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First Spaceship on Venus

Der schweigende Stern

  • Status: Released
  • 26-02-1960
  • Runtime: 93 min
  • Score: 4.7
  • Vote count: 77

A mysterious magnetic spool found during a construction project is discovered to have originated from Venus. A rocket expedition to Venus is launched to discover the origin of the spool and the race that created it.

Oldřich Lukeš

Prof. Harringway Hawling

Ignacy Machowski

Prof. Saltyk

Julius Ongewe

Talua, afrikanischer Fernsehtechniker

Mikhail Postnikov

Prof. Arsenew

Kurt Rackelmann

Prof. Sikarna

Günther Simon

Robert Brinkmann, deutscher Pilot

Hua-Ta Tang

Dr. Tchen Yu

Lucyna Winnicka

Joan Moran

Yoko Tani

Sumiko Ogimura, japanische Ärztin

Ruth-Maria Kubitschek

Frau Arsenjew

Eva-Maria Hagen

Reporterin

Karen Fredersdorf

Gertraud Kreissig

Werner Senftleben

Nico Turoff

Wüstenarbeiter (uncredited)

Eduard von Winterstein

Weimann, Kernphysiker

Stanisław Igar

Scientist (uncredited)

Artur Młodnicki

Scientist (uncredited)

Józef Pieracki

Scientist (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Were it not for the really terrible English-language dubbing, this would actually have made for quite a decently made sci-fi feature. When evidence is found from a meteor that there might be intelligent life on Venus, an international team is assembled to travel in the "Cosmocrator" to that distant world to investigate. En route, they manage to decipher some of the writing found on the meteoric chunk and conclude that the folks from Venus had actually contemplated invasion of the Earth at the start of the 20th Century - might they be flying into the lions den? The space ship effects are all pretty much "Forbidden Planet" (1956) and the actors, though admittedly pretty poor, reflect a diversity of races and nations as they hurtle through space. Once on the planet, however, this starts to come apart at the seams a bit - they must evade an encroaching mass of mud/treacle/chocolate and their destination, that definitely shows signs of having had a developed civilisation at one point, seems to want to eliminate them all... Can they make it back home? It's no worse than any of the "Outer Limits" style movies we'll have sat through over the years, and had it been subtitled I might have actually quite enjoyed it. It even has an underlying theme that might just be worth bearing in mind 60 years later, too.