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  • To my surprise this is actually a Fullmoon movie, the company well known only for cheesy horror films. Apparently they do sci-fi even worse.

    Laserblast presently sits with a 2.6 rating on IMDB, which is astoundingly low. I didn't think for a second it would be that bad, it actually is.

    It tells the story of a young man who finds a laser cannon in the desert, after wielding it and the necklace that came with it he is periodically transformed into a creature hellbent on destruction.

    Looking at the cover you'd think the "Creature" was Gary Busey, in the film it's more an early Romero zombie.

    The special effects are embarassing even for the time, the plot is riddled with holes and the whole thing comes off amateurish.

    One of the worst films every made? No. Deserving of 2.6? Absolutely.

    The Good:

    Erm.....

    The Bad:

    Looks hideous

    Just can't take it seriously

    Things I Learnt From This Movie:

    Aliens are just giant turtles without shells who wear shiney gloves
  • Teenagers just want to have a little innocent fun, so when one of them comes across and alien weapon, he tries it out on a few people who aren't cool. This excites The Man, who want kids to be miserable.

    There's some nice stop-motion animation by Harry Walton, who seems to have come up with E.T. before Steven Spielberg thought of it. The other effects are a bit cheesier. Keenan Wynn does no favor to his long career of more than 140 features by appearing in this one.
  • I was expecting Laserblast to be awful, judging by its position in the "Mystery Science Theater 3000: 10 Worst Movies They Riffed" list and its reputation. It is a bad movie- though I can see why people would find it entertaining to watch- but it is much better than the likes of Monster A-Go Go, Manos the Hands of Fate, The Wild World of Batwoman, Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders and Hobgoblins, and in general there are far worse as well. The best asset of Laserblast is the music score, which pulsates through the movie with great energy and atmosphere that is not matched with the rest of the movie. Cheryl Smith is sweet and sympathetic and Keenan Wynn is appropriately gruff. And I personally though the stop-motion and the aliens were quite good, of any of the movies on the "10 Movies they Riffed" list it is Laserblast that has the best special effects. Everything else comes up painfully short though, Roddy MacDowell is wasted to the point that you question why was he even in it, and Eddie Deezen has to be the most annoying bully ever seen in film. The story is a real drag as well, it makes very little sense if at all, has so much overlong filler that adds nothing to the storytelling and is one of those instances where the plot summary pretty much sums up the whole movie. It also doesn't know what to do with itself and takes forever to get going, it is half-an-hour until anything of the sort happens and then when the gun is found the rest of the movie is just stuff getting shot at. At best, the camera work and editing are haphazard, the dialogue is hysterically bad and the characters are not developed anywhere near enough or characterised very effectively to be believable or likewise. In conclusion, Laserblast is a bad movie that is rather dull and senseless and wastes McDowell but a great score, better-than-average stop-motion and effects and two decent performances make it not as bad as all that. 3/10 Bethany Cox
  • I swear every time I see that Star Wars billboard get blown up I almost wet myself. What more can you ask of cheap Sci-Fi than Laserblast? Granted it doesn't have that 50's kitch like Angry Red Planet, but it WAS the 70's. Personally I love and own this film. If you can see the true beauty in astoundingly bad film making, then you should see Laserblast. I mean one character gets mutated into a green laser-blasting monster by a salt shaker he wears around his neck!! and there's bad stop-action aliens!! YES! it took 2 guys to write it!!! 2!!! and they called it LASERBLAST!

    I think if you consider the general aesthetic of the seventies, you will see that this is the ULTIMATE 70's movie. I regret never seeing it at a drive in.
  • I actually saw this in the theater when it came out. After all these years, I can still say it is the worst movie I have ever seen. And I LIKE campy, cheesy B-Movies! Look out Kraft; you are not the cheesiest. If you think the special effects are bad because the movie is old, think again. Sitting in the movie theater in 1978 my friend and I both thought the effects were the worst we'd ever seen. And the acting. And the plot(?). The filmography sucks. It's not even interesting like a train wreck. It's about as interesting as watching sidewalks crack. Without ants. At night. No moon.

    I could go on, but I've already put more creativity into this review than the movie had. And I'm not creative.

    I'd give it negative stars if possible. Ten black holes. I had to give it a one though, and that hurt.

    Bad movie. Anguishly bad. I still want my money back.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This movie is seriously confusing, scenes that don't seem to belong together follow each other without transition or explanation. Who are these people? Why are they here? What i going on? No one knows. On top of that, the special effects are laughable, the characters are ill defined and the acting is bad.

