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Monday, October 13, 2008

War of the Robots

Release Year: 1978
Country: Italy
Starring: Antonio Sabato, Yanti Somer, Malisa Longo, Patrizia Gori, Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, Roberto Bianchetti, Aldo Canti, Enrico Gozzo, Licinia Lentini, Frank Siedlitz, Massimo Righi, Dino Scandiuzzi, Nicole Stoliaroff, Ian Pulley, Venantino Venantini.
Writer: Alfonso Brescia
Director: Alfonso Brescia
Cinematographer: Silvio Fraschetti
Music: Marcello Giombini
Producer: Luigi Alessi
Original Title: Le Guerra dei Robot
Alternate Titles: Reactor, Robots, Stratostars


When one possesses tastes such as I do, one often assumes that he will find himself standing alone in a vast sea of people who think you are mad, completely mad. If the Internet has taught me one thing other than there are a lot of blogs maintained by people's house cats, it's that you're never so alone as you think you are. No matter how obscure or out of the mainstream your affection for a particular something may be, chances are very good that there are multiple discussion boards, chat rooms, and websites dedicated to defending and celebrating whatever that thing may be. Heck, by Internet standards furries, scat freaks, and people who like to watch monkeys stick their fingers up their butt then sniff them and fall over are mainstream.

And yet even in this glorious netherworld where everything is acceptable and nothing is beyond the realm of defense, there are rare occasions when I still feel cold and alone in a world that regards me with a suspicious and disgusted eye. Such is the case when I offer up the opinion that Italian science fiction films are "pretty good."

Pretty much every Italian B genre has ample defenders, be it peplum, giallo, violent cop films, or those screwball comedies we only watch because we know Edwidge Fenech gets nude in them. Even the third Ator film has its defenders (am I among those sad individuals? Need you even ask?). And yet when I venture forth with the suggestion that Wild, Wild Planet or War of the Robots are enjoyable movies, I feel like one of those unfortunate guys who mis-times a bodily function in a crowded venue and lets loose the precise moment everyone simultaneously gets quiet for no discernible reason.

And the expression on most of the faces around me is no more approving than the faces staring in harsh divine judgment at someone who just cut one in church. "Why?" they ask me as I try feebly to defend my adoration of films featuring Antonio Sabato in a metallic unitard. "Why do you enjoy making baby Jesus cry?" And I when I look to Christ on the cross for reassurance, his gaunt, forlorn visage merely peers back at me in disappointment as he says, "Really, Keith! I was ready to forgive your obsession with big round asses, the visible thong fashion trend, the naughty office lady stereotype, and maybe even Yor, The Hunter from the Future. But Cosmos: War of the Planets? That's too much, even for me."


Luckily, though, I don't actually buy into religion, and I haven't been to church since I was a young teen trying to make time with a minister's daughter. So you know what, Pope Benedict? I don't care if The Vatican disapproves of my appreciation of War of the Robots or bigtitsroundasses.com (Umm, not that I've ever been to that site). And even if there's not a single person out there who will back me up on this one, then I am proud to be the lone voice in the wilderness, howling like a banshee about the merits of a film like War of the Robots. Well, perhaps "merits" is too strong a word.

There doesn't seem to be a wealth of research available on Italian science fiction, not the way there is for giallo and horror or peplum. And as I'm not living in Italy and my conversational Italian is limited to "Dove il bagno?" and "Hey! That's a spicy meat-a-ball-a!" I'm probably not going to end up being the trailblazer in proper research of Italian science fiction films and themes, though over the coming months I shall do my best. Someone has to shoulder the burden, right? And Jesus made clear to me that he was willing to die for a lot of things, but Antonio Sabato in a unitard wasn't among them. Heck, I may even go to the library and blow some dust off any books they may have there, perhaps even pretend to read them when really, all I'm doing is looking at the pictures and making up assumptions based on chapter titles. If you ever wonder why the state of journalism is so dreadful these days, it's because of me. But there. I went to an online card catalog for a major American university and found nothing. The few books on Italian science fiction I could find were referring to literature, and not Antonio Sabato in a unitard. Hold on, let me do a search for "Antonio Sabato in a unitard." Nope, nothing except Teleport City. So I guess I have to make it up as best as can for the time being, and rely on subsequent reviews and reader corrections to better whittle down my fantastical assumptions into something more reflective of the truth.


