planets, Forbidden Zones, and Lost Continents. Austin, University of Texas Press, p xii. 2015.
Bibliography
Baxter, John. Science Fiction in the Cinema. New York: A. S. Barnes, 1970.
Brodie, Douglas. Fantastic Planets, Forbidden Zones, and Lost Continents. Austin, University of Texas Press, p xii. 2015.
DeMichael, Tom. Modern Sci-Fi Films FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About Time Travel, Alien, Robot, and Out-of-This-World Movies Since 1970. Milwaukee, WI: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books, 2014.
Haskin, Byron. Byron Haskin: An Interview by Joe Adamson. Metuchen, New Jersey: The Directors Guild of America and Scarecrow Press, 1984. ISBN0-8108-1740-3.
Hickman, Gail Morgan. The Films of George Pal. New York: A. S. Barnes and Company, 1977. ISBN0-498-01960-8.
Kinnard, Roy. “A New Look at an Old Classic: Conquest of Space” in Fantastic Films: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in the Cinema, Volume 2, Number 2. Chicago: Blake Publishing Corp., June 1979.
Ley, Willy. The Conquest of Space. New York: Viking, 1949. Pre-ISBN era.
Ley, Willy, Wernher von Braun and Chesley Bonestell. The Exploration of Mars. New York: Viking Press, 1956. ASIN: B0000CJKQN
Miller, Thomas Kent. Mars in the Movies: A History. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2016. ISBN978-0-7864-9914-4.
Roman, James. Bigger Than Blockbusters: Movies That Defined America. Westport, Connecticut, London. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 153. 2009.
Ryan, Cornelius (ed.). Across the Space Frontier. Essays by Joseph Kaplan, Wernher Von Braun, Heinz Haber, Willy Ley, Oscar Schachter, Fred L. Whipple; Illustrations by Chesley Bonestell, Rolf Klep, Fred Freeman. New York: Viking Press, 1952. ASIN: B0000CIFLX.
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American actress and model (1930–2011) Elaine StewartStewart in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952)BornElsy Henrietta Maria Steinberg(1930-05-31)May 31, 1930Montclair, New Jersey, U.S.DiedJune 27, 2011(2011-06-27) (aged 81)Beverly Hills, California, U.S.OccupationsActressmodelYears active1952–1976Spouses Bill Carter (m. 1961; div. 1963) Merrill Heatter (m. 1964) Children2 Elaine Stewart (born...
Česká Pojišťovna Cup ◄ vorherige Austragung 1998 nächste ► Sieger: Schweden Der Česká Pojišťovna Cup 1998 war die fünfte Austragung des seit 1994 in Tschechien stattfindenden Eishockeyturniers und die erste unter dem neuen Namen Česká Pojišťovna Cup. Das Turnier war 1996 Teil der neu stattfindenden Euro Hockey Tour, an der die Nationalmannschaften Schwedens, Tschechiens, Russlands und Finnlands um den inoffiziellen Titel der besten europäischen Nationalmannschaft kämpfen. ...
Negeri KhayalanAlbum studio karya Nicky AstriaDirilis10 Agustus 1995Direkam12 Mei 1995GenreRockDurasi-LabelHP RecordsProduserHadi SoenyotoKronologi Nicky Astria Gairah Jiwa(1993) Permata Biru(1994)'Gairah Jiwa'1993 Negeri Khalayan (1995) Jangan Ada Luka (1996)'Jangan Ada Luka'1996 Negeri Khayalan adalah album musik dari penyanyi Nicky Astria. Daftar lagu NEGERI KHAYALAN (Pay) MENGAPA (Ly, Baiduri, Yusac) DUKA (Andy Julias) BUNGA CINTA (Ian Antono, Ali Akbar) KARENA KETULUSAN (Franky Sahil...
الرسم في العصر الذهبي الهولنديمعلومات عامةجزء من العصر الذهبي الهولنديالباروك (رسم)Dutch painting (en) مجال العمل رسم البلد جمهورية هولندا تاريخ البدء 1600 تاريخ الانتهاء 1699 تأثر ب كالفينيةالنهضة الإيطاليةكارافاجيو تعديل - تعديل مصدري - تعديل ويكي بيانات الرسم الهولندي في العصر ال...
Trading card series Hollywood ZombiesLogoTypeTrading cardsCompanyToppsCountryUnited StatesAvailability2007–2007 Hollywood Zombies was a trading card series manufactured by Topps, which portrayed American celebrities at the time as flesh-eating zombies.[1] Released in 2007, the series was available only in select comic book specialty stores and video stores. Among the many commercial artists and illustrators contributing to this series were Layron DeJarnette, Drew Friedman, Jay Lynch...
Species of tree Not to be confused with Ziziphus jujuba, Paliurus spina-christi, or Ziziphus nummularia. Ziziphus spina-christi Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae Clade: Tracheophytes Clade: Angiosperms Clade: Eudicots Clade: Rosids Order: Rosales Family: Rhamnaceae Genus: Ziziphus Species: Z. spina-christi Binomial name Ziziphus spina-christi(L.)Desf. Synonyms[1] Rhamnus spina-christi L. Ziziphus spina-christi, known as the Christ's thorn jujube, is an evergreen tree or ...