    But, looking beyond all these criticisms, and they are valid, believe me, there is actually a rather watchable movie. We have the story of Billy who is turned into a monster that wanders the streets shooting things with a laser gun. Kind of like a sci-fi version of a werewolf story where the protagonist does not know he is the monster. Not to mention that the aliens that one would naturally assume to be evil, seem to be some kind of police officers chasing down the monster, a fun take on things I say. And of course, the whole thing is really rather campy which is appropriate.

    An added bonus on my copy were the trailers for several campy looking old movies.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    You can generally arm yourself against bad movies … Most efficiently, of course, is not watching them at all, but it's much better to arm yourself by inviting a group of friends, providing big slices of pizza, copious amounts of beer and – if really necessary – some other kind of mind-broadening stuff. But even then, you can never fully prepare yourself for something like "Laserblast". Right from the opening sequences already, you'll have the impression of being drunk and/or stoned. There's a man, slightly looking like a zombie, in possession of a hi-tech laser gun being chased by two alien creatures that look like E.T.'s malignant cousins. Here we are in the year of Our Lord 1978, but the stop-motion effects of "King Kong" for example, which was release more than forty years earlier, are much more convincing. Anyway, the zombie dude is killed but the aliens leave the gun and the complementary amulet to make it function behind in the desert for Billy Duncan to find. Billy is a prototypic teenage loser whose mommy is always off to parties in Acapulco. He's the type of nerd that gets bullied by other nerds that look like even bigger nerds. But now that Billy has an intergalactic weapon of mass destruction.

    Maybe I was a little overenthusiastic when I watched this, but I honestly think that deep down in the minds of the people who created "Laserblast" there were some truly great and innovative ideas present. It's mainly the elaboration of these ideas and the execution of the movie where it went wrong a little. It's the lack of budget and talent involved that makes "Laserblast" a completely failure and pathetic movie; not the plot. The overlong parts were nothing gets blown up or where those cute little clay aliens aren't on screen, which pretty much covers 90% of the entire movie, are incredibly boring. The characters are all insufferable people. Billy is a dork who never expresses any sort of emotion and the nerd character who mocks him is the single most irritating and overacting imbecile ever! Somehow, the director of this thing must have thought that his film was bigger than Star Wars. At some point in the film, Billy even blasts away a promotional billboard of Star Wars with his laser gun! I wonder if that was a symbolic act or statement saying something like: "Up yours, George Lucas!".

    In conclusion, this is a fantastic movie to analyze afterwards! Preferably when you're still a bit tipsy! What was, in fact, the role of these aliens? Are they the good guys who come to save us, stupid and defenseless human beings, against maniacs that can't deal with hi-tech interstellar weaponry? Or are they sadists that strategically place this powerful weapon somewhere accessible for a moron to find it and gradually exterminate mankind? Cheesy food for thought
  • Laserblast (1978) was one of my childhood favorites. I saw a lot of these movies on a small black and white t.v. later Friday or Saturday night. The best of the bunch were bad sci-fi and horror films. Well this one still brings back memories of my youth. The movie is about a young guy who picks up a funky medallion and a ray gun. Then one day he goes berserk and runs amok blasting everything in sight. A sub-plot of the movie is about a couple of creepy looking aliens who speak a dialect that sounds like space-mandarin. The duo spend most of the movie's running time trying to find their lost toy. What will happen to the boy? Will the cheesy looking aliens find their little gizmo? To find out you'll have to watch LASERBLAST!!! The F/X, budget and acting is pure 70's cheese and I like it! and so will you!

    Recommended for a slow night. Watch it with some friends for total satisfaction!
  • A teenager (Kim Milford) stumbles upon an alien weapon, which transform him into a grotesque killer.

    I would love to say nice things about this, given the appearance of Roddy McDowall and such decent effects work from Randall Cook ("The Gate"). But the acting, plot and directing is just so poor that nothing could really save this.

