Fantastic Planet

For the album by Failure, see Fantastic Planet (album). For the safari park, see Planete Sauvage (safari park).
Fantastic Planet

Poster showing a giant blue humanoid Draag examining a human in her hand

French film poster
Directed by René Laloux
Produced by
Written by
Based on Oms en série
by Stefan Wul
Narrated by Jean Valmont
Music by Alain Goraguer
Cinematography
  • Boris Baromykin
  • Lubomir Rejthar
Edited by
Production
company
Les Films Armorial
Ceskoslovenský Filmexport
Distributed by Argos Films (French release)
New World Pictures (US release)
Release dates
  • 6 December 1973 (1973-12-06)
Running time
71 minutes[1]
Country
  • France
  • Czechoslovakia
Language French

Fantastic Planet (French: La Planète sauvage, Czech: Divoká planeta, lit. The Wild Planet) is a 1973 Franco-Czech allegorical cutout stop-motion science fiction film directed by René Laloux and written by Laloux and Roland Topor. Topor also completed the film's production design and it was animated at Jiří Trnka Studio.[2]

The film was an international co-production between companies from France and Czechoslovakia and was distributed in the United States by Roger Corman. The story, about humans living on a strange planet dominated by giant humanoid aliens who consider them animals, is based on the 1957 novel Oms en série by French writer Stefan Wul.

A working title while in development was Sur la planète Ygam (On the Planet Ygam),[3] which is where most of the story takes place; the actual title (The Fantastic/Savage Planet) is the name of Ygam's moon. The film won the special jury prize at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival.[4] It had a total of 809,945 admissions in France.[5]

Plot

In the distant future, the gargantuan blue humanoid Draags have brought human beings (who are called Oms as a play on the French word for "man", homme) from Earth to the planet Ygam, where they maintain a technologically and spiritually advanced society. The Draags consider Oms animals, and while they keep some as pets, others live in the wilderness and are periodically slaughtered by the Draags, who wish to control their population. Draags have much longer lifespans than Oms, but reproduce much less.

When an Om mother is teased to death by three Draag children, her orphaned infant is found by Master Sinh, a key Draag leader, and his daughter Tiva, who keeps the boy as a pet and names him Terr. Tiva loves Terr and is careful not to hurt him, but, in accordance with her parents' instructions, keeps him under control, giving him a collar with which she can pull him in any direction. She brings Terr to sessions in which she receives her education using headphones that transmit knowledge into her mind, and a defect in his collar allows him to receive the knowledge too. Around the time that Tiva grows into her teens and first performs Draag meditation, which allows the species to travel with their minds, she loses some interest in Terr, who has become a young man and acquired much Draag knowledge. He escapes into the wilderness, stealing Tiva's headphones.

There he runs into a wild female Om, who cuts off his collar and introduces him to her tribe, which lives in an abandoned Draag park full of strange creatures and landscapes. Terr shows them how to use the headphones to acquire Draag knowledge and literacy, winning the right to do so in a duel. The literacy they gain allows them to read a Draag announcement that the park will be purged of Oms, and, when the purge comes, some are slaughtered by Draag technology while others escape, joining forces with another tribe. They are attacked by two Draag passers-by and manage to kill one of them before escaping to an abandoned Draag rocket depot, much to the outrage of Draag leaders. They live there for years, joined by many other Oms, and, due to the knowledge acquired from Terr's headphones, manage to replicate Draag technology, including two rockets; they hope to leave Ygam for its moon, the Fantastic Planet, and live there safe from Draags. When a large-scale Draag purge hits the depot and many Oms are slaughtered, a group led by Terr uses the rockets to flee to the Fantastic Planet, where they discover large statues that Draags travel to during meditation and use to meet beings from other galaxies in a strange ritual that maintains their species. The Oms destroy some of the statues, threatening the Draags' existence; the genocide is halted on Ygam, and, facing a crisis, the Draags sue for peace. This leads to an era of peaceful coexistence between the two species, who now benefit from each other's way of thinking.

Voice cast

Themes

Fantastic Planet is recognisable for its surreal, psychedelic imagery, created by French writer and artist Roland Topor, who was the production designer and co-writer of the film. The landscape and lifeforms of Ygam are extremely strange, as are various aspects of Draag society, such as their meditation (which allows them to commune psychically with each other and different species and can lead to transformations of their shape and colour) and their technology (such as the devices they use to slaughter Oms). The film's weird atmosphere is enhanced by its soundtrack, composed by Alain Goraguer.

The relationship between Draags and Oms, which changes completely over the course of the film, can be seen as allegorical of the relationship between various groups of humans, as well as between humans and animals, drawing on themes such as racism and speciesism (in the final scene, a Draag child from the future is learning about the peace between Draags and Oms while stroking a doglike pet where Draag children would once have stroked a pet Om). It is the knowledge Terr gains and brings to the Oms that allows them to become the Draags' equals, and Terr has to win a duel to prove that it is not wrong to use it. The ending, in which the violence suddenly stops and an era of peace begins, with both Draags and Oms deciding they have nothing to gain from mutual destruction, carries a hopeful message relevant to the Cold War period in which the film and its source novel were created.

Soundtrack

The music was composed by Alain Goraguer.[6]

Track listing

  1. Deshominisation (II)
  2. Deshominisation (I)
  3. Generique
  4. Le Bracelet
  5. Ten et Tiwa
  6. Maquillage de Tiwa
  7. Course de Ten
  8. Ten et Medor
  9. Ten et Tiwa Dormet
  10. Ten est Assome
  11. Abite
  12. Conseil des Draags
  13. Les Hommes – La Grande Co-existence
  14. La Femme
  15. Mira et Ten
  16. Morte de Draag
  17. L'Oiseau
  18. La Cite des Hommes Libres
  19. Bleed Or Burn Yourself
  20. Attaque des Robots
  21. La Longue Marche – Valse Des Statues
  22. Les Fusees
  23. Generique
  24. Strip Tease
  25. Meditation des Enfants
  26. La Vielle Meurt
  27. Soul To Take

Video releases

References in other works

Madlib cites the film as an influence, using visuals from it on his album covers and samples of the soundtrack in his songs. The song "Come On Feet", on his album The Unseen, contains many samples from the movie, including the recurring main theme.[7]

The band Failure named its third full-length album after the film.

In the movie The Cell, Jennifer Lopez's character Catherine Deane watches the movie on her bedroom television.

Music from Fantastic Planet is sampled in "Insomniak" by Mac Miller, "Chrysalis" by The Underachievers, "Boomerang" by Big Pun, and "Don't do drugs kids" by Flatbush Zombies.

Flying Lotus has said that he drew inspiration from the film when producing the track “Your Potential/The Beyond” from the album You're Dead![8]

Scenes from the film are used by The Gaslamp Killer in the music video "Shattering Inner Journeys".

References

  1. "Fantastic Planet (A)". British Board of Film Classification. 29 May 1974. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  2. "La Planète Sauvage (Fantasic Planet) @ BCDB". BCDB. 2012-11-16.
  3. Stephenson, Ralph (1967). "15. Filmographies". In Peter Cowie. Animation in the Cinema. International Film Guide. London: A. Zwemmer. p. 173.
  4. "Festival de Cannes: Fantastic Planet". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
  5. La Planète sauvage
  6. La Planete Sauvage Soundtrack ]
  7. Stones Throw Records
  8. Flying Lotus Provides A Track-By-Track Breakdown Of You're Dead!

External links

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