Red Planet Mars

SEE! The first contact between Earth and Mars!

4.7
19521h 27m

Production

Logo for United Artists

Husband-and-wife scientists pick up a pie-in-the-sky TV message supposedly from Mars.

Available For Free On

Logo for Plex
Logo for Plex Channel
Logo for Fawesome

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Red Planet Mars   1952   Trailer

Red Planet Mars 1952 Trailer

Cast

Photo of Peter Graves

Peter Graves

Chris Cronyn

Photo of Andrea King

Andrea King

Linda Cronyn

Photo of Herbert Berghof

Herbert Berghof

Franz Calder

Photo of Orley Lindgren

Orley Lindgren

Stewart Cronyn

Photo of Walter Sande

Walter Sande

Admiral Bill Carey

Photo of Morris Ankrum

Morris Ankrum

Secretary of Defense Sparks

Photo of George Blagoi

George Blagoi

Russian Official (uncredited)

Photo of Tom Keene

Tom Keene

Maj. Gen. George Burdette

Photo of Colin Kenny

Colin Kenny

Mine Owner

Photo of House Peters Jr.

House Peters Jr.

Dr. Boulting - Mitchell's Assistant

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

I actually quite liked the underlying, and quite manipulative, concept of this film. "Cronyn" (Peter Graves) and his wife "Linda" (Andrea King) manage to make contact with Mars and low and behold, there's life there. Not only life, but a fairly benevolent one at that, that promises mankind salvation - quite literally - if they return to the teachings of the Bible and embrace God more fully. When this news reaches the ears of the wider public, mass indoctrination occurs across the world and an infrastructure of zealousness begins to prevail. Thing is, though, is this really a message from Mars at all - or is it a clever ploy by some Earth-bound entity to manoeuvre mankind into a form of pseudo-authoritarian society? The problem here is that the acting and writing are so nondescript that is rather leaves us to use our own imagination all too often. The philosophies offer clear allegory of "Red" = "Soviet" and the worse case scenario for humanity should an "enemy" ever prevail, but the film itself offers us little by way of action or dialogue to engage with or to entertain. Food for thought? Well at the height of the Cold War, then quite possibly - but what potency it had then has long since abandoned ship and we are now left with pace-less example of soundstage verbosity that again makes me wish that if ever aliens do attempt to contact mankind, maybe try those in Switzerland, India or somewhere less dogmatically militaristic.

You've reached the end.