    Most people who have seen this probably saw it through "Mystery Science Theater 3000", and that is for the best. They not only do a great job, but this is among their funniest episodes. I would love to know if Leonard Maltin has ever rescinded his 2 1/2 stars...
  • Scarecrow-8813 August 2009
    Warning: Spoilers
    If you like watching cars, buildings, and other objects go KABOOM, then maybe you'll be interested in the low budget Charles Band production, LASERBLAST. Young pretty boy blonde, Billy(Kim Milford) finds a powerfully destructive laser which works when he wears a necklace containing a pendant..in the desert outside a California town, one alien humanoid is killed by two alien monster adversaries, with the laser and neck-laced pendant the only remains. Billy is a rather moody, melancholy kid whose mom, a stewardess, is always off to Alcapulco, as he's often contending with police deputy, Pete Ungar(Dennis Burkley) who enjoys writing him tickets, and two local bullies, Froggy(Eddie Deezen, if you can believe it!)and Chuck(Mike Bobenko)who actually attempt to rape his girlfriend, Kathy(Cheryl Smith). Meanwhile an agent, Tony Craig(Gianni Russo, whose character is awfully underwritten and ambiguous)is searching for evidence of potential danger to humankind. The sheriff(..television veteran Ron Masak)is all too willing to assist Craig in any way possible. Billy, when the pendant touches his chest, is controlled by the alien's presence(..the one who once wore it, I guess)which forces him to blow his enemies(..and lots of objects, as well)to smithereens.

    Keenan Wynn is Kathy's senile military grandfather Colonel Farley and Roddy McDowell is the town physician who removes a small plate that was forming into Billi's chest where the pendant had rested. Neither of these actors have lucrative roles of any importance, which is a shame. Neat stop motion work by Dave Allen whose claymation aliens actually operate a space ship and fire their zap rays, ridding us of those who wish to harm and destroy.

    I wouldn't dare claim that this is a good movie..it's not in the slightest. There are filler scenes featuring characters whose mundane activities mean so little to whatever plot there was to begin with. The sole reason this film was made was to see all sorts of things(..such as a mail box, Star Wars billboard(!), and pinball machine)explode, the objects destroyed engulfed in slow motion flames. I didn't mind that actually. I just said "f#ck it" and quit caring, watching as Billy's metamorphosis into a humanoid alien(..his eyes and face transform into a hideous visage)yields devastating consequences to all those who ever crossed the kid. Milford and Smith make an attractive couple. Burkley, as the rotund deputy always snatching away his partner, Deputy Jesse Jeep's(Barry Cutler)food, doesn't fail to entertain us. Catchy score from Richard Band and Joel Goldsmith who give the film a unique feel that actually somehow enhances it. For some reason, the movie entertained me more than it ever should have.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "I think they were trying for 'A Touch Of Evil' in this movie, but they actually wound up with a touch of something else." - Crow T. Robot. This was the last movie covered by MST3000 when they were on Comedy Central, so it is hard to be fair to the movie when feelings about it are tinged with sadness that the Bots would no longer be enlivening my Saturdays.BTW, the MST version is not their best effort,but is still a fair amount of fun, and is worth seeing.

    As for "Laserblast" itself...these days, such an effort would be direct-to-video, or direct-to-cable; it's hard to imagine such a minor league effort ever getting a nationwide distribution. It's too lightweight and threadbare to be a feature film. However, it wouldn't be out of place as an episode in a science fiction or horror anthology title such as "Tales From The Crypt" or a color version of "The Outer Limits".

    So where does it fall short? In oh so many ways...! To give one example, the government investigator who comes to town to investigate the alien incursion is dressed in a Palm Beach suit; this completely undercuts any aura of menace or ominous vibes he is meant to generate by making him look like a 3rd-string men's fashion model. My guess is that the poor guy (whose actual performance is not too bad) had to wear his own clothes to the movie for his 'costume' and this was the best thing he had in his wardrobe.

    For another example, there's the weird cognitive dissonance when Billy, the "protagonist" of the movie, is pushed around and teased by other teenagers. Billy is a good looking blond kid with perfect hair (in the "sullen Ken doll" mold), his own van, and a slender, pretty girlfriend. In normal life, such kids are not ever the targets of persecution by their peer group, so this just doesn't work.

    For a third, Eddie Deezen is in the movie. This isn't to cast aspersions on Deezen as a person or anything, but I hate him as an actor. Eddie has gotten a lot of work over the years, so I assume he's considered good at what he does (sub-Jerry Lewis comedy relief), but he's a waste of space and film here - there isn't a single moment in the film where he doesn't make the most obvious and lazy acting choices (OK, the director shares part of the blame for this). Every scene he is in sucks wind.

    Roddy McDowell shows up for about 3 minutes of screen time, which probably blew the movie's budget. He's competent and professional and pretty much blows every one else off the screen, which is why he's the biggest name actor in the movie. Keenan Wynn, the other 'name' actor in the movie, is on autopilot; he could have phoned his part in. He could have perked up the movie considerably, but he was as lazy as Deezen and just set his internal dial to 'ranting craziness'.

