IMDb RATING
5.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Aliens from another world send a huge robotic accumulator to invade the Earth and absorb all energy it comes in contact with.Aliens from another world send a huge robotic accumulator to invade the Earth and absorb all energy it comes in contact with.Aliens from another world send a huge robotic accumulator to invade the Earth and absorb all energy it comes in contact with.
Jose Gonzales-Gonzales
- Manuel Ramirez
- (as Jose G. Gonzales)
Don Eitner
- Weather Operator
- (as Donald Eitner)
Kenner G. Kemp
- Producer of TV News Broadcast
- (uncredited)
Robert Stevenson
- New York TV Newscaster
- (uncredited)
Baxter Ward
- Second TV Newscaster
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter a string of highly successful big budget science fiction films throughout the 1960s, Twentieth Century Fox considered remaking this film in the early 1970s in response to the energy crisis. The project was not green-lighted and, by the end of that decade, accepted an offer from Wade Williams to buy the film and all rights. This film is now part of the "Wade Williams Collection."
- GoofsDuring the evacuation of LA, traffic is showing flowing both in and out of the city in roughly equal amounts.
- Quotes
Dr. Leslie Gaskell: Do you think you'll be able to respect a husband that probably pulled the scientific boner of all time?
- ConnectionsEdited into Goosebumps: Escape from Horrorland (1996)
Featured review
Scientist John Emory (`Rocketship X-M' ) is possessed by an alien intelligence which foces him to provide information for invaders who are en route to Earth in a huge spacecraft. Astronomer Jeff Morrow (`This Island Earth') spots the approaching ship through his telescope, but he thinks it's an asteroid on a collision course with Earth (never mind the fact that the image we see through the telescope is obviously a saucer-shaped object that zigs and zags insanely).
The spacecraft splashes down off the coast of Mexico, and the next morning `Kronos' is standing on the beach -- a giant, rectangular robot with four piston-like legs. Kronos begins it's destructive march across the country, draining power from everything it encounters (including an atom bomb which the Air Force drops on it. Impressive scene). Morris Ankrum makes a welcome appearance as a psychiatrist (insteand of a general, for a change).
The plot has an interesting basic concept, but the script is plagued by scientific inaccuracies and unintentionally funny scenes. Jeff Morrow and fellow scientist George O'Hanlon (the voice of George Jetson) make casual comments about `minor shifts' in the orbit of the approaching asteroid -- even though what they (and the audience) see in their telescope is a wildly zig-zagging spaceship. Morris Ankrum is electrocuted when John Emory throws him against a protective fence that surrounds a high-voltage transformer ( Wait a second -- Ankrum is electrocuted by a PROTECTIVE FENCE?).
Despite the embarassing goof-ups, `Kronos' is loaded with special effects by FX wizards Jack Rabin, Irving Block, and Louis DeWitt, who are also billed as associate producers.
The spacecraft splashes down off the coast of Mexico, and the next morning `Kronos' is standing on the beach -- a giant, rectangular robot with four piston-like legs. Kronos begins it's destructive march across the country, draining power from everything it encounters (including an atom bomb which the Air Force drops on it. Impressive scene). Morris Ankrum makes a welcome appearance as a psychiatrist (insteand of a general, for a change).
The plot has an interesting basic concept, but the script is plagued by scientific inaccuracies and unintentionally funny scenes. Jeff Morrow and fellow scientist George O'Hanlon (the voice of George Jetson) make casual comments about `minor shifts' in the orbit of the approaching asteroid -- even though what they (and the audience) see in their telescope is a wildly zig-zagging spaceship. Morris Ankrum is electrocuted when John Emory throws him against a protective fence that surrounds a high-voltage transformer ( Wait a second -- Ankrum is electrocuted by a PROTECTIVE FENCE?).
Despite the embarassing goof-ups, `Kronos' is loaded with special effects by FX wizards Jack Rabin, Irving Block, and Louis DeWitt, who are also billed as associate producers.
- Bruce_Cook
- Dec 26, 2001
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Kronos: Ravager of Planets
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $160,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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