Forbidden Zone

R 6.5
1980 1 hr 14 min Fantasy , Comedy , Music

A mysterious door in the basement of the Hercules house leads to the Sixth Dimension by way of a gigantic set of intestine. When Frenchy slips through the door, King Fausto falls in love with her. The jealous Queen Doris takes Frenchy prisoner, and it is up to the Hercules family and friend Squeezit Henderson to rescue her.

  • Cast:
    Hervé Villechaize , Susan Tyrrell , Matthew Bright , Viva , Joe Spinell , Danny Elfman

Similar titles

Mary Poppins
Mary Poppins
Mr Banks is looking for a nanny for his two mischievous children and comes across Mary Poppins, an angelic nanny. She not only brings a change in their lives but also spreads happiness.
Mary Poppins 1965
Bend It Like Beckham
Bend It Like Beckham
Jess Bhamra, the daughter of a strict Indian couple in London, is not permitted to play organized soccer, even though she is 18. When Jess is playing for fun one day, her impressive skills are seen by Jules Paxton, who then convinces Jess to play for her semi-pro team. Jess uses elaborate excuses to hide her matches from her family while also dealing with her romantic feelings for her coach, Joe.
Bend It Like Beckham 2003
Calypso Heat Wave
Calypso Heat Wave
A jukebox operator helps promote a calypso craze.
Calypso Heat Wave 1957
Juke Box Rhythm
Juke Box Rhythm
An European princess visiting America helps a record producer organize a big concert.
Juke Box Rhythm 1959
Keep Your Seats, Please
Keep Your Seats, Please
Despite being on his uppers, George is still prepared to pawn his beloved banjo in order to help his girlfriend save her niece from the orphanage. Help seems to be at hand when George is left a fortune by his old auntie, but unfortunately his inheritance is hidden inside a chair which has already been auctioned off! Can George and his chums track down his rightful due before his grasping solicitor (Alastair Sim, in an early film appearance) snatches the lot? It's hard to say, but he still finds time to perform both the title song and the classic 'When I'm Cleaning Windows'.
Keep Your Seats, Please 1936
An American in Paris
An American in Paris
Jerry Mulligan is an exuberant American expatriate in Paris trying to make a reputation as a painter. His friend Adam is a struggling concert pianist who's a long time associate of a famous French singer, Henri Baurel. A lonely society woman, Milo Roberts, takes Jerry under her wing and supports him, but is interested in more than his art.
An American in Paris 1951
Cameron Esposito: Rape Jokes
Cameron Esposito: Rape Jokes
RAPE JOKES is an hourlong standup special centered on sexual assault from a survivor’s perspective. Written and performed by Cameron Esposito, proceeds from the special benefit RAINN, the United States’ largest anti-sexual violence organization.
Cameron Esposito: Rape Jokes 2018
Earth Girls Are Easy
Earth Girls Are Easy
In this musical comedy, Valerie is dealing with her philandering fiancé, Ted, when she finds that a trio of aliens have crashed their spaceship into her swimming pool. Once the furry beings are shaved at her girlfriend's salon, the women discover three handsome men underneath. After absorbing the native culture via television, the spacemen are ready to hit the dating scene in 1980s Los Angeles.
Earth Girls Are Easy 1989
Chasing Amy
Chasing Amy
Holden and Banky are comic book artists. Everything is going good for them until they meet Alyssa, also a comic book artist. Holden falls for her, but his hopes are crushed when he finds out she's a lesbian.
Chasing Amy 1997
Wattstax
Wattstax
A documentary film about the Afro-American Woodstock concert held in Los Angeles seven years after the Watts riots. Director Mel Stuart mixes footage from the concert with footage of the living conditions in the current day Watts neighborhood. The film won the Golden Globe for Best Documentary Film.
Wattstax 2023

Reviews

Karry
1980/03/15

Best movie of this year hands down!

... more
Diagonaldi
1980/03/16

Very well executed

... more
Afouotos
1980/03/17

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

... more
AshUnow
1980/03/18

This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.