    Mostly, the pacing and editing are death to any sense of excitement or interest. The movie spends no time explaining how the Laserblast gun and pendant got to Earth in the first place or why the aliens are interested in it enough to vaporize any earthling who uses it. Presumably this was intended to add an air of mystery to the proceedings. But there is NOTHING else going on except Billy's corruption by the Laserblast pendant and his overreaction/revenge on his peers and the town, and the scenes where this stuff actually happens are drowned in endless, tedious filler scenes that kill any momentum the director is trying to generate.

    To say some kind kind things about the movie: the soundtrack (one guy with a synthesizer) actually has some decent, effective musical cues and riffs for such a low budget effort. The animated scenes with the aliens are 2nd rate, but are still fun to look at. Sometimes the movie does manage to convey the boredom and emptiness of a teenager's life in a small town. Most of the minor actors (especially the "lens crafter technician" and the two deputies) try mightily and do the best they can with their material. And no one here actually sucks on the level of an old Corman or Sam Neufield movie (except for Eddie Deezen). As I said, Roddy McDowell is his usual compelling self. That elevates the movie above the sheer awfulness that deserves a "1" rating.

    Good enough to serve as background video wallpaper on the TV while you wash the dishes.
  • gengar8435 March 2010
    I cannot believe the low rating this film has. First of all, I have to give credit to the stop-motion animation. When I first saw this in 1978 in the theatre, I was impressed, just a touch below Harryhausen quality. Too bad if you disagree! Second, the adolescent setting is just fine. Teen angst, bullying, small-town doldrums in the 1970's. I remember the 70's and it was about this dirt-poor culturally. We didn't have Internet, plasma TV, cell phones, or CD's. We had portable tape players and we used pay phones. Third, you have to love Kim Milford's impression of a cooked Mark Hamill. Come on! Fourth, Eddie Deezen is about as annoying as you've ever seen him. High marks. Fifth, the story is good. Aliens returning for their lost weapon. Gives us all hope. I've seen the movie several times and it's always a satisfying time. 8 of 10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Out in the desert reptilian aliens kill a humanoid alien leaving his Laser gun and necklace in a pile of ash. Later that day Billy Duncan finds the gun and necklace and discovers that combined they hold immense destructive power. He sees this as a great opportunity to get revenge on everyone who has done him wrong. Eventually the power of the weapon begins to take control of Billy as he begins to mutate and revenge takes a back seat to wanton destruction.

    It would be easy to write Laserblast off as rubbish. It's not particularly well made the acting isn't brilliant the special effects aren't great (excluding the stop motion aliens) but it is a whole lot of fun. Some of the jokes in the script fall a little flat but the performances themselves are a constant source of entertainment. The props with there schlocky appearance are great. I know if I had seen this as a little kid I probably would have found Billy quite creepy in some of the scenes when he mutates. In the end when the weapon takes over Billy and he becomes more Morlock than man the movie turns into explosion porn, and we are treated to some truly odd choices of things to blow up. Yeah the script is weak and nothing is ever explained but thats what your imagination is for. I have my own ideas of what the aliens were up to, and why Billy went that way. In this day and age of everything being explained out for us in exposition heavy dialogue this is a rare treat.

    I must give special mention to the movies musical score. The music in Laserblast really adds a level of class to proceedings which in all fairness probably doesn't deserve to be there. That main theme over the credits really is great sci-fi music.

    I enjoyed Laserblast and they really don't make them like this anymore, I'm not even sure they'd want to, which makes me very sad.
  • Laserblast occupies the absolute bottom rung of film. There is absolutely nothing to like, and I do mean Nothing. To call the acting sub-par would be a massive understatement and the plot would have been much stronger if it had been held together with shoestrings and chewing gum. I would never choose to watch this film for any reason if it wasn't being lampooned by MST3K. The MST3K version is absolutely hysterical though, so at least this poorly thought-out disaster of a film served some higher purpose. The best parts are where you can actually see members of the film crew and cameras, so much for editing I guess. This movie came out the year I was born and if I were the superstitious type I would consider it a bad omen. If you are given the choice between torture and seeing this film I would strongly recommend you at least consider the torture, the film is really that bad.
  • As I saw that, I was stunned. Leonard Maltin rates movies on a scale of one to four. I'll give it 2 1/2 stars out of ten, maybe. The plot is stupid and full of holes. Aliens fight on earth for some reason and kill this guy with green skin, who drops his laser gun. A loser that everyone picks on (for good reason) finds this gun and starts blasting everyone and everything that did him wrong. Especially hilarious are when he blows up a pinball machine (did it take his quarter?) and when he blows up a billboard that says simply "Star Wars" (Huh?). It's every bit as bad as it sounds. Roddy McDowell actually appeared in this movie - he must have been hurting bad for a movie role. Just remember, according to Leonard Maltin, this is better than "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" (which only got two stars). Worth watching once on its own for camp, but recommended especially for MST3K. The episode doesn't run on TV anymore and can't be found on Rhino, though, so it's tough to find. Pretty bad. This movie marked the point I stopped trusting Leonard Maltin altogether.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    If a scale of 1-10 is used to rate all films, then every other film ever made must get 10/10 in order to accommodate this film on the same scale.

