The aliens land and meet with the police, the pilot and an army colonel and belittle the humans for their "stupid minds! Stupid,stupid!" The head alien,Eros, explains that humanity will "stumble across" a way to explodeparticles of sunlight, thus eventually destroying the universe. The movie climaxes with a fight between Eros and the pilot and the spaceship taking off, leaving the reanimated corpses as skeletons before exploding in mid air. As they leave, Criswell says:
My friend, you have seen this incident based on sworn testimony. Can you prove that it didn't happen? Perhaps on your way home, you will pass someone in the dark, and you will never know it, for they will be from outer space. Many scientists believe that another world is watching us this moment. We once laughed at the horseless carriage, the aeroplane, the telephone, the electric light, vitamins, radio, and even television! And now some of us laugh at outer space. God help us... in the future.
Every year, at the 24-hour film festival known as B-Fest, this movie is screened at midnight. There are a set of actions a laThe Rocky Horror Picture Show that are performed with the film (yelling "DAY!" for day shots, "NIGHT!" for night shots, "NOT BELA!" for Bela's replacement, "BANG" wheneversomeone displays poor firearm safety etc.).
Strangely, despite the sort ofSo Bad It's Good kitsch the show usually reveled in, this movie wasnever riffed on byMystery Science Theater 3000. (There is aRiff Trax of it, though.) Perhaps that's because it didn't reallyneed the help...
Due to the expiration of its copyright, the film has fallen into the public domain, so check it out (either atthe Internet Archive orSpike.com) and decide for yourself if this movie deserves itsreputation.
Due toSmall Reference Pools,Plan 9 from Outer Space is frequently used as a shorthand for "really bad movie", especially by film critics. For example, a movie review might read "Good Movie isPlan Nine compared toExcellent Movie."
Age-Appropriate Angst: The alien leader who looks like a man in his fifties. Both the dialog and the way the actor delivers it makes him come off like a ten year old who's just had his video games taken away. The actress playing his assistant can be seen laughing in the background during one of these tantrums.
Wood had to have known this was going to happen; the actor was a famous drag queen, and a good friend of Wood's.
America Saves the Day: Toy flying saucers menacing your world? Defeat it with some California town folk and military stock footage. Said saucers only menaced one military company for all of five minutes and seemed most interested in screwing with one specific cemetery in one California town. You can't blame the rest of the world for not wanting to get involved.
Broken Aesop: The aliens trying to stop humanity from accidentally destroying the universe are presented as thebad guys. One has to admit that reanimating the dead into brainless ghouls is a...less effective way to accomplish this purported goal.
Keep in mind, at this point, they've become desperate, as eight previous plans failed.
Camp Gay: The alien leader, played by Bunny Breckenridge, who was in fact openly gay.
"Inspector Clay is dead... murdered. Andsomebody is responsible!" "Visits? Well, that would indicate visitors!" "...and they attacked a town. Not a large town, I must admit, but a town of people: people who died!" "Future events such as these will affect you in the future."
Flying Saucer:Not hubcaps-on-strings as is commonly thought; they were, in fact,toys.
Though they are plainly saucers, and referred to as such throughout the film, the pilot refers to it as "shaped like a huge cigar," which is another common description ofUFOs.Mike Nelsonclarifies that it was "A saucer-shaped cigar."
Soldier: Looks like we've beat them off again, sir. Captain: Who are they? Where do they come from? Where are they going? Mike Nelson: And why are webeating them off?
Hollywood Darkness: Done erratically, to the point day switches to night and vice versa from shot to shot.
Humans Are the Real Monsters: The humans respond to Eros's warnings about the dangers of creating a "solaranite bomb" by starting a fight and destroying his space ship.
Eros has it the worst, though. For one thing, he spends the entire movie trying to deviously avoid the humans noticing him, while simultaneously getting frustrated to the point of hissy-fits that the humans aren't paying attention to him. Also, his plan to destroy all of human civilization was apparently to use three zombies, possibly hoping that they would scare people to death.
