Forbidden Planet (1956) — Review
10+ / 10
Forbidden Planet is one of the best science fiction films ever made. I saw it as a kid and it scared the hell out of me. The Id monster sequences put images in my head that took years to fade. I have watched it many times since. The 10+ rating reflects honest evaluation of a film that holds up nearly seventy years after release despite the inevitable dating that any production from 1956 carries. The film created the template that Star Trek would build on a decade later, gave science fiction cinema its first proper electronic score, introduced the first sympathetic robot in film history, and engaged with Freudian psychology at a level the genre had not previously attempted. The film is a little dated in specific technical respects. The substance underneath the dating remains genuinely powerful.
The Setup
The film is set in the 23rd century. Humanity has developed faster-than-light hyperdrive and operates the United Planets, a multi-world political organization that maintains a fleet of exploration cruisers. Commander John J. Adams (Leslie Nielsen in a rare serious dramatic role, decades before the comedic register that would define his later career) commands United Planets Cruiser C-57D on a mission to investigate the fate of the Bellerophon expedition, which had been sent to Altair IV twenty years earlier and never reported back.
The crew arrives at Altair IV to find that only Dr. Edward Morbius (Walter Pidgeon) and his daughter Altaira (Anne Francis) survived the original expedition. Morbius warns Adams to leave immediately. Adams refuses. The remaining film explores what Morbius has discovered on Altair IV, what destroyed the original expedition, and what the Krell, the long-extinct alien civilization that inhabited the planet 200,000 years before, left behind underground.
The Krell
The Krell are one of the great achievements of science fiction worldbuilding. The film presents them as an alien civilization vastly more advanced than humanity that had inhabited Altair IV for thousands of centuries before destroying itself in a single night. Morbius has spent twenty years studying their remains. He has learned to operate some of their technology, including intelligence-boosting devices that doubled his own mental capacity, and he gives Adams a guided tour of what he has discovered.
The Krell technology operates at scale that no previous science fiction film had attempted. Eight thousand cubic miles of underground machinery. Nine thousand two hundred eight thermonuclear reactors maintaining the system for two hundred thousand years after their builders died. The visual scale of the Krell machinery sequences remains genuinely impressive. The matte paintings, the constructed sets, the sense of vertical depth as Adams looks down into the machinery, all of this operates at level that subsequent science fiction filmmaking would build on. The Krell machinery bridge inspired the Babylon 5 Great Machine. RoboCop’s executive producer Jon Davison wanted the OCP headquarters interior to look like Krell machinery because those were his favorite shots in the film.
The Krell themselves never appear on screen. Their physical form is suggested through doorways too wide for human use and through control panels designed for non-human anatomy. The choice to show their works rather than their bodies generates substantially more mystery than any direct depiction would have produced. Audiences imagine the Krell rather than seeing them. The imagination consistently exceeds what production design could have delivered.
For Writers
Forbidden Planet demonstrates the value of showing what an alien civilization built rather than what its members looked like. The Krell never appear on screen. The audience receives their technological remains, their architectural choices, and the consequences of their final mistake. The choice generates substantially more imaginative engagement than direct depiction would have produced. The lesson for writers is that absence sometimes generates more presence than presence does. If your alien civilization is supposed to feel ancient and vast, show what they left behind rather than describing what they looked like. Let the reader’s imagination do work that direct description cannot accomplish. Show the eight-thousand-cubic-mile machine, not the engineers who built it.
The Monster From The Id
The film’s central reveal is that the Krell built a machine capable of materializing thought, and that this machine destroyed them in a single night when their subconscious minds gained the power to create matter. The same machine is now drawing on Morbius’s subconscious. The invisible creature that has been killing the C-57D’s crew is the manifestation of Morbius’s id, the Freudian unconscious harboring his primal desires and resentments. He does not consciously want anyone dead. His unconscious has different priorities.