    Just what the hell exactly was this about? Who was that dude at the start of the film? Who were those aliens? Why did they leave that gun on Earth? What was that pendant thing? Why does Billy's Mum keep going to Alcapulco ? Who was the government agency guy? What was he trying to do? And why the hell, at the end of the film did the aliens LEAVE THE GUN ON EARTH AGAIN?

    Simply the worst film I have ever seen.
  • Strangely I never saw this picture, just come out in DVD in Brazil, one the most weirdo Sci-Fi production ever seen, mixing a small stop motion mixing, science fiction & horror genres, where the unique novelty really is a advanced laser gun, heaven only knows appears a young guy holding a powerful Laserblast until appear two Aliens very similar with Spielberg's E. T. (Should him copied those Aliens?) vaporizing him instantly, worst these two dumbest Aliens didn't collect the weapon and a necklace on the ground, out of the blue shows up a bullied guy got the gun and aftermaths start blasting everyone who harassed him lately, to worsen every time he got the gun attached with the necklace such guy turns into in a monster.

    Silly plot indeed, some gorgeous girls around, two moronic deputies splitting forcibly a lunch, a cigarette, whatever they eat, what a couple of jerk guys, also the Sheriff as well, the flash appearance of Roddy McDowall, quite sure to commodify the picture afterwards and the screen debut of iconic Eddie Deezen, in other hand it somehow plenty of fun if we forgot the holes and mismatches as well.

    Thanks for reading

    Resume:

    First watch: 2023 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 4.5.
  • I have been searching for this film for the past few years since I've been a fan of IMdB. I thought it was entitled something else and was perplexed why I couldn't find it. I was hoping the film wasn't really done...but here it is.

    This film should be inducted into the "Worse Films of All Time" honorable mention category. It's a bad film, but it's one of those bad films you keep watching as if watching it again may show something different to make it better.

    It's pure 70's schlock. There are actors and actresses in it you've seen in much better films before. The story is kinda interesting, but it fizzles.

    This film was shown all over the place in the 80's on TV and Cable and everytime it came on, it provided nothing but unintentional laughs for me.

    For those who wonder if drugs run rampid in the Entertainment Executive Greenlighting Departments of film studios, all you have to do is look at this film to know it is.

    Either that or -- someone was getting fired and thought this would be the best revenge to greenlight this mess.

    Either way..unless you're a fan of bad movies and want to see the ones that are bubbling close for the top spot, skip this one.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Laserblast starts in a Californian desert where two lizard like aliens chase another human like alien (special effects make-up man Steve Neil who also gets a 'special property designer' credit whatever that means) & after a short (one shot each) laser fight the lizard aliens zap & vapourise the human like alien, the two lizard aliens are disturbed by an air-plane overhead & make their escape in a spaceship but leave behind the human like aliens laser-gun & pendant. In a nearby town teenager Billy Duncan (Kim Milford) has a tough life, his mum leaves him home alone a lot, he is picked by by just about everyone who knows him & his girlfriends Father (Keenan Wynn) is giving him serious hassle. Billy has had it & to make his day even worse he picks up a speeding ticket, however while on his own messing around in the desert he discovers the human like aliens laser-gun & pendant & discovers that the laser-gun shoots, erm well lasers. Billy starts to change as the power of the laser-gun & pendant take over, it turns Billy into a green faced creature with bad teeth & the strange desire to blow as many cars up as possible. Can shadowy Government official Tony Craig (Gianni Russo) together with Billy's girlfriend Kathy (Cheryl Smith) put an end to his homicidal laser-blasting ways & get the real Billy back?

