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| Spaceballs | |
|---|---|
Movie poster |
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| Directed by | Mel Brooks |
| Produced by | Mel Brooks |
| Written by | Mel Brooks Thomas Meehan Ronny Graham |
| Starring | Mel Brooks John Candy Rick Moranis Bill Pullman Daphne Zuniga Dick Van Patten George Wyner Michael Winslow Joan Rivers |
| Music by | John Morris |
| Cinematography | Nick McLean |
| Editing by | Conrad Buff |
| Studio | Brooksfilms |
| Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn Mayer |
| Release date(s) | June 24, 1987 |
| Running time | 96 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | US $22,700,000 (estimated) |
| Gross revenue | $38,119,483 |
Spaceballs is a 1987 science fiction parody film co-written, directed by, and starring Mel Brooks. It was released on June 24, 1987, and earned only modest returns, but has gone on to become a seminal cult classic[1] on video. The movie received a PG rating from the MPAA.
Its plot and characters contain numerous parodies of elements primarily from the original Star Wars trilogy, as well as Star Trek and other popular science fiction films. The script was written by Mel Brooks in only six months, and was approved by George Lucas, as he was a big fan of Brooks's previous films.[2] Special effects were done by Apogee Productions.
On June 4, 2008, an animated sequel TV series premiered on Super Channel in Canada,[3] and in the United States on September 21, 2008 on G4. Spaceballs was released on Blu-ray disc on June 16, 2009.
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Planet Spaceball, led by President Skroob (Mel Brooks), has wasted all of its air and, desperate to find more, plans the extraction of all the air from planet Druidia. They plan to kidnap the Druish Princess Vespa (Daphne Zuniga), who is about to marry the narcoleptic Prince Valium (Jim J. Bullock). Resenting this marriage, Vespa runs off from the altar with her Droid of Honor, Dot Matrix (Joan Rivers/Lorene Yarnell), and escapes into space, where she is attacked by the Spaceballs under the command of Dark Helmet (Rick Moranis).
Vespa's father, King Roland (Dick Van Patten), hires Captain Lone Starr (Bill Pullman) and his mog (half-man, half dog) sidekick Barf (John Candy), who are desperate for money to pay back their debts to the Mafioso Pizza the Hutt (Dom DeLuise), to rescue his daughter. Aboard their Eagle V, Lone Starr and Barf save Vespa and Dot, and distract the Spaceballs by literally jamming a radar hub on their flagship, Spaceball One, and then escaping by entering light speed. In response, Spaceball One pursues by attempting to go faster, but end up traveling at "ludicrous speed" and overshoots Eagle V. Upon exiting hyperspeed, the heroes realize they have run out of fuel and crash-land on the desert "Moon of Vega". There, they meet Yogurt (Mel Brooks), who introduces Lone Starr to The Schwartz and the audience to the film's merchandising (which is prevalent throughout the film henceforth). However, the Spaceballs, having discovered their location by using an "instant cassette" of the movie, trick Vespa and capture her again, taking her to their capital city. Lone Starr and Barf rescue the Princess again, but not before the Spaceballs have succeeded in forcing King Roland to reveal the entry code to Druidia's atmosphere (1, 2, 3, 4, 5).
Spaceball One, upon arriving at Planet Druidia, transforms into Mega Maid with a vacuum cleaner, which starts to extract the air from the planet. Lone Starr uses his Schwartz ring to reverse the procedure, and sneaks through Mega Maid's ear to the central brain area of the ship to activate the self-destruct button. As he is about to press the button, Dark Helmet appears and challenges him to fight. They proceed to duel using lightsaber-like weapons emanating from their Schwartz rings, until Dark Helmet tricks Lone Starr into losing his ring. Yogurt then speaks to Lone Starr, convincing him he doesn't need the ring to use the Schwartz. Using this advice, Lone Starr summons a mirror to reflect Dark's attack and inadvertently press the self-destruct button, causing chaos aboard the ship as Mega Maid counts down to self-destruction. The heroes then escape as Dark Helmet, President Skroob and Col. Sandurz (George Wyner), failing to make it to any of the escape pods in time, look on in horror. The resulting explosion causes the three along with parts of Mega Maid to crash-land on a neighboring planet, much to the horror of its simian residents.
