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Galaxy of Terror Poster

Galaxy of Terror

ALIEN was the beginning… Hell Has Just Been Relocated!
1981 | 81m | English

(10011 votes)

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Popularity: 0.9 (history)

Details

As a lone spaceship proceeds on its long voyage across space, the crew are surprised to encounter a strange pyramid form. Surprise turns to horror as one by one, they discover that their darkest nightmares are all starting to become real. The pyramid has to be behind it all somehow, but how can they save themselves from its influence?
Release Date: Oct 01, 1981
Director: Bruce D. Clark
Writer: Bruce D. Clark, Marc Siegler
Genres: Adventure, Action, Science Fiction, Horror
Keywords monster, spacecraft, stranded, murder, alien, alien planet, gore, planet, astronaut, alien possession, space monster, trapped in space
Production Companies New World Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $700,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Edward Albert Cabren
Erin Moran Alumna
Ray Walston Kore
Bernard Behrens Commander Ilvar
Zalman King Baelon
Robert Englund Ranger
Taaffe O'Connell Dameia
Sid Haig Quuhod
Grace Zabriskie Captain Trantor
Jack Blessing Cos
Mary Ellen O'Neill Mitri
Name Job
Rupert Harvey Production Accountant
Allan A. Apone Mechanical & Creature Designer, Special Effects Makeup Artist
Don Keith Opper Production Manager
Bill Paxton Set Decoration
James Cameron Production Design, Second Unit
Barry Schrader Original Music Composer
Tony Randel Visual Effects Editor, Visual Effects, Effects Supervisor
Alec Gillis Prosthetics
Steve Neill Mechanical & Creature Designer
Austin McKinney Director of Photography
Mary Ann Fisher Executive In Charge Of Production
K.C. Scheibel Set Decoration
Bruce D. Clark Writer, Director
Barry Zetlin Editor
Steve Graziani Art Direction
Peter Tothpal Hairstylist
R.J. Kizer Editor
Tom Campbell Visual Effects Supervisor
Alex Hajdu Art Direction
Larry Bock Editor
Jane Covner Publicist
Francesca Bartoccini Property Master
Stephen Purvis Dialogue Editor
Karen Kubeck Special Effects Makeup Artist
Tom Schwartz Prosthetics
Larry S. Carr Prosthetics
Aaron Lipstadt Production Manager
Jacques Haitkin Director of Photography
Robert Skotak Production Design
Marc Siegler Writer
Ernest D. Farino Visual Effects
Lisa Mionie Casting
Timaree McCormick Costume Design
David Lewis Yewdall Supervising Sound Editor
Nick Kelsh Still Photographer
Sue Dolph Makeup Artist
Iya Labunka Prosthetics
Rick Stratton Mechanical & Creature Designer
Gary Wagner Second Unit Director of Photography
Thom Shouse Special Effects Makeup Artist
Brian Wade Prosthetics
R. Christopher Biggs Prosthetics
Stephen Hunter Flick Sound Effects Editor
Name Title
Roger Corman Producer
Marc Siegler Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
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Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 15 22 10
2024 5 17 27 11
2024 6 15 28 8
2024 7 15 27 8
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2025 1 12 18 9
2025 2 12 17 3
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Trending Position


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2025 3 507 507
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2025 2 180 614
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
5.0

The first ten minutes of this really do have you reaching for the fast forward button, but once it settles down and we get past the characters/plot establishment sequences, it turns into an half-decent sci-fi murder mystery. The crew of a spaceship are sent on a rescue mission. When they arrive at t ... he site, they discover that the other crew have been brutally slaughtered and, trapped by an electro-magnetic storm, they now have to look to their own self-preservation. B.D. Clark manages - actually quite an achievement - to generate a bit of suspense aided by Barry Scrader's slightly over-the-top score, but the acting is pretty dreadful. Erin Moran (whom I'm sure was in "Happy Days") and Edward Albert really draw attention to the low-budget sets and effects; and the story is all pretty routine

Jun 07, 2023
Wuchak
6.0

**_Corman-produced sci-fi in the wake of “Alien”_** In the future when humanity is involved in space travel and governed by “The Master,” a rescue spacecraft is sent to a remote planet to investigate a crashed vessel. Things go from bad to worse. People tend to write off “Galaxy of Terror” (1 ... 981) as an “Alien” knockoff,” which it is, but that iconic Ridley Scott film itself ripped-off every main aspect of the first half of "Planet of the Vampires," aka "Terror in Space" (1965). So it wasn't exactly original, although it was well-done and superior. This is basically a combination of those two films with bits borrowed from "Forbidden Planet" and, of course, Star Trek (both the Original Series and the first movie). Unlike Roger Corman’s “Battle Beyond the Stars” from the year prior, there’s no Star Wars-like cuteness. This is dead-serious adult-oriented sci-fi in the manner of the aforementioned works, perhaps best known for a giant slimy maggot sequence involving statuesque blonde Taaffe O'Connell (Dameia), It’s also known as the movie that paved the way for James Cameron’s breakthrough. He was the art director and talked Corman into being the second unit director. He wrote & shot the arm-severing sequence wherein two producers happened to be in the studio. They were so impressed that they hired James to direct his first movie “Piranha II: The Spawning.” After that, he was ready for “The Terminator” and the rest is history. Aside from Taaffe in the feminine department, there’s Erin Moran as a crewmember with psychic powers. Meanwhile Grace Zabriskie is surprisingly appealing (and convincing) as fit Captain Trantor. I say “surprisingly” because I only know her from roles when she was older, such as Susan’s mother, Mrs. Ross, in several episodes of Seinfeld. Notables Ray Walston, Robert Englund and Sid Haig are also on hand. Like “Planet of the Vampires,” this starts to get dull in the mid-section with crewmembers scampering around dark sci-fi sets, usually in terror, but the grim atmosphere is palpable and the ending is fairly interesting. It influenced “Aliens” (Cameron went on to direct that famous film five years later), as well as “Event Horizon” and “Sphere.” It runs 1 hour, 21 minutes, and was shot at Corman's studio in Venice, California, his "renowned lumberyard facility," as well as Santa Monica. GRADE: B-

Aug 29, 2024