    Directed by Michael Rae I am somewhat surprised to see Laserblast on the IMDb's bottom 100 list, I mean it ain't no masterpiece that's for sure but one of the 100 worst films ever made? I don't think so, I really don't. Then again if all you're used to is Hollywood films with budgets that consist of 10's of millions of $'s then yeah I suppose I could see how someone like that might see Laserblast as a pretty crap film. Anyway here's my opinion, I'm in two minds over Laserblast as it's a pretty bad film but there was just about enough in it for me to enjoy it on a basic level. The script by Frank Ray Perilli & Franne Schacht moves along at a reasonable pace, I certainly didn't think it was boring or dull so that's something positive I can say about it. Unfortunately there's plenty of negatives as well, it takes itself far too seriously, the narrative is poor throughout & character's are very underdeveloped & stereotypical including two dumb comic relief Deputies. How did that Government agent guy know what was going on? The old army buddies thing with him & Kathy's Father goes nowhere & serves no purpose whatsoever. What were the human alien & lizard aliens fighting over in the first place? Why did the lizard aliens leave the laser-gun behind? What actually happens to Billy? Why does he change? What is he changing into? You will not find the answer to these & many more questions in Laserblast. Laserblast was released shortly after the much better Star Wars (1977) to try & cash in on it's success & at one point Billy uses his laser to blow a Star Wars advertisement billboard to pieces! Make of that reference what you will. The film is basically all about underdog empowerment & in this sense owes as much to the also then recent & also much better Carrie (1976).

    Director Rae doesn't do anything special & he seems to have some sort of fascination with blowing cars up & showing the same shot from different angles. The film has flat & bland cinematography & the dull, repetitive desert locations are instantly forgettable. The films distinctly underwhelming climax has Billy blow up a newspaper stand & letterbox along with, yes you've guessed it, a couple of police cars. The lizard aliens are realised using stop-motion animation & are pretty cute if I'm honest, I want one as a pet although it goes without saying I'd have to take his laser-gun off him otherwise he'd probably zap me. The other special effects are poor & won't impress anyone.

    Technically Laserblast is pretty rough & not that well made, I counted at least two shots where the boom mike was clearly visible at the top of the screen & generally speaking you can tell it was a low budget effort. The acting was average, no one's going to win any awards for it that's for sure.

    Laserblast is a terrible film really but there was a certain something that I liked about it, something that kept me watching right through to the bitter end. It has many problems, a badly underdeveloped script, clichéd character's, awful special effects & low production values but I found a certain charm, a certain amount of entertainment value & at the very least I wasn't bored. Sure it's a mess but it's a watchable mess as far as I'm concerned.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    For years, I wanted to see this movie. In 1978, my options were limited as it never played our drive-in, or if it did, I was six, so I couldn't just drive out and see it. But I'd see stills of it in Starlog and think of how cool it looked. I mean, just take a glance at the poster!

    It wasn't until years later that I'd realize that my dreams of how awesome Laserblast could be are way better than the actual final product.

    The one and only directorial effort of Michael Rae - I don't count the Full Moon mixtape Aliens Gone Wild - this movie was produced by Charles Band, who in addition to producing so many movies that proclaim his love for puppets also directed movies like Metalstorm: The Destruction of Jared-Syn and Trancers.

    The alien effects are by longtime Band collaborator David Allan. As we discussed back in our review of The Dungeonmaster, Allen had an interesting life. He got his start on the movie Equinox and worked on Flesh Gordon, Laserblast, The Howling, the Puppet Master series, Willow and so much more. But after dying in 1999, a crazy story emerged.

    Allen used to be married to a woman named Donita Woodruff, who learned that Allen had an ex-girlfriend named Valerie Taylor - who also used to be a man and had enough of a criminal record that Woodruff found evidence that she'd committed murder in 1979. As a result of that evidence, Taylor went to jail and Allen and Woodruff would eventually divorce, according to Woodruff's book Deadly Masquerade: A True Story of Illicit Passion, Buried Secrets, and Murder.

    But hey - let's talk about Laserblast.

    A green-skinned man is wandering the desert when two aliens emerge and blow him away, returning to their spaceship without the weapon and pendant he was wearing.

    Non-sequitur time: Billy wakes up millions of miles away. He's played by Kim Milford (Rock-a-Die-Baby, Wired to Kill), an angry teenager miffed that his mother is leaving to go on a trip to Acapulco. He goes to visit his girlfriend Kathy (Cheryl Rainbeaux Smith, who will forever be Lila Lee in Lemora, but she's also Lavelle in Caged Heat, Cinderella in Cinderella, Mary in Massacre at Central High and so many more roles, as well as a drummer who played with a version of The Runaways and with Joan Jett), but he insane grandfather Colonel Farley (Keenan Wynn!) is so bonkers that he just leaves.