For our purposes here, Italian science fiction is divided into two main eras: the late fifties through the sixties, and the post-Star Wars 70s. Now, let me preface this entire discussion with the admission that I hate discussing sci-fi as inspired by Star Wars. People seem to insist that movies are "rip offs" of Star Wars even when the assertions are more tenuous then the kind of crap I assert. Not that Star Wars didn't have a major impact on science fiction in particular and movies in general, and not that a lot of sci-fi films would never have been made were it not for the success of Star Wars. I'm just saying that it isn't always Star Wars; there were plenty of other sci-fi films in the 70s that the Italians could rip off, and the Italian b-movie industry has never been anything if not egalitarian in where it steals ideas from. Plus, disregarding any of the Campbellian "myth" myth that has been layered on as extra meaning behind Star Wars, it was at heart just a rip-off of old pulps and sci-fi which, in turn, were inspired by the Victorian speculative fiction writers, which in turn...oh, you get the idea, don't you? For me, it's never a question of who rips off what, but of whether or no the rip-off is any good. And the general consensus around a film like War of the Robots is "No, not really."

I, obviously, disagree.


You see, in many aspects of life, I am gentleman of refinement and culture, with mature tastes and the wisdom of the ages. You will find me wearing my three-piece velvet suit (don't think I don't own one), sitting in an overstuffed, weathered leather recliner, with a glass of fine single malt or bourbon in one hand and an exquisite cigar in the other, discussing no doubt the history of "the Great Game" during the 1800s or what's to be done with this Taft fellow. In certain other aspects of life, however, I am possessed of the wide-eyed disregard of a child. And so when a film comes to me wrapped in pretty colors and glitter, all full of skintight metallic jumpsuits and blinking lights, I can't help but drop the cigar, spill the scotch (which fills me with a profound sense of sadness beyond the ages), and collapse to the floor, drooling and clapping and laughing "Pretty!" Few things are as candy-colored as Italian science fiction from the 60s and 70s.

In fact, that may pretty much be the only thing they are. You certainly can't call most of them intelligent or well-written. You can't call most of them well directed or well paced. Certainly not well-acted. But they are full of pretty colors. Hooray! And no matter how dull and plodding the film itself may actually be to the rest of the right thinking world, I sit there in a hypnotized state, gazing happily at the colored lights and thinking to myself how much I love what I'm watching.


Such is the case with War of the Robots, a film that was most likely scripted on the back of a napkin and filmed in less time than it took to write on that napkin. It comes from the second era of Italian sci-fi, or the Alfonso Brescia era (the first era was the Antonio Margheriti era). This was the era when the swingin' swanky spacecats of films like Wild Wild Planet gave way to the swingin' disco lounge lizards of the cosmos, but the ponderous and meandering pace of the films remained constant. Brescia is the kind of director who has a filmography awful enough that if you told me for six months I'd be allowed to watch nothing but Alfonso Brescia movies, I'd be pretty happy for six months. Like most Italian exploitation directors, he worked the gamut -- peplum and spaghetti westerns in the 1960s; sex, cop, and science fiction films in the 1970s; sword and sorcery and Miami Vice rip-offs in the 80s.

Among other things, he directed one of my all-time favorite fantasy films: the bizarre mash-up of Hercules and Flash Gordon that is Conquerors of Atlantis. Although first and foremost a peplum, or sword and sandal film, Conquerors of Atlantis had more than enough mad scientist gear, metallic wizard robes, laser guns, and atomic generators to also plant it firmly within the realm of science fiction. Specifically, it plays like an old serial, one of those where a good-natured cowboy accidentally discovers a lost world of guys in pointy helmets and armed with ray guns. Only instead of a cowboy, it was an ancient world strongman. Given Brescia's familiarity with such material, it's a bit of a surprise to me that he didn't make any straight sci-fi during the 1960s, and that straight sci-fi remained more or less the sole dominion of Antonio Margheriti until later int he 70s, when Brescia took over and Antonio decided to spend his time directing cheap, bloody Vietnam movies.


Come the 1970s, when Star Wars generated new interest in the pulpy, adventure-oriented sort of science fiction that the 1970s had otherwise eschewed in favor of contemplative (if ham-fisted) post-apocalypse films (which were not very much like the post-apocalypse films of the 1980s), Brescia was the man behind the camera more times than not (the most significant "not" being Luigi Cozzi's Starcrash, but we shall come to that in due time). Brescia's films are defined by a few key elements, though if there's any single over-arching theme running through the body of his science fiction output, it's that in the future, most of our time will be spent sitting in front of control panels covered with blinking lights. Other characteristics include his bizarre hybrid of swingin' 60s pop art fashion with sparkling lens flare disco aesthetics and an extreme reliance on gratuitous and functionally useless helmets. He also really likes shots of guys firing flashlights at each other from behind stone formations. Oh yeah, also -- whatever movie you thought you were watching in the beginning ends up getting discarded halfway through in favor of another movie Brescia must have thought up during lunch and figured he wouldn't get a chance to make, so why not cram it into the movie he was already making?

