Destination: Outer Space (2010)
REVIEW BY: Jeffrey Long
Company: Saint Euphoria Pictures
Runtime: 95 mins
Format: DVD
Plot: During a test flight of Earth's first faster-than-light-speed rocket, an incident occurs that throws test pilot Captain Jackson halfway across the galaxy! Lost in deep space, Captain Jackson must use all his wits to find a way back to his beloved home world, but first he must deal with mysterious alien planets, robotic lifeforms, beautiful space pirates, and an evil alien Empire hell-bent on galactic domination!
Review: Destination: Outer Space is filmmaker Christpher R. Mihm's black and white throwback to classic 1950s low budget space adventure serials, along the likes of the classic The Space Adventures of Flash Gordon, with a dash of Star Wars and Star Trek tossed in for good flavor (actually, quite much more than a dash – ha!). It's following on the heels of several other similar-style movies by the same filmmaker, titles like The Monster of Phantom Lake, It Came From Another World!, Cave Women on Mars, and Terror From Beneath The Earth. If you're familiar with any of those (be it watching them yourself or just from reading my previous reviews of them), then by now you know the whole spiel here and what to expect from a Mihmiverse movie.
Runtime: 95 mins
Format: DVD
Plot: During a test flight of Earth's first faster-than-light-speed rocket, an incident occurs that throws test pilot Captain Jackson halfway across the galaxy! Lost in deep space, Captain Jackson must use all his wits to find a way back to his beloved home world, but first he must deal with mysterious alien planets, robotic lifeforms, beautiful space pirates, and an evil alien Empire hell-bent on galactic domination!
Review: Destination: Outer Space is filmmaker Christpher R. Mihm's black and white throwback to classic 1950s low budget space adventure serials, along the likes of the classic The Space Adventures of Flash Gordon, with a dash of Star Wars and Star Trek tossed in for good flavor (actually, quite much more than a dash – ha!). It's following on the heels of several other similar-style movies by the same filmmaker, titles like The Monster of Phantom Lake, It Came From Another World!, Cave Women on Mars, and Terror From Beneath The Earth. If you're familiar with any of those (be it watching them yourself or just from reading my previous reviews of them), then by now you know the whole spiel here and what to expect from a Mihmiverse movie.
After having his presence terribly
missed in the previous movie, actor Josh Craig thankfully returns to
the series to reprise his second character, Captain Jackson, in
addition to playing a cameo of his first character and father of
Captain Jackson, Professor Jackson. Destination: Outer Space acts
almost like a direct sequel to Cave Women on Mars, catching us up
with Captain Jackson and what's all gone on with his life since
returning from the Mars Mission and the repercussions his actions at
the end of that movie have had on his life (spoiler: Nothing good).
Looking to redeem himself and his family name, he returns to space
(after much persuasion from both his father, as played by himself
once again, and his best friend, as played by M. Scott Taulman, one
half of the Canoe Cops duo from Monster of Phantom Lake and It Came From Another Wold!, here playing the intelligent son of his
Canoe Cop character), in order to test out an experimental spaceship,
however something goes terribly wrong and he ends up lost in a
far-away uncharted galaxy. With his ship broken and no way to return
home, he finds himself in one Star Wars-inspired adventure after
another, with some Star Trek and Lost in Space rearing their heads
from time to time, along with plenty of other homages and nods, many
of which I caught but some I'm sure I missed as well, and will
require multiple viewings to catch them all.
This movie's runtime returns to the
longer runtime that I normally dislike for these kinds of movies for
reasons I've stated in the previous reviews. With that said, it did not
bother me one iota here, seeing as how the nature of this movie
actually kind of called for it. You see, with this being a homage to
classic space adventure serials of the days of old, it very much
feels like three separate half hour-ish episodic serials just edited
together to form a continuous movie. The first chunk reintroduces us
to the character of Captain Jackson and eventually gets him out into
space where he ends up in a far-flung foreign galaxy and crashing
onto a planet after experiencing ship troubles. The second part picks
up with him wandering this planet and finding his way into a
'wretched hive of scum and villainy' cantina filled with not just
strange new alien lifeforms, but some hilarious returning 'faces' to
fans of the Mihmiverse, both in actors as well as monstrous fellows.