The Freudian framework was direct cultural engagement at the time. Psychoanalysis was prominent in 1950s popular culture. A glossy MGM production using id, ego, and superego as plot mechanics rather than as background sophistication signaled that science fiction could engage with serious psychological material. The genre had been mostly creature features and atomic monster paranoia. Forbidden Planet treated its audience as capable of following actual ideas about the human mind.
The Id monster sequences scared me as a kid and they still work. The creature is invisible except when it touches a force field, at which point it appears as a roaring outlined silhouette of pure rage. The animation, done by Disney’s Joshua Meador, gives the creature a specific physical presence that the invisible-monster premise would otherwise lack. The crew firing energy weapons into the creature while it advances through the force field is one of the great horror sequences in science fiction cinema. The weapons do not work. Nothing works. The crew dies in specific gruesome ways because the monster is made of solidified thought and conventional weapons cannot affect solidified thought.
The reveal that Morbius is the source is structurally elegant. He cannot accept the truth because accepting it means accepting that he has been responsible for the deaths of his original expedition crewmates twenty years earlier and the C-57D crew now. His denial is the same denial that the Krell exhibited two hundred thousand years before. Civilizations that gain unlimited power over matter without resolving their unconscious destructive drives destroy themselves. The Krell solved every technical problem of advanced civilization and missed the only problem that mattered.
Robby The Robot
Robby is the first sympathetic robot in cinema history. He cost MGM approximately one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars to construct in 1955, which is more than a million dollars in current value, and the investment shows. The design by Robert Kinoshita remains one of the most iconic robot designs in the history of film. The blue neon tubes in his chest, the rotating external ear sensors, the conical plexiglass dome housing his processing components, all of this established a visual vocabulary that subsequent robot designs would either copy directly or define themselves against.
More importantly, Robby has personality. He operates under what amount to Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics. He cannot harm humans. He cannot allow humans to be harmed through inaction. He follows orders except when those orders conflict with his programming. The film makes substantive use of these constraints. When Adams orders Robby to kill the invisible monster, Robby cannot do it. The monster is Morbius. Killing the monster requires harming Morbius. Robby’s programming will not permit it. The robot has just identified the answer to the mystery before any of the humans figure it out. He cannot share what he knows. His programming includes loyalty to Morbius. The constraint is the plot.
Robby’s voice work by Marvin Miller gives the character specific dry wit. The “in my case, sir, the question is totally without meaning” response to the ship’s cook asking whether Robby is male or female is one of the film’s better single lines. The character demonstrates that robots could be characters rather than threats or tools. C-3PO inherits Robby’s lineage directly. R2-D2 operates within the same template at smaller scale. The Wall-E character three decades after Star Wars still operates within the framework Robby established. Robby walked so every subsequent sympathetic robot could run.
For Writers
Robby demonstrates the value of giving non-human characters specific constraints that drive plot. His programming prevents him from killing the monster because the monster is Morbius. The constraint is not decorative. The constraint generates the climax. Adams cannot get Robby to act, and the failure to act tells Adams what he needs to know to solve the mystery. The lesson for writers is that artificial characters earn dramatic engagement through their limits rather than through their capabilities. If your robot can do anything, your robot is plot machinery. If your robot cannot do specific things for specific reasons, your robot is a character. The Three Laws operate as character architecture, not as background detail. Apply the same principle to any non-human character you write. The constraints generate the story.
The Electronic Score
Bebe and Louis Barron composed the first entirely electronic film score in cinema history for Forbidden Planet. The score predates the invention of the Moog synthesizer by eight years. The Barrons built their own electronic circuits based on principles from Norbert Wiener’s 1948 book Cybernetics, then manipulated tape recordings of the circuits to generate what MGM credited as electronic tonalities rather than as music. The credit decision was partly legal protection against the American Federation of Musicians, which would have objected to electronic sound being credited as music in a major studio production.