In War of the Robots, for example, the movie we start out with is about a scientist (Jacques Herlein, who once appeared in a movie called The Hostess Also Likes to Blow the Horn) and his lovely assistant (Brescia sci-fi regular Malisa Longo, who also had a bit part in Way of the Dragon) who get kidnapped by aliens designed to look like Miles O'Keefe in Sword of the Valiant. The aliens need the scientist because he has discovered the secret of how to create life, presumably with his sexy assistant. I'm not really sure how a race that hasn't figured out how to procreate even managed to become a race in the first place, but whatever. It's the future. Sadly, there's no scene were one of the goofy looking foil-suited aliens insist that the professor hand over the Genesis device, only to be confronted by the professor fondling his assistant and purring, "She's the only Genesis device I need, mister!" However, it's worth noting that the old crank seems to have an entirely unprofessional affection for his young assistant, which he expresses whenever he can by grabbing her bare shoulders and casually brushing against her breasts.


The kidnapping doesn't sit well with Captain Antonio Sabato, who had a thing going with the sexy assistant Lois, or with the rest of the people in the world, since the scientist was apparently running an experiment that, if left unattended, will destroy the planet. And in an incredible feat of planning, the aging old scientist is the only person who knows how to shut down the experiment. So off into space we go with Sabato and his crew, most of whom seem pretty blase about the whole "the world will explode in seven days" thing and more interested in slinging cheesy lounge lizard come-on line sat each other, though mostly at crewmember Julie (Yanti Somer, yet another Alfonso Brescia sci-fi stalwart), because she's the hottest and looks like Brigitte Nielson in Rocky IV, only cute instead of terrifying yet somehow alluring. She has a thing for Captain Sabato (yes, yes, the ol' John Hughes "guy has thing for glamor girl when plucky, hot tomboy sidekick is much sexier and better for him" plot is firmly in place years before Hughes made it his stock in trade), and if you're wondering why we're wasting time with all this dumb soap opera nonsense when we should be tending to rescuing a scientist from some alien pageboys, well you're apparently not going to get very far in Italian space command. Remember that they are a fiery and passionate bunch, those Mediterraneans, and just because you are on a critical mission to save the world doesn't mean there's not time to ooze up next to a crewmate and lay on sleazy lines like, "Baby, why are you still obsessed with the captain? You know he loves Lois. But maybe you could swing by my quarters later, and I'll show you my collection of Anthorian fertility fetishes."

En route to the point ("north Pole Earth, 90 degrees west, and 810 north" -- Star Trek wishes it could ride techno-babble this ridiculous) at which their spaceship -- which is kitted out with the world's most advanced rolling space office chairs -- will intercept the aliens, our crew ends up crashing on a planet inhabited by mutants, one of whom looks like Yul Brynner in cheap World of Warcraft elf makeup. It turns out that these people are used by the pageboys as a humanoid (as they say, "we are humanoid but different from you") internal organ farm. The pageboys, it turns out, are the goon squad for a race that can only stay alive by stealing organs from other races. Yul Brynner (Aldo Kanti, actually, as Kuba) is itching for revenge. So Sabato lets him join the crew, on the condition that Kuba trade in his loin cloth and cape combo for a snug, metallic space jumpsuit.


After some more, "So, who do you like? Why does he love her?" banter, we finally arrive at the alien planet, where Captain Sabato discovers the horrible truth -- that the scientist is actually enjoying his new home and accompanying space wizard robes and has no interest in returning to save Earth or even telling the crew how to shut down the stupid experiment he left percolating in the kitchen. In fact, it turns out he and Lois have decided to lead an invading armada and conquer the planet -- which would make you think they'd want to at least help out with stopping the reactor, since amassing an armada to invade a planet that blows up a couple minutes after you leave seems like a poor application of resources.

So at this point, someone calls Sabato and is like, "Oh, we ended up figuring out that reactor thing. You can go on to the next movie." So the remaining half of the film is dedicated to the glorious and epic battle among the stars for the very fate of humanity itself. This is realized largely by filming scenes of Antonio Sabato wearing a motorcycle helmet and sitting at a control panel while he pretends to fly a spaceship with scenes from the movie projected behind him, not unlike similar scenes from the Turkish sci-fi epic, The Man Who Saved the World. Other people sit at control consoles elsewhere and do the same. In the end, it seems like an exceptionally one-sided battle despite what we're being told in various snippets of exposition delivered by a woman who forgot to put on the undershirt portion of her space uniform. I mean, on one side is an old man and a bunch of pageboys who turn out to be androids filled with springs, and on the other side are a bunch of hot-blooded Italians lead by Antonio Sabato in a useless helmet. What is a motorcycle helmet going to do for you while you're flying a space fighter? I would think that, even by Italian standards, when you crash a ship in open space, mild head trauma is going to be among the least of your concerns.