It's there that Jackson runs afoul of a red-headed tough-as-nails
female bounty hunter that ends every sentence with 'Yes?', a
character trait I initially found annoying but quickly grew to love
(and then miss once the character was gone). Escaping from her ship
when it comes under attack from the evil Ominai Empire, Jackson
aimlessly floats through space for weeks in the escape pod, surviving
off nothing but tasteless packed MRE rations. The third and final,
almost double-length, portion picks up as Jackson is rescued from his
fate by a box-headed robot named A.D.A.M (quite possibly the most
laugh-out-loud funniest character in any of these movies yet) that
introduces him to his home planet and then wishes to use Jackson's help in delivering a terrible blow to the
Ominai Empire and in return offers to help him get back home to his
own galaxy.
I really don't know how much I can say
about this entry in the Mihmiverse series, for the simple fact that everything is perfect. The hammy acting was the
best I've seen out of this series to date, the impressive no-budget
special effects and set designs did their job perfectly in making me
forget they were even special effects and fake sets and that this
movie was actually largely filmed in just some guy's basement, the
costume designs were inspired and the perfect mix of familiar and
alien, and even the larger-then-normal (out of this world, you might
say!) scope of the story - just everything is top-notch excellent
here and easily Christopher R. Mihm's best effort yet, taking all the
things I loved about Cave Women on Mars and amplifying them even
more. Sure the runtime was one of the longest yet, however it
honestly felt much shorter to me because I was so easily able to get
caught up in this story and the fictional world presented here. Of
course it also helps that there were plenty of hilariously cheesy
fight scenes, all done with great and fun-to-watch choreography, from
getting tossed around by the bounty hunter's crew, or dueling with
electrified baton weapons against the Ominai footsoldiers, or using a
spear against the Tusken Raider-wannabe Ominai soldiers that had giant eyeballs for
heads (and ending in a hilarious spear-through-the-eye scene), this
movie had no shortage of Captain Kirk-inspired tussles, and they were all a blast to watch.
As with all the other movies in the
Mihmiverse, this self-produced DVD is stacked right up with tons of
excellent bonus content that while may be a bit less then usual, is
still quality stuff all the same: We get only one Blooper Reel
instead of the usual two (but it has a really good length to it and
is, just like all the others, simply laugh-out-loud hilarious), a
trailer for both this movie as well as other movies under the
Mihmiverse banner, a Photo Gallery of tons of Behind-the-Scenes
photos, an introduction to the film by Horror Host Dr. Ivan
Cryptosis, and the usual informative full length Audio Commentary by
Christopher R. Mihm and several of the main actors of the movie.
In classic serial nature, Destination:
Outer Space ends things off on a promised note of further adventures
of Captain Jackson in this 'lost galaxy', yet as the way of things
with these movies, I'm willing to bet this is probably the most we'll
ever see, since Christopher R. Mihm and the folks over at Saint
Euphoria have done eight of these movies so far (with a ninth in the
works) and none have really been true sequels to one another other
then recurring characters and locations. Also, it's sad to note that
to date this is Josh Craig's final appearance in the Mihmiverse
series, perhaps truly being lost in another galaxy right along with
his character, waiting to be rediscovered in a future movie and
adventure! In all seriousness though, despite some misgivings I had
in the past with one of the characters he plays, Josh Craig's overall
presence in the series will surely be missed in the following movies.
However on the positive side of things, I really can't think of a
stronger, more bold, movie for him to go out on, then Destination: Outer Space.
Seeing as how most of the advertising
for these movies come from simple word of mouth from the fans, then
if you do check his stuff out and enjoy it please help get the word
out there on these movies and hopefully we can snag in a few other
fans that may not even realize these exist. You can order these on
DVD (and even BluRay for the latest couple!) over at
his official site which is filled with all sorts of other goodies
as well (including a monthly newsletter in addition to a very laid
back, yet fun and informative, podcast). Hell, there's even an
excellent deal on right now – Buy Three Movies, Get One Free, which
seeing as how there's currently eight of these titles, if you do that
twice then that is the perfect way to catch up with all of them and
in the end save some dough – that's how I did it!
10/10 rooms in the Psych Ward
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