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Alien Adventure

Alien Adventure
Alien Adventure VideoCover.png
Directed by Ben Stassen
Produced by Charlotte Clay Huggins
Caroline Van Iseghem
Written by Ben Stassen
Starring Bouli Lanners
Pierre Lebecque
Narrated by John Boyle
Music by The Puzzlers
Louis Vyncke
Cinematography Ben Stassen
Edited by Ed Escalante
James Manke
Todd Portugal
Production
company
Distributed by nWave Pictures
Ventura Distribution (DVD)
Release date
July 1, 2000 (Japan)
Running time
37 min. (Japan)
35 min. (U.S.)
Country Belgium
United States
Language English

Alien Adventure is a science fiction/slapstick comedy 3D film in IMAX format released in 1999 by nWave Pictures, written and directed by Ben Stassen. The movie was rated G (or the local equivalent) in most countries. It was the first fully digital feature-length film produced for a large-screen format.

The movie begins with an extraterrestrial humanoid species, the Glegoliths, wandering through space in search of a new world. Encountering an unknown planet (which turns out to be Earth), the Glegolith leader (Cyrillus) sends two "manned" probes to the surface to determine if it is suitable for colonisation.

The scouts in the probes think they have arrived at a great city, but in fact they have arrived at a new amusement park that is not yet open to the public. They proceed to explore four amusement rides (later made into separate shorts):

At each ride the Glegolith scouts become variously excited, frightened, frozen or violently ill, but end up having a lot of fun. On seeing this, Cyrillus decides that the new planet "was too much fun" and would destroy the fabric of his society, and orders his scouts to withdraw. The alien visitors depart Earth without actually making contact with humans.

The exotic looking alien script seen in several places in this movie is actually the real Glagolitic alphabet. The name of the alien leader - Cyrillus - bears a resemblance to Saint Cyril, who invented the Glagolitic alphabet. Also, the language spoken by the aliens (which is never translated in the movie) is the Walloon language, a real but rare dialect from Belgium, where the movie was produced. It is completely unrelated to the Glegolithic script. On the approach of the manned probes to the surface, the coastline appears to be that of California. However, the outdoor shots of the theme park are actually from a real French theme park, "Parc Du Futuroscope".


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