Planet 51 (2009) Poster

(2009)

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7/10
Funny and appealing adventures starred by an astronaut and an extraterrestrial in a far planet
ma-cortes8 December 2013
In this successful Spanish picture there are humor , rip-roaring adventures , action , thrills and many other things . It deals with an American astronaut Captain Charles "Chuck" Baker (Voice by Dwayne Johnson) lands on Planet 51 thinking he's the first person to step foot on it. To his surprise, he finds that this planet is inhabited by little green people who are happily living in a white picket fence world, and whose only fear is that it will be overrun by alien invaders like Chuck. But on this alien planet the media has tagged spacemen as brain-eating, zombie-creating monsters, causing Baker to run . The planet is set in the 50s and even though much on the alien planet is round in design, nothing has wheels . There Chuck meets Lem (the name voiced by Justin Long, is also the abbreviation for Lunar Excursion Module. NASA's LEM was used as part of the Apollo program to land astronauts on the moon) , an average teenager working on getting the girl named Neera (Jessica Biel's voice) and furthering his career at the local planetarium . While , Chuck's command module called Odyssey (this is the same name of the command module used in the Apollo 13 mission) is orbiting the planet .

Fabulous and amusing C.G. animated film , lavishly produced and achieving a big success . Gorgeous and astounding animated picture with outstanding and fantastic starring , an astronaut called Chuck and his good friend , Lem . Fun story of outland space plenty of adventures , bemusing situations , fights , chuckles , emotion , and action . Entertaining and solid retelling from Atresmedia Cine , the film division of DeAPlaneta's broadcasting group Atresmedia or Antena 3 , co-produced Planet . The whole piece of adventure teems with excitement , thrills , humor , astral atmosphere and being pretty amusing . The movie was originally going to be called "Planet One" but the owners of Planet One, who make children's and teen TV programs in the USA, threatened to sue . The film's producers chose to call the movie Planet 51 (2009), acknowledging Area 51, the supposed center of UFO investigation in America. Spain's animation output is now knocking on global market doors, boosted by the growing commitment of private broadcasters such as Antena 3 TV . Ilion Animation Studios' $60 million Planet 51, a Sony U.S. pickup, paved the way by scoring $105.7 million worldwide in 2010 . Formerly , the great producer , Julio Fernandez from Fantastic factory had produced successful animated pictures such as ¨El Raton Perez I and II¨ or "The Hairy Tooth Fairy", ¨Donkey Xote¨ , ¨Gisaku¨ , ¨El Cid : the legend¨ by Jose Pozo and ¨Goomer¨. Two of Spain's more anticipated releases — the $28.6 million-budgeted "Justin and the Knights of Valour," produced by Antonio Banderas, and Argentinian Juan Jose Campanella's $20 million Foosball are animated features.

The motion picture was compellingly realized by a trio of perfect filmmakers as Jorge Blanco , Javier Abad and Marcos Martinez ,with a high budget of $70 million, this is the most expensive movie produced in Spain . Production lasted 16 months, roughly half the amount of time it takes to make a Pixar movie. Rating : Above average , worthwhile watching .
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7/10
We all liked this film - This is a REAL review of the movie.
irelands-the29 November 2009
First, I'll let you know about our demographic (to help you decide if you will relate to my review or not): I am a parent of a 10 year old boy, a 7 year old girl, and a 2 month old baby. I am in my early 30s, and my wife is in her late 20s. We are moderate movie-goers, as in, we watch a fair number of movies, and we miss a lot of movies. I am University educated, my kids are fairly typical of their age, and my wife is also fairly well educated.

We decided to go to this movie with our children at 9:20 PM on a Saturday Night which was actually also our 11th anniversary. It was a bit of a risk, and considering the rating that this movie seems to have, it could have ended horribly (considering it was our anniversary) We all quite enjoyed this movie. It's not overly complicated, but it's got a fairly unique plot, decent script, excellent character development, and it seems to steer clear of some of the more cliché stereotypes that could have plagued this type of movie.

It's pure fantasy, and it's nearly 100% kids movie, but we adults didn't have to "suffer" through it. My wife and I laughed heartily at much of the situational humour; both my kids laughed uproariously at most of the silly funny moments, and the situational humour. The visuals were quite pleasing, without being annoying (I find the latest 3D craze with so many movies rather annoying, for example). The voices were well cast, the scripts and voice-acting was well done and quite seamless. I didn't find myself thinking, "I know who that voice is!" at all, because it wasn't something that popped into my mind.