    Billy hates the town he lives in and everything and everyone in it, like Chuck Boran, Froggy (Eddie Deezen in his first role) and the cops (who include Dennis Burkley, one of my favorite sitcom stars as Cal on Sanford and Son; he's also the biker Dozer in Mask).

    Our hero - I guess, he's kind of a spoiled jerk - wanders the desert and finds the laser cannon and pendant. Whoops - I guess aliens aren't as smart as we think they are, leaving that kind of weaponry behind on our backwater planet.

    Chuck tries to pick up Kathy, which means he has to pay. Billy uses his new firepower to basically nuke Chuck's car from orbit.

    This show of force puts government official Tony Craig (Gianni Russo, who was Carlo Rizzo in The Godfather films - well, the first two that matter - and was also the owner of a Las Vegas club and casino at one point. Once, a patron was bothering a female guest and Gianni intervened. The man broke a champagne bottle and stabbed the actor, who pulled his gun and shot the man twice in the head. While that was considered a justifiable homicide, it turned out that the dead man was a member of Pablo Escobar's cartel. A hit was ordered on Russo, but canceled when the drug lord learned that Russo had been in The Godfather; good thing he never saw Laserblast) on the case. He works with the sheriff (Ron Masak, who was a commercial voiceover guy who is the first cousin of Family Ties and Tremors star Michael Gross and Saturday Night Live castmember Mary Gross - who I never realized were related) to find out what the hell is going on.

    Billy has a growth on his chest, so Kathy makes him go visit Doctor Mellon (Roddy McDowall, who deserves better; he definitely deserves better than to have his name misspelled as McDowell in the credits), who removes a metal disc from Billy's chest. For this act, he and his car are blown up real good by Billy, which is a mercy killing, removing McDowall from this shoddy film.

    It turns out whenever Billy wears the pendant, he becomes a green-skinned killer. He wipes out the deputies and nearly kills Kathy before she escapes. He also gets Chuck and Froggy before going full-on alien and screaming like a petulant child as he destroys his hometown. He feels like me, yelling at people who won't let him skate at Rite Aid with his crappy Valterra skateboard back in 1988.

    The aliens return to kill him, but guess what? They forget the pendant and laser gun again! Aliens! What is your problem?

    This is a movie that takes potshots at Star Wars, including blowing up a billboard advertising that film. I'm trying to think of an analogy, but instead, whenever something inferior takes a cheap shot at a much better thing, I'm going to say, "That's like Laserblast making fun of Star Wars."

    If you watch this and wonder, "Where have I heard this music before?" perhaps you've seen Band's film Auditions. Or Robot Holocaust. Or The House on Sorority Row.

    It was released along with End of the World by the Irwin Yablans Company, the same folks who brought you the first thee Halloween films. There was talk of a sequel in 1988, but the money never showed up. However, the Band production Deadly Weapon is exactly the same story as Laserblast.

    What else can you say about a science fiction movie shot over three weekends for basically no money on an abandoned 1920's Chicago set somewhere in California? Just imagine if you'd seen this movie under its awesome Spanish title of El Rayo Destructor Del Planeta Desconocido (The Destructive Beam of the Unknown Planet) or Greek name O Ektelestis Me Tis Aktines Thanatou (The Performer with Her Death Ray), two incredible names that would make the disappointment of watching this hurt even worse!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    What kind of ending is that? The aliens just show up out of nowhere at the end of the film and blast him like it ain't no thing.

    And they forget to take the damn gun away so they'll have to make yet another trip to Earth...lame! Leonard Maltin gave this movie 2.5 / 4...did he even see this movie?

    This movie could not have been watchable without my good buddies Servo and Crow, who in their right mind decided this should be made?

    Adding Roddy McDowell was only adding to the sheer fromage factor this movie generates. Might as well have had him in the ape costume for all the good his partt did.

    I have only 1 question for you...Are ya ready for some football?!
  • LASERBLAST is one of the very worst films of the 1970s--and that's saying a lot because they made a huge number of terrible films that decade. From start to finish, the movie is unbelievably inept and just plain stupid.

    The film begins with some horribly rendered stop-motion alien lizards stalking some creature and killing him. However, inexplicably, they didn't bother to take their prey's weapon with them. Later, when the main character (the actor's named was Kim--and it's a guy) wanders into the vast desert, he just happens to find this laser cannon right.