The score is indistinguishable from sound design in places. The Krell machinery hums and throbs with electronic textures that operate as both music and as the sound of the machinery itself. The Id monster’s sonic presence emerges from the same electronic vocabulary. The film cannot be separated from its sound. Subsequent electronic film scoring, from Vangelis’s Chariots of Fire through Tangerine Dream’s various productions through current synthesizer-based scoring, traces its lineage through what the Barrons accomplished in 1956.
The score also could not be nominated for an Academy Award because the Barrons did not belong to the Musicians Union. MGM did not release a soundtrack album with the film. The score’s eventual recognition came decades after release. The score remains one of the great achievements in film sound regardless of its initial institutional treatment.
The Shakespeare Foundation
Forbidden Planet is loosely based on William Shakespeare’s The Tempest. The structural parallels are direct. Prospero becomes Morbius, the isolated scholar on a remote location with command of advanced powers. Miranda becomes Altaira, the daughter who has never encountered other humans before the visitors arrive. Ariel becomes Robby, the servant with capabilities beyond his masters. Caliban becomes the Id monster, the unconscious destructive force that Prospero never fully acknowledges as his own.
The Shakespeare foundation gives the film structural integrity that pure science fiction premises rarely achieve. The Tempest’s questions about power, isolation, knowledge, and the appropriate limits of human capability operate beneath the surface science fiction adventure. Audiences who recognize the source material receive additional layers of meaning. Audiences who do not still get a structurally coherent film because the underlying Shakespeare structure works as drama regardless of recognition.
The pattern would influence subsequent science fiction’s tendency to draw on classical literature for structural foundations. 2001: A Space Odyssey draws on multiple mythological sources. Star Trek consistently used Shakespearean and classical references. The pattern of building science fiction on humanist literary foundations rather than on pulp adventure foundations traces partly through Forbidden Planet’s specific demonstration that the combination could produce serious cinema.
The Altaira Problem
The film has a sexism problem that deserves direct treatment rather than being dismissed as “dated.” Some of the sexism is load-bearing within the Shakespeare structure. Most of it is decorative addition that 1950s MGM production conventions imposed on top of the source material.
Altaira’s innocence is load-bearing. The Miranda character in The Tempest requires sheltered upbringing without exposure to other humans. The Shakespeare foundation needs the daughter to have never met other men. Anne Francis’s character cannot be sophisticated and worldly without breaking the structural framework the film operates within. This part of the characterization is structural rather than gratuitous.
The decorative sexism is everywhere else. Altaira’s wardrobe consists of progressively shorter dresses designed for maximum titillation while the film judges her for presenting her body the way her wardrobe presents it. The crew leers at her openly during her introduction sequences. Multiple crew members attempt seduction in scenes the film treats as comedic rather than as harassment. Adams lectures her about her clothing choices and tells her that her revealing dresses are causing problems with his crew. The film positions Adams as the moral authority correcting Altaira’s behavior rather than as the senior officer responsible for controlling his crew’s professional conduct.
The tiger scene is the clearest single example of the decorative sexism. Altaira keeps a pet tiger that has always treated her as harmless. After she kisses Adams for the first time, the tiger no longer recognizes her and attacks her. Adams shoots the tiger. The framing is direct virgin and corrupted-woman positioning. Female sexual experience produces danger that requires male protection. The scene exists nowhere in The Tempest source material. The scene was added to the science fiction adaptation specifically to deliver the patriarchal message that female sexuality is dangerous and requires masculine management.
Altaira’s character arc is the transfer of authority from one male figure to another. She begins under Morbius’s patriarchal control. She ends under Adams’s romantic control. The transition is the plot. Her own agency is minimal throughout. She does not make significant decisions. She does not solve significant problems. She responds to what the male characters around her demand. The Tempest gives Miranda some interior life despite the structural constraints. Forbidden Planet gives Altaira substantially less interior life despite operating within the same structural framework.
Anne Francis’s performance is more capable than the material deserves. She brings specific charisma and watchability that almost transcends what the script is doing to her character. Her line readings have substantially more intelligence than the dialogue itself suggests. The performance is one of the film’s specific achievements operating in spite of the material rather than because of it. A different actress in the role would have produced a substantially weaker film.