So, I gave this a 7. Why not higher?, you might ask. Well, it's not ground-breaking, it wasn't epic, and it wasn't a movie that leaves me thinking about something for a long time. It wasn't lower because there was nothing blatantly bad about this show. It was all enjoyable, and none of us regret having seen this show on our anniversary.

I hope my review helps you decide to go see this film :D
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7/10
A cute family film..
GirishGowda11 April 2010
American astronaut Captain Charles "Chuck" Baker lands on Planet 51 thinking he's the first person to step foot on it. To his surprise, he finds that this planet is inhabited by little green people who are happily living in a white picket fence world, and whose only fear is that it will be overrun by alien invaders...like Chuck! This film is made from the alien perspective. They are like the 50's Earth, they have the hippie guy, the youngsters who are open to new ideas that aliens are friendly. Frankly, I liked the film even though it wasn't epic or adventurous enough. This is a film made for the kids have a great time & I know they'll enjoy this. The thing I didn't like was that the love story between Neera & Lem seemed to be forced. Planet 51 is the hometown & Chuck the human astronaut is the alien in this film. It was funny at times & I think every youngster can relate to something in the film & the old timers can get a kick out of the 50's feeling.

I liked how it rained rocks & how the evil doctor laughed. Everything about the storyline is about the 50's. Even they have The Humaniacs horror film that is considered scary for their generation. The premise of the plot is great, they could have made it better. The voice actors Dwayne Johnson (Chuck), Justin Long (Lem) & Neera (Jessica Biel) all did a good job. You'll enjoy this if you watch this with some kids.

7/10
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7/10
Didn't quite match expectations, but a fun watch
MartianOctocretr522 November 2009
It's an "ET-in-reverse" story. An Earthling astronaut gets stuck on what he calls an alien planet. The local green folks call him (accurately) the alien. The story is a fond tribute to drive-in's, space-creatures sci-fi, and the 50's. With the Area 51 reference in its title, you know the film will be poking fun at everything it can get its hands on, including itself. It delivers this.

There's hover craft that look like big-finned autos of that era, black & white TV, and pioneer rock 'n' roll. It's clever humor, although some of this has been done before. There's a lot of parallels to Monsters vs. Aliens, too, in that frequent references to classic sci-fi flicks (up to the present, not just the 50's) pop up in sight gags and one-liner jokes. My fav was the character that resembled the Aliens movie creatures. There are other clichés sent up for satire: a loud mouth hawkish general, a wanna-be scientist, etc. Adults won't be bored thanks to these in-jokes, and the kids should like the slapstick stuff.

The film boasts a great idea, and some, but not all, of the potential is utilized. It's good natured and fun, rating about average for an animated feature.
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6/10
Great quality, easy plot, fun... perfect for kids!
TheotherSak27 November 2009
First of all, let me say that I'm tired of dumb reviews saying "why do aliens speak English?" or "they fart and burp a lot". Disney's The Princess and the Frog's trailer has about 3 ass related jokes and one burp in less than 45 seconds. Toy Story's characters spoke English and understood humans and nobody wondered why. A house managed to be lifted by balloons in Up with no police radars detecting anything. So, this said: Let's sit down and enjoy a movie and stop looking for silly excuses to criticize it.

I watched Planet51 with my two nephews (8 and 10 years old) and they enjoyed it all the way. The quality is as good as Pixar's or Dreamworks and, yes, it's true the script is somewhat flat and very repetitive, but as the kids said to me "We didn't understand Wall-E's plot and didn't sympathize with any characters in Up, but Planet51 we did." It has some really funny characters (the white camera ala Wall-e and the alien pet), plus it's easy to understand, and despite the lack of chases or explossions it keeps its pace all the time and, as I said before, kids love the characters and understand -and enjoy- the plot.