Inferred Holocaust: Plan 9 is to stop humanity building a "solaranite bomb" and destroying the universe. Yet Plan 9 fails. What does this mean for the universe? Given that it's the Plan 9 Universe, total destruction may be merciful.
Informed Ability: The advanced nature of the aliens. The humans admit that they're "far ahead of us" as their spaceship screams flaming and exploding through the sky, thanks to their own stupidity.
Bill Corbett: Yeah, look at those crafty alien bastards; we couldnever do that!
Juggling Loaded Guns: The actor playing Lieutenant Harper purposely pointed at things with his revolver to see if Ed Wood would reshoot the scenes.He didn't.
Lost Aesop: "You know, it's an interesting thing when you consider... The Earth people, who can think, are so frightened by those who cannot: the dead."
Mondegreen: According to Kathy Wood, Ed had the Bible open when writing the screenplay, and came upon the phrase "soul of a knight", which is where "solaranite" came from. The rest of the cast keep mispronouncing it ("solernite", "solonite", etc.)
From theRiff Trax commentary: "I'mma go do Levytown."
Only under the direction of the director, which was a common theme among Tor's speaking roles in movies. In reality, he was also a businessman who eventually lost most, if not all, of his accent.
Offscreen Crash: The explanation for "the old man" dying. Note that the old man's standing shadow is clearly visible and stationary when he's supposed to be getting hit by a car, not to mention that the trees blowing in the wind suddenly freeze.
(the scene cuts from the old man screaming to an ambulance racing by, with no sound effect indicating a car crash) Mike Nelson: Uh, did he die or did he get a job as an ambulance driver?
Please Wake Up: Tanna to Eros (who probably doesn't wake up because she's mispronouncing his name!)
Reckless Gun Usage: The cops seemed to be either retarded, suicidal or theircharacters are really supposed to be carrying toy guns. One cop keeps his finger on the trigger at all times, whips the gun around treating it like his pointer finger, he even scratches his head with it. Reportedly, the actor was doing this on purpose to see ifEd Wood would call him on it. Wood didn't.
Also done by Eros to Tanna when she is lecturing the humans...for no real apparent reason other than - according to Kevin Murphy - "'This ismy bullshit lecture!'".
Truth in Television: Actually, there is weather in space - just notEarth weather. For example, the entire solar system deals with solar wind that varies in strength.
Stay in the Kitchen: One of the reasons the aliens are so incompetent is that Eros is willing to shout down Tanna, despite the fact that she's been assigned to his ship. The source of the aliens' food isnever revealed, so one can only really assume that she's been put there on equal terms.
Stealth Pun: If this is Plan 9, it's left for people to wonder what Plan 8 was. Say it phonetically.
Step Three: Profit: Apparently Plan 9 goes "Step one: raise three zombies, two of whom think they're vampires, in a small town. Step two: ???? Step three: Earth doesn't destroy the universe." One wonders how much they paidthe Underpants Gnomes.
Stock Footage: Lots, most notably the military firing at the flying saucers.
Title Drop: Sort of. Criswell ends his opening narration with "grave robbers from outer space," the film's original title. It was supposedly changed from "Grave Robbers" to "Plan 9" at the request of the Baptist ministersfinancing the film.
Too Dumb to Live:Everyone in theentire Universe, but especially Eros, who seems to think that the way to convince mankind of the extreme danger a potential scientific discovery holds is to call a group of armed humans stupid. Repeatedly.
Not to mention his plan to take revenge for humans ignoring the existence of aliens by killing the few people who do believe in them.
And then setting your own ship on fire by using critical instrumentation as a blunt-force weapon.
The Unintelligible: Inspector Clay, unintentionally. At B-Fest, the proper response to each of his lines is "WHAT?"
Unit Confusion: Constant references to "sunlight particles", which are apparently "made of many atoms."
For clarification, the particles themselves are never said to be made of atoms, but the actual line states, "A ray of sunlight is made of many atoms!" Not that it makes much difference, given that neither one holds merit.
Villainous Breakdown: One of the most bizarrely sudden ones in history. ("You see? YOU SEE? Yourstupid minds!STUPID! STUPID!)