As is often the case, if you ask me why I like this movie, I'll shrug and mumble something about pretty colors and lights and isn't Yanti Somer cute with her sexy crew cut and form-fitting space uniform? And you'll shake your head, maybe try to explain to me that those are not really reasons of merit to like a film as much as I like War of the Robots. I will respond by putting my fingers in my ears and, in an affected monotone computer voice, repeating "Does not compute!" until you finally lose heart and go off to win the Nobel Prize or something, leaving me in peace to watch War of the Robots and brood about how no one understands me but Alfonso Brescia.


Sabato seems to be on autopilot for this film, but he's still Antonio Sabato, and that means he's cooler than you or me, which is why he has time to juggle two hot space babes while still saving the galaxy from an army of Miles O'Keefe robots. Malisa Longo really gets to chew some scenery with her "lab assistant turned evil space empress of the universe" role, and I guess we can't blame her or the professor for taking the offer, though they might at least have questioned how a race that has perfected android making, interstellar travel, ray guns, and other highly advanced technologies and feats has yet to figure out how not to live in sparsely adorned caverns. Yanti Somer mostly hangs around looking cute with her bad-ass crewcut (I admit it -- dames with crewcuts really appeal to me. Add that to my tally, Jesus). The rest of the cast is pretty non-descript, except maybe the "Texan" who communicates his Texan-ness by wearing cowboy boots with his space outfit. If you happen to learn any of their names, it is purely through brute repetition, and not because anyone turns in a memorable performance.

Really, though, none of the faults of this film bother me very much. Or rather, they didn't bother to the point that they outweighed the enjoyment I got from the sheer silliness of everything on display. Even though I opened this review by talking about how I hate when everything is listed as "a rip-off of Star Wars," it's hard to argue against that when Antonio Sabato gets involved in a fight with glowing laser swords. Unfortunately, Alfonso Brescia couldn't afford to have someone draw in animated laser blades in post-production (I don't even think a movie like this has post-production -- I think they just assemble it as they film it, then send it off to theaters later that afternoon by fourth class media mail), so they just use regular plastic swords with reflective tape on them, the kind runners put on their shoulders and shoes in a vain attempt to stop crazed motorists from running them down. But other than that, I think claims of Star Wars rip-offery are greatly overstated. Yes, this movie and the whole series of science fiction films made by Brescia got made because someone wanted their own Star Wars. But opening the floodgate is one thing.

The content of War of the Robots is substantially different from that of its big-budget door-opener. It's very much a throwback to the cheap sci-fi films of the 50s and 60s, when the interiors of spaceships were all wide-open and spacious and equipped with folding tables and rolling chairs. And yes, there's a lot of scenes comprised of nothing but people sitting at a prop control panel turning knobs, but there's also a fair amount of goofy laser battles and sneaking around in catacombs while wearing sexy pleather space outfits. If anything, War of the Robots owes more to Mario Bava's Planet of the Vampires and even more to Gerry Anderson's British sci-fi television series UFO than it does Star Wars. It is from psychedelic space adventures like these that Brescia seems to be cribbing all his notes (including an alien race that survives by harvesting the organs of other compatible races and putting most of his female cast in platinum bob haircut wigs), and as such, War of the Robots feels more like something that came before Star Wars. Heck, the UFOs in which the aliens travel are basically the UFOs from UFO, only realized with less of a budget than that television show probably enjoyed.

A lot of the science fiction in the 70s started striving to create some new, usually depressing realism, abandoning the gee-whiz pop art madness of the 1960s and opting instead for films that were dystopic and, at least in the eyes of those making them at the time, truer to a potential real future. Thus the grim setting of a film like Solyent Green, Ultimate Warrior, or Silent Running. For decades, science and the military had protected us, even when they were also responsible for creating whatever it was we need to be protected from (usually a giant scorpion or giant mantis or giant bald man in a diaper). After the turmoil of the 1960s, science fiction was much keener on appealing to the suspicious and, at times, misanthropic streak running through people. Science was our undoing, rather than our savior, and it was left to the survivor to pick up the pieces as best they could and spend their days waxing poetic about plants and wearing burlap tunics.