As Groucho Marx once said: A child of five could understand this. Fetch me a child of five!!!
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6/10
MUCH better than expected!
ajs-1024 October 2010
As you may or may not know, I'm a bit of a sucker for an animated feature and, having seen the trailer for Planet 51 a while back I was keen to see how it turned out. I must admit I was shocked how poorly it has been received. What I found was a funny, engaging film with a whole load of gags referring to just about every mainstream sci-fi/alien film. I admit it's not perfect, but I think it deserves another chance. But more of that later, first, here's a very brief summary (miss the next paragraph if you hate summaries).

Planet 51 is supposed to be lifeless, well, that's what the data said anyway. Unfortunately for astronaut Captain Charles T. Baker, it isn't. Alien life forms with green skin inhabit this little planet and they have advanced as far as the 1950's, that's USA 1950's, just in case there's any doubt. A teenager, Lem, befriends Baker and, with the help of his friends, Skiff and Eckle, hides him from the army and their leader, General Grawl and the crazy scientist, Professor Kipple. He is in love with Eckle's sister, Neera, but struggles with getting the right words out. Back with the mission, help is at hand in the form of R.O.V.E.R., an advance scout robot who was sent ahead of the mission. Time is running out for Baker, his command craft, in orbit, leaves in 72 hours. Can Lem and his friends get him back to his Lander in time? Will Baker help Lem with Neera? Is there any end to these crazy questions? Guess you'll have to wait and see.

As I said at the beginning, there are plenty of gags incorporated into the script and there's also a lot of slapstick. My favourite character is the 'Alien' dog; you'll know what I mean when/if you see it. The dialogue was adequately delivered, but then nobody was really stretched. Honourable mentions go to the voice talents of; Dwayne Johnson as Captain Charles T. Baker, Jessica Biel as Neera, Justin Long as Lem, Gary Oldman as General Grawl, Seann William Scott as Skiff and John Cleese as Professor Kipple.

Over all I found it a very entertaining movie with quite a few laughs. I guess it's down to taste and I'm aware that we are all different, especially when it comes to comedy, but I urge you to give this one a chance. Although it's not perfect, I've seen much, much worse… Recommended.

My score: 6.4/10
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7/10
Good Not Great
bluestrat7021 November 2009
I took my 8 year old daughter and her friend to see this opening night. There was a decent size crowd who seemed to enjoy it. For ESPN fans one of their long time personalities, who has his own video short series on the website, was there. But I digress.

It took a while to realize that it definitely was Dwayne Johnson as the astronaut's voice. He's created a great niche for himself in family films and I think he does good job. Justin Long was a good choice for the lead "alien" Lem and John Cleese is always a good choice as he did a small role as the professor. The role of Skiff brought good humor to many scenes. Sean William Scott was very animated in his voice acting for this character. Other than Rover and the hippie-like guy, the rest of the characters are just back drops without adding much.

We laughed quite a bit throughout the movie, which is mostly the point. There was plenty of cute humor with the dog-like robot Rover, who was a little reminiscent of WALL-E, a little. The down-side was that it never drew you in to fully connect, sympathize, like or dislike any of the characters. I didn't see myself rooting for anyone over anyone else. If the message is supposed to be about not judging anyone based on appearance, that message was shallow. If the message was to keep an open-mind toward what is possible and to learn new things, that message was under-developed.

Bottom line, the kids enjoyed it and we had a good entertaining night out. So in that respect it served its' purpose. The animation was suitable and I liked the 50's like theme of the planet. One or two adult humor jokes in there that could have been omitted and not change the movie.

For a family movie 7/10.
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4/10
A Nutshell Review: Planet 51
DICK STEEL13 December 2009
I have to admit the trailer was funny enough, with an astronaut so full of himself thinking that his planetary visit was an open and shut case, only to discover that it's inhabited and he's the alien in the truest sense of the word, like a fish out of water trying to make his way home lest he becomes an experimental subject.

And the aliens, well, are just like us, with plot conveniences such as having the same mixture of atmospheric gases like Earth's, and hey, the green things with four fingers on each hand speak English too! They're city folks with a penchant for 50s musical oldies (that pepper the soundtrack), with a whole host of modern day, earth-like references all over the place in a desperate attempt at being recognized for being smarty-pants. Unfortunately though it tries too hard to be funny at every turn, and it only brought about the occasional mirth.

