Barbarella (film)

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Barbarella

US poster for Barbarella
Directed by Roger Vadim
Produced by Dino De Laurentiis
Written by Vittori Bonicelli
Claude Brulé
Brian Degas
Jean-Claude Forest
Tudor Gates
Terry Southern
Clement B. Wood
Starring Jane Fonda
David Hemmings
Music by Bob Crewe
Charles Fox
Cinematography Claude Renoir
Editing by Victoria Mercanton
Distributed by Paramount Pictures (USA)
Release date(s) (USA) October 10, 1968
(Italy) October 18, 1968
Running time 98 min.
Country France / Italy
Language English
Budget $9,000,000
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Barbarella, also known as Barbarella, Queen of the Galaxy is a 1968 erotic science fiction film, based on the French Barbarella comic book created by Jean-Claude Forest.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The comic and film both feature Barbarella, a young woman who has numerous adventures, often involving sex, while journeying around the galaxy, c.A.D. 40,000.

[edit] Style

Jane Fonda in a Barbarella promotional still
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Jane Fonda in a Barbarella promotional still

Barbarella is famous for a sequence in which the title character, played by Jane Fonda, performs a striptease in zero gravity during (and inadequately concealed by) the opening credits.

Barbarella is one of the few science fiction erotica films and includes an erotic torture device.

The whole film is played in a very tongue-in-cheek manner—especially when it comes to the frequent (but non-explicit) sex scenes. To modern viewers, the film's special effects look cheaply-made and unconvincing, but they were ambitious by the standards of the day.

The film was simultaneously shot in French and English. In the French version, Fonda performs her own lines in French. In the English version, the character Pallenberg's lines are dubbed by Fenella Fielding, at least according to the region2 DVD booklet notes, although others have claimed that the voice actually belongs to Joan Greenwood. Marcel Marceau's lines are also dubbed into English.

De Laurentiis returned to camp science fiction (but without the erotica) with 1980's Flash Gordon.

[edit] Primary cast

[edit] Reception

The film was a box office failure however, it has since gained a cult following since its re-release in 1977 and on home video.

[edit] Trivia

Jane Fonda as Barbarella
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Jane Fonda as Barbarella
  • Virna Lisi was cast in the title role in Barbarella , but she turned it down and returned to Italy.
  • Star Jane Fonda was married to director Roger Vadim during the production and distribution of Barbarella.
  • The psychedelic "blob" patterns that form much of the special effects in the film are created using an oil wheel projector, a popular visual effects device also used in many other '60s movies, as well as in many anti-drug educational films.
  • The band Duran Duran takes its name from Dr. Durand Durand (O'Shea), a mad scientist who appears in the film as one of the villains. O'Shea repaid the compliment by appearing (as an older version of Durand Durand) in Arena, the band's 1985 concert film. Some of the band's early appearances were at a nightclub called Barbarella's, in their home town of Birmingham, England. The band continued the homage to its roots with their 1997 US single, "Electric Barbarella" (released in the UK in 1998). The band has continually used sound clips from the film in their songs, most notably 1989's "Burning The Ground" and the remixes for 1990's "Violence Of Summer".
  • As the 1980s girl group Fuzzbox could not get permission to use Thunderbirds for their song International Rescue they spoofed Barbarella with Adrian Edmondson playing the Durand Durand character.
  • Another famous singer to use the iconography of Barbarella in a pop video was Kylie Minogue who recreated the infamous zero-gravity striptease in her award winning video for "Put Yourself in My Place"
  • The band Matmos takes its name from the underground fluid creature in the film, as does the lava lamp manufacturer Mathmos.
  • Techno producers Sven Väth and Ralf Hildenbeutel recorded an album entitled The Art of Dance under the alias Barbarella. The singles from this album, a few of which were very popular among electronic music enthusiasts, took their inspiration from the film, and included titles such as The Future, The Spaceship, The Mission, and The Secret Chamber of Dreams, as well as 5 tracks that were named for some variation on the name Barbarella.
  • In 1998, front man Scott Weiland of the bands Stone Temple Pilots and Velvet Revolver released a solo album entitled "12 Bar Blues." The hit song from that album which spawned a music video was titled "Barbarella." The lyrics of the song pay homage to several science fiction television shows and movies.
  • The manga artists collectively known as CLAMP parodied Barbarella in one chapter of their Miyuki-chan in Wonderland, the chapter titled TV no Kuni no Miyuki-chan (Miyuki-chan in TV Land) shows several of the characters (including some female versions) trying to seduce the main character. The manga contains heavy lesbian overtones.
  • The techno-dance band Jamiroquai mentions a "baby Barbarella" in their hit song "Cosmic Girl."
  • Rock-funk artist Prince also has a history of referencing and being inspired by the film Barbarella. His song Endorphin Machine from The Gold Experience album clearly relates to the sexual torture machine Durand Durand uses on Barbarella in the movie. There are even sketches of the Endorphin Machine showing it to be nearly identical to the device in the movie. His album O (-> contains between song segues presented and the adventures of a reporter (played by Kirstie Alley) trying to interview Prince. In one such segment his voice is distorted. He explains he is using a "tongue box", which is a device found in Barbarella. Also his band "The New Power Generation" contained for many years a keyboard player named "Tommy Barbarella", a name certainly approved if not chosen by Prince himself.
  • There is a European Long/Short Hedge Fund quoted on the Irish Stock Exchange that has the name Pygar Fund, inspired by the angel in the film that at the end flew away with Barbarella.

[edit] References

    [edit] See also

    [edit] External links

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