The sexism does not damage the broader film at fundamental level. The Krell worldbuilding, the Id monster framework, the Robby characterization, and the electronic score all operate independently of Altaira’s treatment. The film’s foundational achievements survive the specific 1950s gender politics that shape one significant subplot. Contemporary audiences should expect to navigate the sexism rather than to ignore it. The 10+ rating reflects the aggregate achievement rather than blanket endorsement of every individual element.
For Writers
The Altaira problem demonstrates the difference between structural elements that source material requires and decorative elements that production conventions add on top. The Tempest requires Miranda to be innocent. Forbidden Planet’s adaptation requires Altaira to be innocent for the same structural reasons. The required element is load-bearing. The wardrobe, the leering, the clothing lectures, and the tiger scene are not load-bearing. These elements add nothing the Shakespeare structure requires. They were added by 1950s MGM production conventions about how female characters should be presented for the assumed male audience. The lesson for writers is to distinguish between what your source material structurally requires and what your contemporary conventions are pushing you to add. The structural requirements should be honored. The decorative additions should be examined for whether they serve the work or whether they serve assumptions about the audience that the work does not actually require. Most adaptations get this wrong in the opposite direction. They strip the structural requirements while keeping the decorative additions. The result is contemporary politics replacing classical structure rather than improving on it.
The Star Trek Lineage
Gene Roddenberry publicly downplayed Forbidden Planet’s influence on Star Trek. A 1970 interview has him claiming he only thought about Forbidden Planet when identifying mistakes he wanted to avoid. A 1964 letter that surfaced later contradicted the public claim. David Alexander’s authorized Roddenberry biography names Forbidden Planet as one of the inspirations for Star Trek. The textual evidence supports the connection regardless of what Roddenberry publicly claimed.
The specific parallels are direct. United Planets becomes United Federation of Planets. United Planets Cruiser C-57D becomes the starship Enterprise. The 23rd century setting is preserved. The exploration ship visiting strange worlds is preserved. The crew structure of captain, first officer, ship’s doctor, and engineering specialist is preserved. The away-team structure where the captain, doctor, and first officer take part in external missions while the rest of the crew operates the ship is preserved. The synthetic food production, the energy weapons, the communicator devices, the protective force fields, the deceleration during faster-than-light transitions that resembles transporter beaming, all of this is present in Forbidden Planet before Star Trek developed any of it.
The argument is not that Star Trek copied Forbidden Planet wholesale. Star Trek went on to develop its own specific creative voice across decades of subsequent production. The argument is that Star Trek would have looked substantially different without Forbidden Planet’s template to build on. The exploration starship visiting alien worlds with a multi-specialist crew operating under a benevolent multi-planet political authority is the Forbidden Planet template. Subsequent science fiction television and film either operates within this template or defines itself against it.
The Influence On Star Wars
Star Wars’s influence from Forbidden Planet operates primarily through Robby’s lineage to C-3PO. George Lucas inherited the sympathetic robot template that Robby established. C-3PO’s protocol droid personality, his neurotic affect, his comedic register against R2-D2’s contrasting practicality, all of this builds on what Robby had demonstrated in 1956. The influence is partly cosmetic and partly structural. C-3PO looks substantially different from Robby. C-3PO operates within the same character function Robby occupied two decades earlier.
The broader visual influence appears in specific Star Wars elements. The faster-than-light interstellar travel framework. The exotic alien planet exploration premise. The visual scale of advanced technology serving narrative purposes rather than operating as background detail. Lucas was openly building on multiple science fiction predecessors when developing Star Wars. Forbidden Planet was among them whether Lucas specifically acknowledged it or not.