It's about time that filmmakers realize that pumping a film with too many references for its own good, is something of a tired formula. You'd wonder when such references will seize, to allow a good story to shine. Planet 51 suffers from too much wink-wink moments, complete with blatant rip offs that bring too much attention to themselves. One look at the pet named Ripley and resembling like a Xeroxed replica of an Alien complete with acidic pee, you're likely to roll your eyes. Or how about that robot probe that functions and looks like R2D2/WallE and comes without dialogues but plenty of whirrs and beeps while going about doing cutesy stuff?

Despite a relatively A-list voice cast with the likes of Dwayne Johnson (who doesn't sound like the real deal if you ask me), Justin Long, Gary Oldman, John Cleese, Jessica Biel and Seann William Scott, Planet 51 felt like a Frankenstein monster, stitched together from ideas of other films, and plastered together forcefully to try and make the narrative work. Characters too are a little boring and one-dimensional, with little heart.

Bottom line is, CG graphics and copycat characters don't make an animated film entertaining. A sincere story does and this one is found lacking, and too talky too for kids to enjoy, in my opinion.
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6/10
Beautifully animated, if rather bland
TheLittleSongbird8 March 2012
I have always loved animation, whether it's cartoons(Looney Tunes and Silly Symphonies), films or TV shows. Planet 51 is not a bad movie, but at the end of the day it felt rather bland. I've seen worse certainly, but I can also think of better out there. The animation is wonderful though, very rich in colour and detail. The soundtrack is memorable, there are a few funny moments that will have children chuckling, fun set pieces and a couple of Cold War pastiches that will keep adults interested, Rover is a great character and by far the best character of the movie and it all begins very promisingly. The voice cast are full of great actors, especially Gary Oldman and John Cleese, and Planet 51 generally uses them well, Dwayne Johnson is an especially likable lead. However, the story, despite its great premise, is rather weak and unoriginal in structure and after a promising twenty minutes it is never quite as interesting. I liked the Cold War pastiches, but some of the other references were verging on tired. Among the funny moments, there is the overall mediocrity of the script, with a lot of clichéd dialogue. The characters are weak and stereotypical, with one of the blandest villains I've seen in an animated film recently, and the ending is very predictable. In conclusion, looks great but at the end of the day it felt very bland and forgettable. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
Mild humor, nothing offensive, certainly nothing memorable
RichardSRussell-122 November 2009
Planet 51 (1:31, PG) — SF, 2nd string, original

Let us enumerate the other movies which this one rips off (or, if you wish, to which it pays homage): 2001, Alien, The Day the Earth Stood Still, ET, The Right Stuff, Singin' in the Rain, Star Wars, Terminator, and WALL•E. Even the inexplicable rain (rocks) is evocative of Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs.

The overall theme — alien race in the foreground with humans as the bad guys — has likewise been done in Battle for Terra, The Tale of Despereaux, James Cameron's long-in- production Avatar, and sort of in District 9 and Delgo.

But you know what they say: If you copy from only 1 source, it's a ripoff; 2 is plagiarism; 3 is research; 4 or more is scholarship and will likely lead to tenure. Besides, the target audience is too young to have seen almost any of those other movies, and the writer (Joe Stillman) must have figured he needed to put something in for the parents.

The nostril-less green-skinned natives of Planet 51 don't call it that, of course. To them, it's just "the world", part of a universe that may be as much as 500 miles across, with thousands of stars. This pathetic naivete has not kept them from discovering anti-gravity, however, but it seems that they never figured out how to apply it to anything besides cars. Similarly, they may be aware of design forms other than the sphere, but it seems not to have occurred to them to use anything else. These oddities aside, their world looks a whole lot like Eisenhower-era America, complete with white picket fences, B&W TV, and alien-invasion movies.

Rocketing down into this peaceful scene comes a LEM (lunar excursion module), piloted by Capt. Charles T. "Chuck" Baker (Dwayne Johnson). It lands on the front lawn of one of the globular homes, and Baker strides out of it to plant the US flag on the sidewalk, apparently totally oblivious to his surroundings. The natives finally close their mouths and go into hysterics. Chuck flees.

The main viewpoint character is Lem (heh, get it?), a junior assistant curator at the local planetarium (voiced by Justin Long, who you just kept waiting to say "I'm a Mac."). He's got the hots for the GND, Neera (Jessica Biel), but has been too shy to make a move. She gets put off when it appears that he's anti-alien, but in fact he's just acting that way as he tries to provide Chuck with a hideout preparatory to getting his spaceship back.