Star Wars ushered in a "new" era of science fiction that took the focus off grim prognostications about the future and placed the focus squarely on action and adventure, with films that were as much swashbuckler and fantasy as they were sci-fi. Few kids filed dutifully in to see Star Wars because they were interested to find out what it had to say about the threat of nuclear annihilation or because they wanted to reflect on how Gran Moff Tarkin was an allegory for the Nixon administration. It was meant to be a rolicking good adventure yarn, and for a population perhaps weary of being beaten over the head with the doom and gloom scenarios that filled the 1970s, it struck exactly the right chord.

I know there are those out there who will bemoan the fact that science fiction became more about adventure and daring-do and less about speculation and message, but I'm not among them. As much as I enjoy a heavy handed 70s sci-fi film, I also enjoy a good ol' pulpy adventure, and I think the universe is big enough to house them both. War of the Robots doesn't really strike me as having any particular type of message, although one could be forced from it if one was desperate. After all, this is a movie were science gets us in a pickle then flat out refuses to take even the simplest of steps to rectify the situation, leaving the solution to be found by two-fisted adventurers. Somewhere in there is a parallel to the gritty cop dramas of the 1970s, films in which bureaucracy and red tape cripple society, leaving criminals to run wild and free until one man, probably with an awesome mustache, steps forward with a willingness to circumvent the system and box in a few ears.

I don't think War of the Robots is trading in that sort of an agenda, though. I think, more than anything else, Alfonso Brescia just wanted to make a goofy science fiction film full of lens flares, metallic jumpsuits, and boopidy-boo-boo electronic music by Marcello Giombini (which I quite like). What you have here, then, is basically what would happen if you mashed the freewheelin' science fiction of the 60s together with the fashion and art design of Logan's Run. It's pretty glorious in that cut-rate way Italian sci-fi production design tends to be. Lots of tight, shiny vinyl, lots of Lycra jumpers, some bulky spacesuits, and perhaps my personal favorite: the crew uniforms that say "Trissi" on them, ostensibly because the spaceship is named Trissi, but in reality because the uniforms are just Trissi brand motorcycle outfits, and the filmmakers didn't have the time, money, or interest to remove the logo from the arm of the outfits.


Other key moments include the realization of space walking by turning the camera sideways and having an actor wave his arms around in front of a starry background painting. Suspending him by wires in front of the starry background would have just been too costly and complicated. Better than that, this is just footage recycled from Brescia's War of the Planets. And even better than that, War of the Robots uses it twice. Then there's the laser gun battle (keeping in mind that there are no animated rays; just flashlights in the shape of novelty ray guns) where they forgot to add sound effects and such, so it's just a scene of the good guys pointing their prop ray guns at the bad guys, who then fall down.

At some point, someone said they would probably need some sort of a story or something, so Brescia shrugged and came up with something that was probably a summary of the last few scripts he read. Thus you get space aliens kidnap a scientist, ummm, and then they're going to invade Earth...let's throw a romantic triangle in there for good measure...and look, really, as long as Antonio Sabato is in there wearing a bright red motorcycle helmet and we have a lot of animated ray gun effects (we don't, by the way), we should be good to go. And as long as they had a viewer as stupid and undemanding as me in mind, they were correct.

Pretty much the only reason this movie went into production was that someone noticed that had a lot of stuff laying around that was used on Brescia's previous War of the Planets and figured they might as well squeeze another movie or two out of it. And if they were doing that, they might as well hire the same basic cast, since they already fit into their costumes as well as anyone can fit into a pleather jumper. And since some of that model work of space ships and stations was so good the last time around, we might as well get some more mileage out of that. Maybe later we can use it all yet again in, oh, I don't know, an Alfonso Brescia directed space porno or something.

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posted by Keith at | 7 Comments


Monday, November 05, 2001

Conquerors of Atlantis

1965, Italy. Starring Luciana Gilli, Piero Lulli, Kirk Morris, Andrea Scotti. Directed by Alfonso Brescia. Available on DVD (Amazon).

Oh man, this one is really going to make your head hurt in the most glorious way. By this point, we've pretty much established that if you are looking for historical accuracy, or even mythological accuracy, the Italian peplum films of the 1960s are not the place to turn, though they are certainly better than relying on Hercules: The Legendary Journeys. But up until now, minus a few minor details like having Greek legends battling prehistoric cavemen or helping 13th century Christians combat the Mongol hordes, the offenses have been relatively minor, and are certainly no different than an ancient Greek playwright inventing his own Hercules stories for the stage. At no point did anyone have Hercules fighting space aliens. Oh wait, they did that in 1983 with Lou Ferigno. Well, then at least they never had anything where Hercules scares little old ladies as he flies by their airplane window en route to modern-day New York. Oh wait, that happened too, didn't it?

