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‘Forbidden Planet’ is one of the most influential sci-fi films of all time, and it’s getting a remake


In the realm of retro science fiction cinema, “Forbidden Planet” is unanimously considered a Hollywood classic and ranks at the top of almost any serious list of seminal outer space films. This 1956 retelling of William Shakespeare’s “The Tempest” proudly stands amid the company of other vintage works like “The Thing From Another World,” “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” “The War of the Worlds,” and “The Day the Earth Stood Still” as prime examples of that long-past Golden Age.

Of that celebrated group of 1950s sci-fi movies, “Forbidden Planet” also remains the only one that has mercifully not received a Tinseltown reboot, but that’s all about to change with recent news of a Warner Bros. “revisionist” remake in the works from Eisner Award-winning comic book creator and screenwriter Brian K. Vaughan (“Y: The Last Man,” “Saga”) and seasoned producer Emma Watts.

As reported last week by Deadline, Vaughan will pen the script for an updated take on “Forbidden Planet” much to the dismay of purists who believe the material should be left untouched regardless of his solid reputation as a gifted storyteller.

A vintage MGM lobby card for 1956’s “Forbidden Planet.” (Image credit: MGM)

“Forbidden Planet” was originally directed by Fred M. Wilcox and starred Walter Pidgeon, Leslie Nielsen, and Anne Francis. It was loosely adapted from The Bard’s final completed stage play about marooned sailors on a magical island lorded over by a sorcerer named Prospero — an interesting plot that was revamped into a grand galactic adventure where a crew from the patrol spaceship C-57D lands on the planet Altair IV to investigate a colony of forgotten scientists. 



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