The military under Gen. Grawl (Gary Oldman) shows up and behaves as it did in TDTESS. Among the grunts are stock Rosencrantz and Guildenstern figures, apparently to provide comic relief in what was ostensibly a comedy to begin with.

This all takes place in the town of Glipforg, and I spent way too much time during the show trying to figure out what it must be an anagram for. (Frogglip, which describes Neera?)

We know from Monsters Inc. that it's fiendishly difficult to animate hair and fur. If you recall Up, you may have been among the 2% of the audience that noticed Carl growing a very fine, sparse gray stubble over the course of his adventure. This is the sort of thing that nobody would have noticed if it had been absent, but the Pixar guys threw it in anyway, because they're Pixar. Ilion Animation, the Spanish firm behind Planet 51, not only didn't go that far, they decided to skip the hair thing altogether and went with banana dreads for the natives.

OK, so I've already rattled off lack of originality, inconsistent technology, gratuitous distractions, and corner-cutting animation. Why then do I rate this flik as high as "average"? Because the animation was good enuf for the quality of the film, the story was good- natured, there were several smiley moments (tho no out-loud laffs), and it's hard to get too down on any movie where a jostled iPod starts playing "Macarena" and the general exclaims "I've never seen such a heinous weapon.".
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8/10
Good movie - NOT a rip-off
fred-m-stabs20 March 2011
Please disregard RichardSRussell-1's review, I am not sure he watched the movie, at least not with very much attention. First, he states "humans as the bad guys" but the only human was the movie's good guy! The military general was the bad guy, and even a four year old could easily see that. Second, I'm not sure if he is familiar with movies playing on themes and paying homage to other movies, stories, and so forth. That's not ripping off, but that reviewer obviously can't even grasp that concept. Countless movies, perhaps most of them, will include scenes and lines deliberately intended to make reference other works – this is not plagiarism, it's paying homage! There has not been a single children's animated movie with this particular theme, not even close (at least no movie or major work). Yes, it is essentially a reverse E.T. and builds on many, many other movies that have come before. But the overall work is not a copy of anything else.

It's a play on the common movie theme, and popular attitude in the 1950's, that all aliens must be terrifying monsters and the civic paranoia and fear that follows the suggestion of an alien visitor. Given that, it *has* to copy themes and images and possibly even lines from other movies. That's the whole point.

Having seen almost every kid's animated movie out there, I found this movie to be very enjoyable and I loved seeing it. More importantly (at least if you're a parent) my kids loved this movie, and they don't like every kid's movie. It may not be the greatest movie of all time, but I would definitely recommend it and a great watch.
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6/10
Amusing Animation.
anaconda-4065825 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Planet 51 (2009): Dir: Jorge Blanco, Javier Abad / Voices: Dwayne Johnson, Justin Long, Jessica Biel, Gary Oldman, Seann William Scott: Family animation about places and the beings living there. Astronaut Charles lands on a strange planet populated by green people. Among them is Lem who befriends him and struggles to hide him from authorities who seized his spacecraft. Directed by Jorge Blanco and Javier Abad who have fun with placing the shoe on the other foot in terms of who is on what turf. While the narrative is certainly bland at best it is equipped with a colorful animated world. Dwayne Johnson voices Chuck who gradually adapts in communicating. He is now the one being observed as oppose to the one observing. Justin Long voices the ambitious Lem who decides to assist him in reaching his ship. We know how this turns out and the supporting characters are an even bigger torn in the side. Jessica Biel voices the bland love interest Neera and that pretty much sums her up. Gary Oldman plays the stereotypical General Grawl who is out to expose and exterminate Chuck. Seann William Scott voices Lem's best friend who works at a comic book store. The role is as straight forward as it sounds. The screenplay will hardly appeal to adults but children may find its simplicity amusing. Interesting concept places humans as the observed and misunderstood. Score: 6 / 10
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5/10
They're out there, somewhere
LazySod17 February 2010
It all starts when an astronaut leaves his shuttle and sticks the flag he carries with him into the ground in an attempt to extend the pride and prowess of his country to another planet. Great is his surprise when he steps back and hears the squeaking sound of a rubbery ducky. Even greater is the followup surprise when he discovers the planet is more lively than expected.

