Galaxy of Terror 1981

ALIEN was the beginning… Hell Has Just Been Relocated!

5.221 / 10   195 vote(s)
R
Action Adventure Horror Science Fiction

As a lone spaceship proceeds on its long voyage across space, the crew are surprised to encounter a strange pyramid form. Surprise turns to horror as one by one, they discover that their darkest nightmares are all starting to become real. The pyramid has to be behind it all somehow, but how can they save themselves from its influence?

Release Date 1981-10-01
Runtime 1h 21m
Directors Bruce D. Clark, Austin McKinney, Jacques Haitkin, Gary Wagner
Producers Roger Corman, Marc Siegler
Writers Marc Siegler, Bruce D. Clark

The first ten minutes of this really do have you reaching for the fast forward button, but once it settles down and we get past the characters/plot establishment sequences, it turns into an half-decent sci-fi murder mystery. The crew of a spaceship are sent on a rescue mission. When they arrive at the site, they discover that the other crew have been brutally slaughtered and, trapped by an electro-magnetic storm, they now have to look to their own self-preservation. B.D. Clark manages - actually quite an achievement - to generate a bit of suspense aided by Barry Scrader's slightly over-the-top score, but the acting is pretty dreadful. Erin Moran (whom I'm sure was in "Happy Days") and Edward Albert really draw attention to the low-budget sets and effects; and the story is all pretty routine

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