Well, if you are thinking to yourself, "Sure all that may be true, but Hercules never fired a laser beam at an army of bronze robots commanded by an evil Ming the Merciless wizard from Atlantis," well brothers and sisters, you are wrong.

Conquerors of Atlantis takes the Hercules myth to its most illogical extremes and clocks in as the most absurd, yet also one of the most entertaining entries into the sword and sandal genre. The film sees a returning Kirk Morris, star of Colossus and the Headhunters, still looking a little too GQ for my tastes, but I'm beginning to soften to the guy. I found him terribly bland in Headhunters, but he's better this time around, probably because he's surrounded by such an outlandish scenario. The director, Alfonso Brescia, would later go on to make a string of science fiction movies in the 1970s, and his predisposition toward that genre is already evident here in what was one of his only sword and sandal films. Rather than rely on the age-old blend of muscles and fantasy, Brescia opts to make use of his position as a resident of the latter half of the 20th century, invoking elements of sci-fi that look like something straight out of an old Flash Gordon serial adventure, complete with subpar special effects.

This time around, Morris is referred to as Hercules, or Heracles rather, but it's all the same beefy guy. As usual, it's doubtful the character was meant to be Hercules in the original version, but since he seems to be the only Greek hero anyone can remember, there you go. The ancient Romans really dug Hercules anyway, even moreso than the Greeks who invented the guy. In Greek stories, Herc is generally a moron who blunders his way through a series of adventures and tragedies caused by his own stupidity and bull-headedness. For the more satirical Greek writers, Hercules became a frequently used comic character, and they reveled in using his idiocy as an example of the foibles of relying solely on might to make right.

When they moved in and took over all the ancient Greek ideas, the Romans were much kinder to ol' Herc, transforming him into a far more respectable and capable hero with a strong sense of justice. He was admired for his strength, and it was used as a tool for victory rather than the source of his folly. Obviously the Hercules of the movies is much closer to the Roman version than the original Greek version, but hell, it was Romans making the movies, so what do you want?

The movie begins with what seems to be a never-ending caravan of horses and camels walking across the desert as the credits roll. Just when you think you've seen the last camel, a couple more will trot by. It's sort of like waiting for a Bruce Springsteen song to end. Just when you think things are winding down and you start to applaud, suddenly he's swinging his arms again and has a whole new verse to get through. Listen to "Dancing in the Dark" if you need an example. I think Adam Sandler even spoofed this in a skit somewhere. Not that I'm all that familiar with the work of Adam Sandler. I did see Shakes the Clown though.

The caravan, which is of course led by a stunningly beautiful princess, discovers Hercules passed out on the beach. A night of Bacchanalian revelry that leaves you waking up on the beach going, "Am I wearing a little leather loincloth?" Lord knows I've had nights like that. Or perhaps we're actually seeing some sort of continuity between Hercules films. After all, if Kirk's last film, Colossus and the Headhunters, we see him setting sail on a little raft to parts unknown. Could it be this opening is actually related to the end of the last film? Well, I fell for that old trick once, coincidentally at the beginning of Colossus and the Headhunters, which seems at first to be directly related to the end of Fire Monster Against the Son of Hercules. A mere fool was I, and like Roger Daltry, I wasn't going to get fooled again.

Sure enough, as soon as Hercules wakes up, he explains that he was leading a ship either to or from the Peloponesian War, and the thing sank. So yet again, Hercules has the good fortune to stumble upon a remote corner of the world where he just happens to meet a gorgeous princess. What is it with this guy? The princess he meets is the daughter of the leader of one of the two big-time groups battling for control of the region, which is mostly arid, sandy desert. She talks about what a cool guy her dad is, which means he has a pretty good chance of being exposed as right evil, and how a band of brigands are giving him a hard time, which means the brigands will probably turn out to be pretty noble after all.

Hercules and the princess part company, but not before he notices she has dropped an earring. Is it a golden earring? Looks like it, and Herc's radar love targets her immediately. Unfortunately, she and her band have disappeared far into the desert. Given that they only left about thirty seconds earlier, I have to assume they are simply squatting behind a dune waiting for Hercules to go away.