Staged on a planet other than Earth this animation film plays the "what-if" of an alien arrival from the aliens point of view - where the human is the alien. The effects are clear - the inhabitants of the planet, still ignorant in most of their ways, are in shock and as panic conquers them the chase is on - the human must be caught. And if it wouldn't be for one brave little alien it would turn very sour for the astronaut.

Watching this together with a kid I found myself wondering what audience this film was aimed at. Some of it was clearly meant for a very young audience, other bits for a clearly older one. My guess is that an attempt was made to mix just the right amount of grown-up effects into the mix to make it appealing to the adults accompanying the kids, but that that attempt failed because the mix got out of balance.

As it is a lot of the story goes way over the heads of the children - turns too dark even - and the bits that are meant for the kids are sketchy because of that. Drawing style used is funny enough though and it is a pleasure to watch the design of the alien planet and its denizens.

All in all, it would have been better if the mix between adult and child stuff was better but it isn't entirely bad as it is.

5 out of 10 aliens landing
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7/10
Nice work
kosmasp27 March 2010
Family Entertainment, nothing more, but nothing less either. The movie does have a few hints that only adults might catch, but it's overall kid-friendly. Which is not meant as a bad thing. It just doesn't have the complexity of a Pixar movie. But not every animated movie has to copy the Pixar style. It's kinda refreshing watching something like this as well as watching Pixar movies.

Of course Pixar movies are better overall, but the voice talent here at least can match the one that they use too. Dwayne Johnson hits every note exactly as he has to. Comedy and action is nicely executed. A fun watch for everyone, if you don't expect too much or anything else for that matter!
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7/10
Unimaginative, but a great way to kill 90 minutes.
garfield271031 January 2010
The story is actually really clever twist of something between E.T and ALF. A human trapped on an alien planet like he's the alien. It's a really clever idea, but the execution isn't perfected. There were so many ways this movie could've been better, like better jokes and less potty humor. That doesn't mean all the jokes fall flat. Some of them, actually work quite well. Unfortunately, the best ones have already been released via the trailer. This film is not just about comedy however. This film has a share of action sequences that kept me interested. I would like to say that this film offers nothing new, but gets some things all ready imagined, and kind of messes around with it a little. That's not necessarily a terrible thing, but I think this film overdid it. Animation is not at it's best here, but you could probably tell that just by watching the trailer. If you don't hype up your expectations, then this is a film you'll probably enjoy, or at the very least tolerate. Not memorable, but it's a great filler movie that can keep you interested and slightly entertained for no more than an hour and a half.
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7/10
I kind of like it! A good and entertaining show.
nk83508 January 2010
Planet 51 is about alien invasion, but it is alien invasion of another kind; by us so-called homo sapiens into the green creature planet. The adventure begins with Captain Charles landing on a supposedly new planet, but quickly find himself being surrounded by greeny humanoid creatures. The original inhibitants panicked and thought an alien invasion was in place and all effort was directed to capture Captain Charles and his sidekick, a cute rover robot. Lucky, Captain Charles still managed to gather all the help from new friends and allies and so the adventure begins for Captain Charles to escape from the Planet 51.

In my own opinion, i find Planet 51 to be a quite a good and entertaining animation show, packed with wacky and corny jokes and punchlines. Get ready for an enjoyable joyride!
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7/10
Pretty Good!!!
Pumpkin_Man26 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I really liked this movie. It had an awesome storyline. I loved that it was set during the 1950's on Planet 51, but is modern day on Earth, because I really enjoy 50's pop culture. Lem is an 'alien' who thinks that the Galaxy is only 500 miles long. On a typical day, an astronaut named Captain Charles "Chuck" Baker lands on the planet and thinks he's first, but he was dead wrong. All the residents believe Chuck is an alien who wants to eat their brains and turn them into zombies. Lem befriends Chuck and finds out that he's innocent. The military take over Chuck's ship so they can dissect it. If Chuck doesn't get back to his ship in time, he will never be able to return to Earth. I highly recommend PLANET 51!!!
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4/10
A very ordinary family flick.
Troy_Campbell15 December 2009
Director Jorge Blanco has crafted a weird beast. Planet 51 has the makings of a fantastic role-reversal tale – the aliens are more human than the human himself – and subsequently has plenty of opportunities for hilarity, yet it seems content on not doing much at all. Just when you think it is heading in one, funny, direction it turns down a boring, non-risk taking path that leaves you well and truly unsatisfied. Sure there is a nice message of 'never judge a book by its cover' that is always good to get across to children, but with no comedy or wit, who really wants to sit through 90 minutes of a message? What keeps this film from being a real stinker is the action. A few of the fast-paced sequences in the middle and final act are genuinely exciting and start to bring the movie to life; a chase scene where Baker and Lem are trying to evade the authorities is the highlight. However, even these scenes could have been a smidge longer and with added risk.