Lone Starr returns the Princess to Druidia and leaves without taking the agreed payment of one million spacebucks after learning that Pizza the Hut ate himself to death. After disgustedly leaving a space café after an alien bursts from the stomach of a customer, Lone Starr offers a snack to Barf who is still hungry. Barf opens a fortune cookie (originally given to Lone Starr by Yogurt) to discover that Lone Starr is a "soitified (certified) Prince", and they return in time to interrupt the marriage, and for Lone Starr to marry Princess Vespa.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Mel Brooks | President Skroob/Yogurt |
| John Candy | Barfolomew (Barf) |
| Rick Moranis | Lord Dark Helmet |
| Bill Pullman | Captain Lone Starr |
| Daphne Zuniga | Princess Vespa of Druidia |
| George Wyner | Colonel Kernel Sandurz |
| Dick Van Patten | King Roland, Ruler of Druidia |
| Leslie Bevis | Commanderette Zircon |
| Michael Winslow | Radar Technician |
| Joan Rivers | Dot Matrix (voice) |
| Lorene Yarnell | Dot Matrix (body) |
| Jim J. Bullock | Prince Valium |
| Dom DeLuise | Pizza the Hutt (voice) |
| John Hurt | Kane (John Hurt's character from Alien) |
| Dey Young | Waitress |
| Tommy Swerdlow | Troop leader |
The budget for Spaceballs was $22,700,000 (estimated). The film grossed $38,119,483 during its run in the United States, taking in $6,600,000 on its opening weekend.[4]
The film received mixed reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes reported that 62% of critics gave positive reviews based on 20 reviews with an average rating of 6.2/10.[5] At another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 46%, based on 14 reviews.[6] Many critics agreed that, while it was funny, doing a Star Wars parody ten years after the original film had been released seemed slightly pointless. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film 2.5 stars out of 4 remarked "I enjoyed a lot of the movie, but I kept thinking I was at a revival. (Spaceballs) should have been made several years ago, before our appetite for Star Wars satires had been completely exhausted."[7]
In spite of this, Spaceballs is one of Brooks's most popular movies, and maintains a strong cult following. On the RT Community, Rotten Tomatoes users gave the film an 80% approval rating based on 1117 reviews.[8]
When the film was released, Spaceballs: The Soundtrack was also released on Atlantic Records, featuring many of the songs heard in the film, as well as three score cues by composer John Morris.
For the '19th Anniversary', La-La Land Records released the score presented in its entirety for the first time, with bonus tracks featuring alternate takes and tracks composed for, but not used in the film. It has been released as a "limited edition" of 3,000 units.[9]
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This section may contain original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding references. Statements consisting only of original research may be removed. More details may be available on the talk page. (August 2009) |
The Spaceballs' weapon of conquest, Spaceball One, is a powerful spaceship. The opening scene is an homage to the opening scene of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope with the ridiculously long, wide angle continuous shot of Spaceball One. The length of the ship may also be an homage to the Nostromo of Alien and to the Discovery of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Its shape resembles Battlestar Galactica and the Super Star Destroyers, while its name is a pun on Air Force One, the U.S. president's airplane. The Spaceballs' attitude toward others is expressed by the ship's large bumper sticker: "We brake for nobody."
The ship's absurd size is a frequent point of references:
Spaceball One is capable of traveling at four different speeds: sub-light speed, light speed, ridiculous speed, and ludicrous speed. When going into ludicrous speed all crew members must use a seat belt for their own safety. Ludicrous speed results in the ship leaving a trail of plaid, parodying the "warp trail" seen in the first few Star Trek films and 2001.
Spaceball One's secret weapon is its ability to transform, in parody of various tranforming robot toys (Barf describes it as "a Transformer"), into Mega Maid, a colossal cleaning woman holding a gigantic vacuum cleaner used to extract air from other planets and take it back to planet Spaceball. It can also reverse that process, expelling air, going from suck to blow. When Spaceball One begins to undergo its metamorphosis into "Mega Maid," Dark Helmet exclaims "Ready, Kafka?", an allusion to Franz Kafka's novella The Metamorphosis.
The ship's destruction resembles the destruction of the Death Star in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi—Lone Starr's ship flies through Mega Maid's ear to reach the self-destruct button. It resembles how the Rebel Alliance in Star Wars entered the Death Star through a hole in order to reach the core and destroy it. Mega Maid's head and the hand holding the vacuum cleaner crash into a nearby planet, with the pieces resembling the Statue of Liberty as seen in the final scene of Planet of the Apes.
Primarily, “The Schwartz” is a play on “The Force,” from the 1977 film Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.
The lightsabers emanating from the Schwartz-rings held in front of the crotch are phallic symbols — a play on the words schwantz/Schwanz, which are Yiddish/German slang for penis.[11] Schwarz (an adjective) is German for “black.” In the dubbed German version of the film, “The Schwartz” is translated as Saft (“juice,” a noun which is a play on the German translation of “The Force“, Macht).
The Light and Dark sides of the Force are parodied by being called the “up side” and the “down side.” In the first episode of the animated series, the Dark Side is called "The Schwarz side of the Schwartz"
It has also been widely reported that "the Schwartz" is a reference to Mel Brooks' lawyer, Alan U. Schwartz.[12][13][14]
Breaking the fourth wall, the possibility of a sequel was already included in the film itself, with Yogurt's quote: "God willing, we'll all meet again in Spaceballs 2: The Search for More Money." In September 2004, news about a sequel, parodying the Star Wars Prequel trilogy, appeared on the internet.[15] It was rumored that there was going to be a sequel entitled Spaceballs 3: The Search for Spaceballs 2, but the sequel turned out to be a hoax. In January 2005, it was revealed that Spaceballs would be turned into an animated television show.[16] On September 21, 2006, Mel Brooks announced that he was developing an animated TV series based on Spaceballs, which debuted in September 2008.[17] The show, Spaceballs: The Animated Series, premiered on the Canadian Super Channel, is still airing there, but has come to the American cable channel G4.
In 1989 the movie Martians Go Home was distributed in the Italian market as Balle Spaziali 2 - La vendetta (Balle Spaziali being the localized title of Spaceballs) [18].
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