... more
tracybevil
1980/03/19

Yeah,I like Forbidden Zone for all kinds of reasons. Number one reason.....well,because I do! Lol, it is entertaining as f**k. I first viewed the black and white version in 2011,and watched a second time 2016.It fun to watch with a friend but some movies are best when seen alone,late at night. I am sure to see it many times over.Thank You to my buddy Josh,who has turned me on to lots of hella good stuff. I recommend checking this movie out and giving it a chance. Whether you like it or not I doubt you easily forget it. I enjoyed the black and white release as well as the color version. The entire movie is visually stimulating. The musical aspect is lots of fun...lol,gotta love them musicals! The costumes are interesting! Over the top artsy,on a budget best describes that. Most interesting is the quirky cast. Tattoo! who knew..? Just watch the movie.

... more
lapelpinproductions_remo
1980/03/20

First of all, this film will separate viewers into two groups: either you get it or you don't, love it or hate it. For me I got it, and think it's one of the more amazing films I've seen in recent years. It's unabashedly weird, obscene, hilarious, and a musical masterpiece... I just can't get enough of this film! I've had to limit the number of times I watch this just because I don't want the experience to stale.I'd recommend this musical to anyone with an off-kilter sense of humor who yearn to stretch the limits of what constitutes a "film". Every time I watch it I see something new.There really isn't another film I could compare it to and give it justice, so I won't... but I love camp, British humor, and musicals so if you have similar tastes give it a shot.And if you're one of the ones who love it, you'll be humming the tunes ("bim bam boom") and screening the "Forbidden Zone" with your friends!

... more
Ali Catterall
1980/03/21

First, some back-story: Richard and Danny Elfman grew up in South Central LA. In 1972 the precocious brothers formed a musical cabaret troupe called The Mystic Knights Of The Oingo Boingo.Under Richard's leadership The 'Knights (think Spike Jones' City Slickers or Viv Stanshall's Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band) covered old jazz and swing tunes, Cab Calloway and Josephine Baker numbers, and classical arrangements alongside multi-instrumentalist Danny's original material, such as 'You've Got Your Baby Back' about kidnapped heiress Patty Hearst, all delivered in outrageous costumes and clown face. Danny sung 'St Louis Blues' every night and, years before Bono, donned devil horns to sing 'St James Infirmary'. The Residents and the B52s among other American New Wave bands, definitely owe them a debt.When Richard became more interested in film-making (though not to the point of doing anything so conventional as actually attending film school), he handed the group's reins to younger brother Danny, who began to steer the band toward a more rock-oriented (though still distinctly left-field) direction. In the late 1970s Richard decided to make a film that replicated the spirit of their live shows. The budget was raised by buying, renovating and selling houses. With money so tight, the film was shot in black and white, in a mixture of live action and animation.The resulting movie was Forbidden Zone. What a strange and near-incomprehensible thing it is. In a nutshell, the plot - belatedly built around a series of musical set pieces - goes like this: in the basement of a Venice Beach house belonging to the crazy Hercules family, including a supernaturally-strong Grampa and a middle-aged cub scout son, is a doorway that leads to the sixth dimension, accessed through an immense intestine. Among others, the sixth dimension is peopled by a butler frog, a gorilla, robot boxers, a human candelabra and a permanently topless princess.One day, Frenchy Hercules trips on a roller skate, stumbles through it, and meets little King Fausto, who is immediately smitten with her. Green (at least, grey) with envy, Queen Doris kidnaps the girl, while the rest of the Hercules clan, along with her friend, the 'chicken-boy' Squeezit Henderson, sets off to rescue her. Cast members, such as Gene Cunningham (aka Ugh-Fudge Bwana) were pooled from the band, their families and their associates.Boingo bassist and future writer-director Matthew Bright (aka 'Toshiro Boloney') was a childhood friend of Danny's and was roped in to play the twins Squeezit & René Henderson. Bright was considered ideal for the role of the put-upon twins, having endured gay taunts throughout his schooldays; Danny would always ask his older brother to protect him. Matthew in turn had been a roommate of tiny sensation Hervé Villechaize, the plane-spotting star of 'Fantasy Island', who'd play randy King Fausto. According to Bright, Hervé had a violent temper and liked firearms, once shooting himself in the arm by accident.Former Warhol ingénue Susan Tyrrell played his frustrated wife, Queen Doris. Tyrell was Hervé's real-life girlfriend. On first meeting him she says, "It's what I psychically knew all along - that I wanted to f*ck a midget. I used to say to him, "If you f*ck me, and I ever hear about it..." Gisele Lindley, an occasional performer with the 'Knights was cast as their wonky-breasted daughter. In a nod to his stage act, Danny cameoed as Satan singing Cab Calloway's 'Minnie The Moocher', and Richard's then-wife Marie-Pascale Elfman, another singer with the 'Knights, starred as Susan B 'Frenchy' Hercules and also designed the wonderful cardboard sets; in the years after splitting from Richard, she'd go on to become a respected painter. Her outrrrageous accent in the film, incidentally, was not put on. "I've talked to French people who said she had a weird accent," says her former husband.A real family film then, which suffers from the same affliction as most home movies; inclusive as hell, we often get the distinct impression these skits and antics are not necessarily for our benefit. With an 'otherness' worn so self-consciously it could quickly irritate the casual viewer, the feeling may be akin to showing up at a private party of street theatre performers where the guests have taken more drugs than you and whose collective DNA is already morphing into something unrecognisably human.Yet in truth, for all its 'out-there' cult credentials, Forbidden Zone doesn't have an original bone in its body. This doesn't make it any less of a diverting romp; simply one where you can box-tick the influences at the outset, including Tod Browning, the Three Stooges, the Marx Brothers, Monty Python, and (especially) animators Max Fleischer, Robert Crumb and Terry Gilliam. With its typically 1970s trash aesthetic (where Ed Wood and Betty Paige meet Warhol and Waters), the most obvious comparsions can be made with The Rocky Horror Picture Show, although there's not many numbers here you could easily sing along with, Tyrrell's self-penned 'I Was Born From A Witch's Egg' excepted.Ironically, these weaknesses are also its strengths: the movie is such an over-the-top melange, it just about pulls through on sheer exuberance and reckless charm. But the real hero of Forbidden Zone is Danny Elfman and his dazzling score. His debut film soundtrack is also one of his most magnificent, incorporating rock operas, pseudo-classical passages, 1920s novelty songs like 'The Yiddish Charleston', and old jazz numbers with dextrous ease.As Tim Burton's future collaborator (and Forbidden Zone's influence on Burton, particularly his debut, Pee Wee's Big Adventure, is clear) Elfman would go on to cement a position as one of Hollywood's major players, with Boingo guitarist Steve Bartek as his orchestrator. The Boingos themselves split in 1995, having shed more of their name along the way, and are best known for contributing to a number of 1980s movie soundtracks, such as Weird Science. But as a showcase for Danny's gifts, and the enduring spirit of the Oingo Boingo, there is no greater legacy than this.