He trots off after her and quickly stumbles upon a skirmish between a caravan and some raiders. Using his keen powers of perception, Hercules instantly figures out who is good and who is evil and joins the fray. Hooray! His side wins. The leader, who he discovers is the leader of the aforementioned bandits, greets him in a hearty, manly way. They have a test of strength which literally brings the tent down, and the two of them laugh heartily and roll around with each other in the sand. Sword and sandal movies never did shy away from homoerotic imagery. Hell, how can you when your entire film focuses on a beefy, oiled-up man in a loin cloth wrestling with other men in loin cloths? I mean, through a gay cop mustache and a leather cap on these guys, and you have a Tom of Finland story.

When the bandit king explains that his people are not bandits, and it is the princess's people who are doing all the raiding and oppressing, Hercules decides to get to the bottom of things, or least get to the bottom of the princess. You know, he may be all homoerotic and he may like to wrestle with other men on a plush carpet, but at the end of the day, 'tis the firm buttocks and ample bosom of a curvaceous female that doth light aflame the loins of Hercules. And if she's dressed like a belly dancer, so much the better for all of us. Hercules trades in his loin cloth for a Lawrence of Arabia outfit and bounds across the desert to settle this whole mess. Along the way he stops at the Oasis of Exposition, where a couple grizzled old Arabs tell him a story about strange desert phantoms attacking people, then disappearing into the sands. Even a blockhead like Hercules starts to put two and two together and come up with three, as in there are actually three groups operating in the desert, with the third one being a phantom group no one knows about and is manipulating the attacks to frame the other groups in each other's eyes.

Hmm, a sword and sandal version of the James Bond film? Ahh! But Conquerors of Atlantis came years before You Only Live Twice in which an evil phantom organization with an underground lair attacked both the Russians and the Americans and tried to make it look like Americans were attacking Russians and vice versa. So obviously, the entire Bond franchise was stolen from sword and sandal films. Actually, I think that whole manipulating the superpowers plot has been used about a billion times, but they always fall for it. Suckers.

Sure enough, Hercules shows up at the princess's tent at about the same time weird "weee-ooo-weee" electronic sounds of the future make everyone wonder who's listening to the Forbidden Planet soundtrack. This is, of course, the futuristic sounds of the desert phantoms, who use them for no real reason other than to fuck with everyone. I mean, it's not a death ray. It doesn't really initiate anything, nor is it followed by the echoing "Surface dwellers! We shall crush you!" speech that you'd be expecting. No, they pretty much just have this machine that makes woo-weee-wooo tones, and they use it to mildly annoy their enemies. It sort of like if you attacked your enemy with a copy of Raymond Scott's "Soothing Sounds for Baby, Volume One."

Well, as the fates would have it (and it is "the fates" instead of the singular "fate," as there were a lot more fates back then), the noble leader of the other tribe shows up, everyone sorts out the whole business about the desert phantoms, and they all become friends. This precious moment is interrupted when the princess is kidnapped by the desert phantoms, something that actually once ruined a fairly touching moment in my own life. That's what I like most about Hercules; I can relate to him.

Hercules and his manly pal decide to launch an expedition into the desert's "Forbidden Zone," where they hope to either discover the true nature of the planet of the apes, or simply go kick some desert phantom tail. I'll let you figure out which one. Fans of the genre may be worried about the inability of Hercules to perform his most famous feats of strength, which include boulder hurling and the pushing over of columns. After all, boulders and columns are both hard to come by in the open desert. Luckily, they soon stumble across some ruins, which will give Herc ample opportunity to ply his shtick.

After stumbling around the ruins for a spell, Herc and the Arabic guy fall into a trap door and are immediately held at spearpoint by a squad of beautiful subterranean ladies with blue hair. They also meet a crazy evil wizard who looks like a cross between Ming the Merciless and the dotering old wizard portrayed by Ralph Richardson in Dragonslayer. It's at this point the fashion really kicks into high gear. Gold lame, shiny blue spandex, glittery silver, massive, ornate headdresses, and more mind-altering sparkle, glitter, and sequins than even Sigfried and Roy could handle. Kinda makes you wonder how these guys went unnoticed for so long. I mean, it's like an army of Rip Taylors coming at you. Effective, maybe, but certainly not discreet or subtle.

Herc and his toned but not so toned as to make Herc look smaller pal are led around the underground kingdom revealed to be Atlantis. They are as surprised as I am given that Atlantis supposedly sunk into the ocean hundreds of thousands of years ago. How the hell did it wind up in the middle of the Sahara Desert? Must be some of that continental drift we hear so much about. Almost as surprising as finding Atlantis in the desert is the discovery that the Arab princess has been brainwashed and will become the next queen of Atlantis. Hercules is, of course, heart-broken.