Dwayne Johnson is decent as the egotistical Baker, but you can barely tell it is him. Which begs the question, if you can't tell that it is Johnson why bother having him voice the character at all? I would've thought part of the humour would be to have a man like The Rock - who has become famous in the movie industry for playing roles against type set by his pro-wrestling alter ego - voicing this self-indulgent buffoon in order to send up the aforementioned cocksure persona. Also lending their voices is the usually very funny Justin Long, who plays it straight for the most part as Lem; Jessica Biel who has next to nothing to do as Lem's love-interest other than give the female kiddies a reason to see this; and Gary Oldman who is clearly having fun as over-the-top villain Grawl.

A very ordinary family flick not worth seeing until it hits a $5 DVD bargain bin in the years to come.

2 out of 5 (1 - Rubbish, 2 - Ordinary, 3 - Good, 4 - Excellent, 5 - Classic)
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7/10
a lack of pretension makes this one enjoyable
Buddy-5120 October 2010
The animated pic "Planet 51" – a Spanish/English/American co-production directed by Jorge Blanco - turns the sci-fi genre on its ear by having the earthlings be the alien invaders from outer space rather than the other way around. The planet that NASA astronaut Charles "Chuck" Baker (Dwayne Johnson) lands on looks and sounds suspiciously like a space age version of the 1950s, where English is the spoken language, rocks fall like rain from the sky, rock'n'roll classics blare out from every radio and jukebox, malt shops and bowling alleys serve as the primary venues for recreation and socializing, cheesy science fiction movies dominate the culture, and women in poodle skirts and bouffant hairdos ride around in cars that don't touch the ground. Lem (Justin Long) is a local teen who hides Baker when mass hysteria on the part of the community threatens this stranger from outer space with imprisonment, dissection or worse.

Most of the humor in this sly parody of "The Day the Earth Stood Still" derives from the anachronisms of the setting, as pop culture references, both old and current, pour forth from the screen with reckless abandon. The screenplay by Joe Stillman isn't always as sharp and sophisticated as the idea behind it would warrant, but the action is fast-paced, the voice work spot-on and energetic (with major assists from Jessica Biel, Gary Oldman, Seann William Scott and John Cleese), and the visual style so cheerful and appealing that only a total meanie would expend time pointing out the movie's few imperfections. In many ways, it's less pretentious and more fun-loving than some of the more arty and cerebral Pixar extravaganzas of recent times – which makes it a nice fit for old and young alike.
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5/10
Who Is This Targeted At?
risen_feenix1 December 2009
I saw this movie with my two 4 year old nephews, and it was a tough job getting them to watch it all the way through. The humor and story were above their pay grade as 4 year-olds, so this was definitely meant for older kids.

The humor was based on a lot of cultural references that only adults could really appreciate, though I didn't laugh all that much. Groaned, yes, laughed…. not so much. If you're going to include dialogue that isn't going to make a lick of sense to the kiddies, at least try to get the humor a wee bit sophisticated for us adults. And the 4 year olds, and I think for many children, they had trouble wrapping their heads around the whole "who is the alien" part. I'm sure there's an age where this won't be a problem, but 4-6 ain't it.

It's been a few days since I saw it, so I can't really recall anything overly memorable about the film. A lot of clichés, general "the West is arrogant" theme throughout the story, and by the end we were all happy to get back in the car and put Wall-E in the DVD player.
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10/10
Outer Space just got better and better for this Universe! A grade A+
Naylie9 March 2010
When it comes to watching sci-fi movies, you be expecting a lot of stuff that has to do with outer space such as aliens or other things that are very adventurous, but in Planet 51, we get to see a movie that takes a new turn the other way around between humans and aliens.

