An alien civilization is invaded by Astronaut Chuck Baker, who believes that the planet was uninhabited. Wanted by the military, Baker must get back to his ship before it goes into orbit wit... Read allAn alien civilization is invaded by Astronaut Chuck Baker, who believes that the planet was uninhabited. Wanted by the military, Baker must get back to his ship before it goes into orbit without him.An alien civilization is invaded by Astronaut Chuck Baker, who believes that the planet was uninhabited. Wanted by the military, Baker must get back to his ship before it goes into orbit without him.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 3 nominations
Seann William Scott
- Skiff
- (voice)
Jessica Biel
- Neera
- (voice)
Justin Long
- Lem
- (voice)
Gary Oldman
- General Grawl
- (voice)
John Cleese
- Professor Kipple
- (voice)
Freddie Benedict
- Eckle
- (voice)
Alan Marriott
- Glar
- (voice)
Mathew Horne
- Soldier Vesklin
- (voice)
James Corden
- Soldier Vernkot
- (voice)
Emma Tate
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Rupert Degas
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
- …
Pete Atkin
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe dog in the movie is called Ripley (shown by the name on the doghouse), with the appearance close to that of the Xenomorph from Alien (1979), and is obviously an homage to Ellen Ripley, the protagonist from the Alien franchise.
- GoofsIn every instance except one, the city/town is spelled "Glipforg". On the hardware store sign, it's spelled "Glipfrog".
- Crazy creditsThere is an additional scene halfway through the end credits.
- Alternate versionsOn the UK DVD and Blu-ray release of the film, it cuts straight to the Ilion Animation Studios logo despite TriStar Pictures being mentioned in the opening and closing credits.
- SoundtracksEarth Angel (Will You Be Mine)
Performed by The Crew Cuts
Courtesy of Island Def Jam
Under license from Universal Music Operations Limited
Written by Jesse Belvin (as Belvin) / Gaynel Hodge (as Hodge) / Dootsie Williams (as Williams)
© Dootsie Williams Publications
All rights administered by Warner / Chappell Music Publishing Ltd
Featured review
I took my 8 year old daughter and her friend to see this opening night. There was a decent size crowd who seemed to enjoy it. For ESPN fans one of their long time personalities, who has his own video short series on the website, was there. But I digress.
It took a while to realize that it definitely was Dwayne Johnson as the astronaut's voice. He's created a great niche for himself in family films and I think he does good job. Justin Long was a good choice for the lead "alien" Lem and John Cleese is always a good choice as he did a small role as the professor. The role of Skiff brought good humor to many scenes. Sean William Scott was very animated in his voice acting for this character. Other than Rover and the hippie-like guy, the rest of the characters are just back drops without adding much.
We laughed quite a bit throughout the movie, which is mostly the point. There was plenty of cute humor with the dog-like robot Rover, who was a little reminiscent of WALL-E, a little. The down-side was that it never drew you in to fully connect, sympathize, like or dislike any of the characters. I didn't see myself rooting for anyone over anyone else. If the message is supposed to be about not judging anyone based on appearance, that message was shallow. If the message was to keep an open-mind toward what is possible and to learn new things, that message was under-developed.
Bottom line, the kids enjoyed it and we had a good entertaining night out. So in that respect it served its' purpose. The animation was suitable and I liked the 50's like theme of the planet. One or two adult humor jokes in there that could have been omitted and not change the movie.
For a family movie 7/10.
It took a while to realize that it definitely was Dwayne Johnson as the astronaut's voice. He's created a great niche for himself in family films and I think he does good job. Justin Long was a good choice for the lead "alien" Lem and John Cleese is always a good choice as he did a small role as the professor. The role of Skiff brought good humor to many scenes. Sean William Scott was very animated in his voice acting for this character. Other than Rover and the hippie-like guy, the rest of the characters are just back drops without adding much.
We laughed quite a bit throughout the movie, which is mostly the point. There was plenty of cute humor with the dog-like robot Rover, who was a little reminiscent of WALL-E, a little. The down-side was that it never drew you in to fully connect, sympathize, like or dislike any of the characters. I didn't see myself rooting for anyone over anyone else. If the message is supposed to be about not judging anyone based on appearance, that message was shallow. If the message was to keep an open-mind toward what is possible and to learn new things, that message was under-developed.
Bottom line, the kids enjoyed it and we had a good entertaining night out. So in that respect it served its' purpose. The animation was suitable and I liked the 50's like theme of the planet. One or two adult humor jokes in there that could have been omitted and not change the movie.
For a family movie 7/10.
- bluestrat70
- Nov 20, 2009
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Hành Tinh 51
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $70,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $42,194,060
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $12,286,129
- Nov 22, 2009
- Gross worldwide
- $105,647,102
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
- 2.39 : 1
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