Our two heroes are placed in a prison cell and watched over by a video camera. In one of the most ridiculous bits in the whole film, Hercules devises an ingenious plan to obscure the eye so he and his friend can search for weaknesses in the cell. The plan consists primarily on the Arabic guy standing in front of the camera and talking loudly while Hercules frantically searched for any possible means of escape. Strategies like this might explain why Hercules sunk his ship and ended up here in the first place. I bet when he shoplifts he wears a big overcoat and walks around looking at the ceiling and whistling.

The Mad Wizard then takes our heroes on a sight-seeing tour of his underground kingdom, including showing how they turn dead warriors into scrawny bronze robots with gingerly prances and shiny blue body stockings. Now here's a reaaaalllly long stretch. The bronze men are, for those in the know, a pretty common element in a lot of Hong Kong kungfu films, usually as Shaolin bronzemen who are sort of the last test before a student can become a real bad-ass. Curiously enough, director Alfonso Brescia would direct one of the several rather awful Italian/Hong Kong kungfu co-productions of the 1970s, Supermen Against the Amazons, a kungfu/superhero/spy comedy sequel to 1974's Supermen Against the Orient, which starred kungfu big-wig Lo Lieh. So what we have here are Italians really exploring the proto Shaolin bronzemen.

Sorta. The only difference is that these bronzemen are not undead Shaolin monks, nor are they very good at fighting though several were obviously dancers or professional acrobats at some point. As far as henchmen go, they're pretty fruity looking, but I guess no one can look tough painted gold and wearing a metallic blue spandex body stocking.

The Mad Wizard also shows Hercules his special brain controlling machine, which allows him to control all the bronzemen and the princess. he then goes on to explain how, if the machine was ever destroyed or its rays reversed, all the soldiers, princess, and all the slaves would regain their free will and revolt, so please don't go fiddling with the controls. Yet another graduate of the Bond Villain School of Evil.

The brawn of Hercules and his pal overcome a couple slave girls, who slip everyone a mickey so they can have a night of pleasure with the surface dwellers, promptly proclaiming their eternal love for two men they met mere seconds before. This is another pretty standard thing in a sword and sandal film. Women fall hopelessly in love with the hero in a matter of seconds, even if all he's done is walk across the room. To be fair, the hero is usually a pretty big sap himself, but this is something even more extreme than love at first sight. It's like primitive love.

Unfortunately, the girls seem as good at planning as Hercules himself. After pulling their little stunt, they simply take the heroes back to the regular quarters, and are caught about five minutes later. For loving a man, the Queen of Atlantis kills the two women with the laser or whatever it is. Seems a bit drastic, but then the evil queen in these movies is always pretty casual about murdering her minions. Hercules doesn't care for her attitude and stages an escape during which he manages to unbrainwash (braindirty?) the princess, steal the laser, shoot the queen dead with it, and lead his trio back to the surface for a big fight with the bronze robot men. All in all, this is a pretty damn good fight, with lots of acrobatics, flipping around, and lackey tossing. It's among the more exciting, better choreographed hand-to-hand fight scenes in any of the peplum films.

The Arab guy and the princess escape, and just as Hercules is about to plod after them, out come the sexy female archers. Hercules grabs one of the the robot men as a shield, which is good since the guy is like half the size of Hercules and leaves plenty of wide-open target for the women, who promptly shoot Hercules in the shoulder. In a way, this buffoonery is pretty on target with a lot of the characterization of Hercules in ancient Greek plays. No one ever said he was the brightest bulb in the sign.

Luckily, the women don't seem much brighter than Hercules. They leave him lying there with the idea that they will "pick him up later." Why? I mean, what else do they have to do? Sure enough, Hercules wakes up, grimaces and clutches his shoulder, and then in the next scene, presto! The wound is gone, and Hercules is as strong and healthy as ever. He invades the inner sanctum of the mad wizard guy while the Arabs mount a full frontal assault and battle the bronzemen, who are suddenly a lot harder to beat than they were in the last fight. So Hercules, the strongest man in the world goes after the frail old scientist while the weaker mortals have to fight the well nigh invulnerable army of robotic bronze men. Maybe Herc isn't so dumb after all.

Of course we all know that the righteous will prevail and the evil will be vanquished. You don't go to these movies hoping to see everyone fail. All in all, it's a pretty wild ride with lots of great fights, a fast pace, and a completely insane plot. The set designs and costumes are colorful and outlandish, Kirk Morris does a decent job, and you get lots of heroic Arabs for once instead of treacherous ones. Conquest of Atlantis is definitely the weirdest and most far-out of all the old sword and sandal films, but it's also one of the most energetic and fun. You may not believe what you're seeing, which is all the more reason to make sure you see it.

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