In the movie, an astronaut in his mid 30s named Charles T. Baker, otherwise known for shortly as Chuck (voiced by the great and awesome Dwayne Johnson who is still famously known to people as The Rock to some others) lands a new planet that is out of this world! Only to find out that aliens (that's right I said aliens) are living in a sweet old-fashion 1950s world. So with the help of his new friend, 16 year old Lem (played by Justin long), Chuck must find a way to get out of this new world and back to his old home at Earth at once before it's too late.

The film delivers a LOT of hilarious jokes you'll find in Chuck and Lem's journey; and others that would be recommended for older adults and teens rather than children. The cast was very well pick, even for Jessica Biel who plays Neera, Lem's love interest. Seann William Scott as Skiff, Lem's dorky friend and let's not forget about Gary Oldman as General Grawl and John Cleese as Professior Kipple.

Though the movie is about 1 hour long and 31 minutes (maybe a little bit shorter than Open Season) you're gonna want to wish that the flick was more longer than that and never stop watching it!
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7/10
A novel idea for a film
scf-890-76489119 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This film's premise is a really great idea- That a human lands in a lesser developed world of aliens, who have black and white television, see the universe as 500 miles wide, and really are at the same state America was in in the '50's in culture. The scene where the Astronaut, Chuck, takes a "One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind" moment to the sound of "2001 A Space Odyssey," places the American flag, and then sees the aliens and realizes he is in their backyard, is priceless. And the movie was great in its physical humor, with spoofs and funny little extras. The only thing, however, that held it back was the dialog. unfortunately, this great movie was hindered by an inorganic and static wordplay, with the obvious being stated, or jokes being cracked without comedic timing. So, 9/10 for plot/picture, but 3/10 for the weak dialog, which I'll average out as about a 7/10 total.
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5/10
Better than I thought
itamarscomix23 September 2011
It wasn't half as bad as I expected. Planet 51 is directed mainly at children, and the humor is appropriately simplistic, which makes the infinite number of cultural references, of a type that was archaic when Pleasantville used them ten years ago, rather odd, because it seems unlikely that any child would get them, but there are enough laughs to make it enjoyable, even if the admittedly appealing premise runs out of gas after about fifteen minutes. If the movie tried to make a serious point about what makes someone 'alien' or about xenophobia and fear of the unknown, then it failed miserably. But as a piece of straight entertainment for the family, it's a fairly enjoyable (thoug forgettable) piece of film.
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Forgettable and silly
Gordon-1121 March 2010
This film is about an American astronaut landing onto a distant planet, that unexpectedly has alien lifeforms.

"Planet 51" is possibly aimed at very young children. The so called jokes is painfully annoying and unfunny. To see two people repeating each others sentences, or chasing each other in circles is not funny for most adults or even slightly older children. The plot is quite uninspired and boring, very little happens but it's still stretched to 90 minutes. The obligatory moral lesson at the end is not touching either. This basically means that almost all aspects of "Planet 51" fails to entertain. I found "Planet 51" boring, forgettable and silly.
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7/10
Nice effort
fabulousrice22 February 2010
There are many things I liked in the film. The designs of the alien world were really well-done; from the cars they use to the furniture and architecture, guns, cars, food (loved the steaks on the barbecue, shaped like ovnis!) to even the fonts which seem to have been given a thought. I liked the plot - which obviously parodies 1982's E.T - here, the main character is a human landing on another planet and being hidden and helped out by extra-terrestrial kids! Nice idea. Even the music seems to be a nod to John Williams' score to ET - which is a good thing because the music is quite nice to listen to - yet at times, the similarities were too obvious. It was overall a very inventive film in terms of design and plot. I want to stress on the efforts which were made to design the film, and all the different aliens who appear in the film (the big monter from the intro sequence, the H.R. Giger-like dog, the main characters of the film, and the "eyeball for a head" which reminded me of Medama-Oyaji from GeGeGe no Kitaro or the band The Residents) And it's nice to see that a company which isn't Dreamworks or Pixar can do something clever and visually achieved!
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