The Invisible Boy

1957 film by Herman Hoffman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Invisible Boy, a.k.a. S.O.S Spaceship, is a 1957 black-and-white American science fiction film from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, produced by Nicholas Nayfack, directed by Herman Hoffman, and starring Richard Eyer and Philip Abbott. It is the second film appearance of Robby the Robot, the science fiction character who "stole the show" in Forbidden Planet (1956),[2] also released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Some of this film’s fans[who?] contend that the robot is the same character as seen in Forbidden Planet, which is set in the 23rd century, brought back to the film's mid-20th century era by time travel. While there is no formal declaration supporting this by the studio, it is well supported within the film via dialog and a photo artifact showing Robby's arrival to Earth in 2309AD.[citation needed]

Directed byHerman Hoffman
Written byEdmund Cooper (story)
Cyril Hume
Produced byNicholas Nayfack
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
The Invisible Boy
Directed byHerman Hoffman
Written byEdmund Cooper (story)
Cyril Hume
Produced byNicholas Nayfack
StarringRichard Eyer
Philip Abbott
Diane Brewster
Harold J. Stone
CinematographyHarold E. Wellman
Edited byJohn Faure
Music byLes Baxter
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • October 1957 (1957-10)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$384,000[1]
Box office$840,000[1]
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Plot

In 1957, ten-year-old Timmie Merrinoe only wants a playmate. After a peculiar encounter with a supercomputer operated by his father's research lab, he is mysteriously invested with superior intelligence, and reassembles a robot that his father and other scientists had been ready to discard as irreparable junk. (It is explained that a vanished scientist claimed to have developed a time machine and retrieved the robot from the future—a photograph on the wall depicts the return to Earth of the space cruiser from Forbidden Planet, and the arrival of "Robby the Robot".) No one pays much attention to the robot after Timmie gets it operating again, until Timmie's mother becomes angry when her son is taken aloft by a huge powered kite that Robby has built at Timmie's urging (once Timmie, prompted by the supercomputer, has disabled Robby's programming to never endanger a human).

When Timmie expresses a wish to be able to play without being observed by his parents, Robby, with the aid of the supercomputer, makes him invisible. At first, Timmie uses his invisibility to play simple pranks on his parents and others, but the mood soon changes when it becomes clear that the supercomputer is independent, ingenious, and evil. The supercomputer had manipulated Timmie into altering Robby's programming and, over many years, manipulated its creators into augmenting its intelligence. It can control Robby electronically, and later uses hypnosis and electronic implants to control human beings, along with intending to take over the world using a military weapons satellite. It later declares its intent to destroy all life on Earth and then conquer the entire galaxy and exterminate any life that it contains, even bacteria. The supercomputer takes Timmie captive aboard the rocket; the army tries to stop Robby, but all of their artillery and weapons have no effect on him. Robby boards the ship, which promptly takes off. The supercomputer commands him to kill Timmie by slow surgical torture to coerce his parents, but Robby frees Timmie rather than obey the supercomputer. Dr. Merrinoe tells Timmie and Robby to remain on board the ship, as it has enough supplies for him to last a year. Instead, Timmie and Robby return to Earth.

Timmie and Dr. Merrinoe return to the laboratory to shut down the supercomputer, but it stops them. Robby then shows up and turns against the supercomputer, destroying its power source. Everything is back to normal: Dr. Merrinoe is about to spank Timmie as punishment for ignoring him. He is, however, stopped by Robby, whose protective programming has been restored, and the film ends with a shot of the Merrinoes and Robby all having a peaceful evening together.

Cast

Reception

According to MGM records, the film earned $390,000 in the United States and Canada and $450,000 elsewhere, for a total of $840,000. With a budget of $384,000, this resulted in a profit of $456,000.[1]

Home media

The entire feature film appears as an extra on the Forbidden Planet 50th Anniversary DVD released in 2006 and on the Blu-ray disc released in 2010. Even on Blu-ray, the film is in standard definition.

References

Further reading

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