    Speaking of Kim Milford, he plays 'Bobby', a guy so cool and sexy he spends most of the movie running about without shirts or with button-up shirts unbuttoned. I guess they did this so you'd always know it was him. You could also recognize him as the guy whose acting range includes sneering and acting petulant.

    Anyway, after Kim uses the gun, he begins to change personality and at times he even appears in silly green makeup with contacts. Later, he has some facial prosthetics that only look semi-shabby. What I really liked, though, was that the makeup only covered his face and there was an obvious demarcation where the paint ended on his neck. Perhaps the makeup artists(?) was a fan of "The Mask", as he looked like a much cheaper version of this character minus the cool clothes. During these rage periods, he runs around town blowing things up--and mostly cars. And, interestingly enough, every time he blows up a car, the car is shown blowing up again and again--as many as four or five times. Maybe the director thought if they did this it would seem like he had blown up more cars than he actually did! Everything about this film is super-cheap and shabby.

    Somehow, however, they managed to get Roddy McDowell to appear in it (ever so briefly) as well as Keenan Wynn (who, during this period in his career would appear in anything). Oddly, Wynn's scenes seem practically irrelevant and really aren't well integrated into the film at all. You just have no idea why he's there. Apparently they only had him for a day or so and just filmed--regardless of its relevance--sort of the way Ed Wood filmed Bela Lugosi for footage he used in PLAN 9. In addition to these down-and-out stars, the film marks the screen debut of one of the most annoying one-note performers in screen history (Eddie Deezen). You may remember his as the 'Mr. Potatohead' character from WARGAMES as well as being the inspiration for the character 'Carl' on "Johnny Bravo". His shtick is to act super-geeky. Here, oddly, he's a sidekick for a bully--a case of strange casting indeed.

    So is it worth seeing this film? Well, if you like laughing at rotten films, yes. There sure is a lot to laugh at during the film. Otherwise, stay away at all costs as everything about this film is the lowest quality imaginable--the acting, direction, script and especially the horrid stop-motion creatures. I think using plastic dinosaurs that are manipulated by a hand would have been more realistic!
  • I am one of those few who liked this movie. I was always reluctant to get this on DVD, but during a Full Moon Valentine's Day Sale, I bought it. A solid little cult sci-fi film with some decent special effects. I liked the development of Billy and how he slowly is possessed and driven completely mad. My only gripe with the movie has to do with the storytelling. How did the original alien in the beginning get on earth and why? Also, what was the deal with that alien being wanted from the other space aliens? That is never explained, however, it's easy to not think about it.

    Too many people take movies seriously these days. Time for people to lighten up and realize that movies don't have to be perfect in order to be fun. Glad Billy blows up a billboard with "Star Wars" on it! Take that Star Wars nerds!
  • Some awesome stop-motion animation in a bad film. The only good live action in this movie in every scene Eddie Dezen is in. He plays a real dork in this movie, so he is funny. The aliens in the movie, on the other hand, are fabulous. They were designed by David Allen ( *batteries not included ) and Jon Berg ( star wars ). They were animated by Randall Wiliam Cook The Gate ) and David Allen. With all of this talent on board, these aliens are truly majestic and awesome. Stop-motion animation fans need to check this one out for the aliens. I love them! The movie, however, is a drag. 4 out of 10.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This could have been a good film. I mean it. Where they screwed-up was in the fact that they included so much that SCREAMED for exposition, but they did nothing with all of it. Take the guy at the beginning: where did he come from? What was he doing with the laser rifle? How did he get it? Was he a mutated human (as our "hero" later became,) or was he an alien?

    Same thing for Tony Craig, the MIB type. Who did he work for? Why was the sheriff so intimidated by him? What was Craig's connection to the aliens?

    As to the alien creatures, were they interstellar policemen? I liked them, personally. Some things I noticed when they got the message from their leader on their ship's view-screen: he gives them an almost Nazi-like hand salute, and one of them responds. The leader then talks to them in an oddly guttural, German-like accent. In fact, he sounded something like Hermann Goering.

    In short, they could have extrapolated on all of this and much more and not left the audience shaking its collective head.

    As to the acting, it was pretty bad. I can't figure out why Kim Milford, who was obviously pretty talented (as well as very cute,) did this film. Did he read the script and decide that it was so lousy that he'd phone in his performance? Was he genuinely inept at this stage in his career, or did he really try and was he then defeated by the director and film editor?

    I have a feeling that Milford didn't discuss this movie much in the last decade of his life. I doubt that Gianni Russo does to this day.
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