Forbidden Planet- Deleted Scenes/Outtakes/Alternate Footage [HD]

Published 2020-04-09
Forbidden Planet (1956) Deleted Scenes, Outtakes, Plus Alternate Footage (Opening Scene + Ending)

Director: Frank McLeod Wilcox
Starring: Leslie Nielsen, Anne Francis, Walter Pidgeon, Warren Stevens, Jack Kelly, Robby The Robot

Official Content From MGM Home Entertainment

All Comments (21)
  • @tinetannies4637
    "A talking robot? Surely you're not serious." "I am serious. And don't call me Shirley"
  • @MikeJw-je4xk
    Forbidden Planet has been my favorite sci-fi movie since childhood.
  • @rodhanson7112
    Forbidden planet, The Day the Earth Stood Still and War of the World's are three of the best sci-fi movie ever made
  • @faerieSAALE
    Even today that Krell Underground Megalopolis is truly mind numbing and terrifying! It freaked me out as little kid in theater and it still does today and I’m 74 years old! I would never want to experience such a place as that!
  • One of the GREATEST SCI-FI movies ever made this and The Day The Earth Stood Still ....
  • One of the best SI-FI movies ever made . It was advance for it's time in the 1950s. I will never get tired of watching it. I have it in both VHS and DVD. Thanks for showing those deleted scenes. Wow.
  • @DirtyLilHobo
    I saw Forbidden Planet in 1956 at a drive-in theater with my parents. I was six years old and that Id monster truly scared me, had nightmares about it for weeks after.
  • they knew how to make sci fi back then, the special effects were amazing. Seeing these movies as a child in the early 1960s, made me love studying science .
  • At 80 years old, I saw Forbidden Planet in my local theater when it came out in 1956. Compared to black and white sci-fi/ monster movies, this technology was awe inspiring to movie goers. And 67 years after I first saw it, I have never seen the deleted scenes in my life. Thank you for uploading it, you have made my life that much more special and will save a copy for my enjoyment as I grab my dvd and visualize the deleted scenes as the competed original movie should have appeared in its theater release.
  • @TheDejael
    I knew Bebe Barron and she said this was the work print they were provided in January 1956 by special air courier from MGM Studios in Culver City to Louis & Bebe Barron in Greenwich Village, New York. They returned it with their 35mm magnetic masters of their electronic score on March 1, 1956. As you can tell, the script dialog was tightened up including Les Tremayne's uncredited opening narration, and they didn't yet have the voice tracks by Marvin Miller's excellent voice for Robby.
  • @thudthud5423
    I love the part where Commander Adams explains the danger the crew is in.. The Cook responds: "Surely, you've got to be kidding." Commander Adams replies: "I'm not. And don't call me Shirley."
  • @AdamosDad
    The landing of the C-57D without pressure beam animation seems more realistic now than back then, I saw the film when it came to Cincinati, I think it was in the RKO Albee Theatre. It influenced me heavily in a lifetime of love of science, science fiction and technology.
  • @mmars4032
    Years after I first saw it, I have never seen the deleted scenes in my life. Thank you for uploading it, you have made my life that much more special! Undoubtedly one of the all-time classic sci-fi movies.
  • @salerio4876
    Anne Francis liked to tell the story of when her young grandsons were visiting and watching this movie at her house for the first time. She had it on tape and only told them that it was a movie with a cool robot in it. When she first appeared on screen, the littlest kid jumped off the couch and pointed at the TV and loudly yelled "There's Grandma!" which made her and everyone else there laugh.
  • @mikeat2637
    When you watch this, the comparisons to Star Trek are undeniable, from the special effects, story lines and witty banter within the crew. Leslie Nielsen as Commander Adams could be Capt. Christopher Pike, Lt. Jerry Farman could be James Tiberius Kirk at an earlier point in his career, Warren Stevens as Doc Ostrow IS Bones McCoy and Richard Anderson's Chief Engineer Quinn is Montgomery Scott. I wonder how hard Gene Roddenberry studied this film.
  • @dannyparis2942
    Forbidden planet from 1956 science fiction masterpiece I love these deleted scenes very fascinating
  • @daydreamer8662
    Fun Fact: Forbidden Planet was the first major movie in which there are no scenes that take place on planet Earth
  • @SumNumber
    The people who created this were way ahead of the curve in story content and special effects. I saw this at the drive-in theater . :O)