Craft: The Foundation Document Of Modern Science Fiction Cinema
Craft Note
Forbidden Planet operates as the foundation document of modern science fiction cinema. The film established multiple templates that subsequent productions would build on across the following seven decades. The exploration starship with multi-specialist crew template that Star Trek would inherit. The sympathetic robot template that Star Wars and most subsequent robot fiction would build on. The advanced ancient civilization template that informed everything from 2001’s monolith builders to Stargate’s Ancients to Mass Effect’s Protheans. The Freudian unconscious as antagonist template that horror cinema continues to draw on. The fully electronic film score template that synthesizer-based scoring would follow for the next seven decades.
The film also operates as one of the rare science fiction productions of its era that took its source material seriously. The Shakespeare foundation provides structural integrity. The Freudian psychology provides thematic substance. The Krell worldbuilding provides imaginative depth. The Robby characterization provides emotional accessibility. The electronic score provides distinctive sonic identity. Each element operates at high craft level individually. The aggregate produces a film that elevates the entire genre rather than working within established genre limits.
The dating is real but specific. The CinemaScope color photography looks slightly faded by current standards. The CGI standards of contemporary visual effects make the rotoscoped Id monster animation look distinctly mid-century. The dialogue register reflects 1950s acting conventions that subsequent productions have moved past. The gender dynamics around Altaira reflect 1950s assumptions that contemporary audiences will read differently than 1956 audiences did. These dating elements are real and worth acknowledging honestly.
The substance underneath the dating remains genuinely powerful. The Krell tragedy still works as cautionary tale about civilizations that solve every problem except the only one that matters. The Id monster sequences still scare. The Robby characterization still operates with specific charm. The electronic score still sounds otherworldly seventy years after composition. The aggregate film operates at level that justifies the 10+ rating despite the surface dating that contemporary viewers will inevitably notice.
The Verdict
A 10+. Forbidden Planet is one of the best science fiction films ever made and one of the most influential. The film established the templates that Star Trek, Star Wars, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and most subsequent serious science fiction cinema would build on. The Krell worldbuilding, the Id monster horror, the Robby characterization, the first electronic film score, and the Shakespeare structural foundation all operate at high craft level individually. The aggregate produces a film that elevated the entire genre when released and continues to reward repeat viewing seven decades later.
The film scared me as a kid. I have watched it many times since. The Id monster sequences still work. The Krell sequences still generate genuine awe. Robby still operates with specific charm that subsequent robot characters have rarely matched. The electronic score still sounds otherworldly. A little dated in surface respects. Genuinely timeless in substance. The 10+ rating reflects honest evaluation of a foundational achievement in the history of the genre.
FAQ
Is Leslie Nielsen really in this?
Yes, in his pre-comedic-career dramatic phase. Nielsen plays Commander John J. Adams as straight romantic-lead military officer. The performance is professionally committed within the conventions of 1950s leading-man acting. Audiences who know Nielsen primarily through Airplane! and the Naked Gun films will need to recalibrate. The dramatic performance came thirty years before the comedic career that would define his subsequent legacy.
Is this really the first electronic film score?
Yes. Bebe and Louis Barron composed the score using DIY electronic circuits built from principles in Norbert Wiener’s 1948 book Cybernetics. The score predates the Moog synthesizer by eight years. The Theremin had been used in previous film scores (notably Hitchcock’s Spellbound in 1945), but Forbidden Planet was the first film with a fully electronic score throughout. MGM credited the work as electronic tonalities rather than as music, partly to avoid Musicians Union complications. The score could not be nominated for an Academy Award because the Barrons did not belong to the union.
How influential was this film?
Substantially. The Star Trek template traces directly to Forbidden Planet’s exploration cruiser premise. Robby the Robot’s lineage runs through C-3PO and most subsequent sympathetic robot characters. The Krell technology bridge inspired Babylon 5’s Great Machine and RoboCop’s OCP headquarters interior. The Freudian unconscious as antagonist template informed subsequent horror and science fiction. The fully electronic film score template influenced synthesizer-based scoring for decades. The film operates as foundation document for modern science fiction cinema.
Does it hold up?