... more
rokcomx
1980/03/22

Forbidden Zone reminded me a lot of the early homemade movies by the 70s comedy troupe the Firesign Theatre. You're probably very familiar with them, as they were making the brainiest 70s comedy records (my faves being the sci-fi I Think We're All Bozos on the Bus and the late night TV spoof Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers).Less known are the Firesign homemade movies, like Eat of Be Eaten and Nick Danger: Third Eye (they also used to overdub comedy dialogue over old movie serials for an 80s Showtime series called Hot Shorts) - Zone was a LOT like those weird old vids.There was also an element of Sid & Marty Krofft to Zone, which seems about right since the Elfmans grew up on 70s TV shows like HR Pufnstuff, Lidsville, et al. And, funnily, just as I was thinking the B&W and golly-gee-whiz acting reminded me of an old Mickey Mouse Club ep - but on acid - the girl with the Mouse ears showed up ---- I bet anything, tho, that the Elfmans were MOST inspired by Frank Zappa's 200 Motels, for which Zone could practically serve as a sequel, if with more cabaret and less "classical" music.I especially liked Zone's Pythonesque animated sequences, and I'll never be able to hear the words "Pico" or "Sepulveda" without humming that bizarre little sequence.When the flick ended, I felt like I'd just come off a dicey acid trip, but it was great fun to checkout! Somebody should make a stand-alone video for Danny Elfman's devil sequence (which meticulously recreated the hijinks of several classic cartoons, even using some sound samples from the 'toons) - they could screen it on MTV tomorrow, and I bet few would ever guess it's a quarter century old and not a brand new video by the Killers or My Chemical Romance....

... more