Yes, with specific dating that any 1956 production carries. The CinemaScope color looks slightly faded by current standards. The visual effects technology is mid-twentieth-century rather than digital. The dialogue register reflects 1950s acting conventions. The gender dynamics around Altaira reflect 1950s assumptions that contemporary viewers will navigate rather than ignore. These elements are real but do not damage the underlying substance. The Krell sequences still generate awe. The Id monster sequences still scare. The Robby characterization still works. The aggregate film operates at level that justifies the 10+ rating despite the surface dating.
How sexist is the Altaira treatment?
Substantially in specific ways. The wardrobe is designed to titillate while the film judges Altaira for presenting her body the way the wardrobe presents it. The crew leers at her in scenes the film treats as comedic. Adams lectures her about her clothing rather than controlling his own crew’s conduct. The tiger scene operates as direct virgin and corrupted-woman framing where female sexual experience produces danger requiring masculine management. The arc is patriarchal authority transferring from her father to her romantic partner with minimal agency in between. Some of this is structural Shakespeare adaptation. Most of it is decorative 1950s MGM production conventions. Anne Francis’s performance is more capable than the material gives her credit for. The sexism does not damage the broader film’s foundational achievements. Contemporary audiences should expect to navigate it rather than to ignore it.
Why is the Id monster so effective?
The monster operates through three specific structural choices. First, it is invisible except when touching a force field, which means audiences imagine it more than they see it. Second, it is made of solidified thought, which means conventional weapons cannot affect it. Third, it is generated by Morbius’s unconscious mind, which means the antagonist is also the protagonist’s father figure. The combination produces horror that works on multiple levels simultaneously. Visual horror through the rotoscoped animation. Thematic horror through the Freudian framework. Dramatic horror through Morbius’s denial that he is responsible. Each layer reinforces the others.
What is the Shakespeare connection?
The film is loosely based on Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Morbius is Prospero, the isolated scholar with command of advanced powers. Altaira is Miranda, the daughter who has never encountered other humans. Robby is Ariel, the servant with capabilities beyond his masters. The Id monster is Caliban, the destructive force the scholar never fully acknowledges as his own. The Shakespeare foundation gives the film structural integrity that pure pulp science fiction premises typically lack. Audiences who recognize the source receive additional thematic resonance. Audiences who do not still receive a structurally coherent film.
What happened to Robby after this film?
Robby became one of the most reused props in Hollywood history. The original costume appeared in The Invisible Boy (1957), three episodes of The Twilight Zone, episodes of The Thin Man, The Gale Storm Show, Columbo, The Addams Family, Lost in Space, The Love Boat, Mork and Mindy, and various other productions. The robot earned the nickname “the hardest working robot in Hollywood.” The original prop survived multiple changes of ownership and restoration efforts and remains in private collection. Robby was inducted into Carnegie Mellon’s Robot Hall of Fame in 2004.
How does this compare to 2001: A Space Odyssey?
Both films operate as foundation documents for modern science fiction cinema. 2001 (1968) extended what Forbidden Planet (1956) had established by twelve years. 2001 went further with ambiguity, visual abstraction, and philosophical depth. Forbidden Planet went further with character accessibility, narrative clarity, and emotional engagement. Both films justify their canonical status. 2001 is more often cited as the genre’s high-water mark. Forbidden Planet built the foundation 2001 was extending. The reputation gap reflects critical fashion rather than craft difference. Both films operate at the highest level the genre has produced.
Should I watch this if I’m new to classic science fiction?
Yes. Forbidden Planet is one of the genre’s essential viewing experiences. The film operates as both entertainment and as historical foundation. Audiences who watch it understand subsequent science fiction better because they recognize where the conventions came from. The viewing experience also justifies itself independent of historical importance. The Krell sequences generate genuine awe. The Id monster sequences generate genuine horror. The Robby characterization generates genuine charm. The aggregate film rewards attention regardless of whether viewers are interested in the historical lineage.