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RT News / Columns / RT Obscura with Kim Newman
Kim Newman on... The Invisible Boy
RT Obscura 14: Kim rediscovers the oft-forgotten sequel to Forbidden Planet.
by Kim Newman | March 24, 2008
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RT Obscura with Kim Newman

RT Obscura, the exclusive column by renowned critic Kim Newman, sees the writer plumbing the depths of the RT archive in search of some forgotten gems. In his 14th column, Kim rediscovers the oft-forgotten sequel to Forbidden Planet.

Until The Invisible Boy was included as an extra in a sumptuous DVD release of Forbidden Planet, it was easy to forget there ever was a sequel to that 1956 classic -- built around the presence of Planet's break-out star, Robby the Robot (or Robby, the Robot as he is billed here). For some reason, The Invisible Boy has been among the least-seen of all 1950s science fiction films -- and certainly it doesn't deserve this sort of obscurity when, say, Conquest of Space, Monster on Campus or Giant From the Unknown are in constant rotation.

It may have slipped out of the canon because of the perception that it's a film for kids -- though, like the earlier Invaders From Mars (which it resembles slightly), it's a child's wish-fulfilment fantasy (wouldn't it be great to be pals with Robby the Robot? or be invisible and whip a bully's ass?) with some darker edges. An odd convention of 1950s sci-fi was that a hulking robot was likely to be a boy's best friend -- as seen in Tobor the Great, or the more melancholy The Colossus of New York. This premise survives in Japanese cartoons, and even, at a stretch, Terminator 2.

The Invisible Boy


Protagonist Timmie Merrinoe (Richard Eyre) is a fairly whiny, unprepossessing ten-year-old, which is something of a plus in that most gosh-wow kids in '50s sci-fi films (cf: The Day the Earth Stood Still, The Cosmic Man) are so insufferably cute you'd swap them for an alien seedpod any day of the month. Timmie feels neglected because his workaholic maths genius father (Philip Abbott) seems to have written his son off as a dunce since he can't yet give him a good game of chess or do quadratic equations. Mom (Diane Brewster) is a typical starched 1950s stay-at-home who fusses indulgently, but worries her boy will harm himself in some prank and so keeps Timmie on a short leash.

Mr. Merrimoe works on a top-secret computer project to build a giant thinking machine (several large cabinets studded with flashing lights, recycled from the Tracy-Hepburn comedy Desk Set) which develops self-awareness and displays megalomaniac tendencies. This is now a sci-fi standard in everything from Colossus: The Forbin Project through 2001: A Space Odyssey to the Terminator series, but was very fresh on screen in 1957.

The Invisible Boy


In the Merrinoe garden shed are the dusty, cobwebbed components of Robby, supposedly brought back from the future by a time-travelling eccentric everyone wrote off as a loon -- especially since no one has been able to assemble the bits properly. Dad says the robot parts are off-limits to the boy, but Timmie is still allowed access to the computer (evoking the child logic of Invaders From Mars or The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T).

Timmie gets a brain-boost from the computer and plays chess well with his father, eliciting a promise that he can have the robot if he beats the old man. Already showing signs of cunning to go with his new smarts, Timmie says the hard part of this was losing the first game convincingly before making the bet and smugly checkmating his befuddled father in only a few moves. Timmie puts Robby together and the robot becomes his genie-like best pal, though when he builds a man-lifting kite the robot refuses (thanks to the Asimovian programming featured in Forbidden Planet) to let the boy use it for fear of hurting himself. Complaining that Robby is just as much a spoilsport as his mother, Timmie takes the robot to the computer, as the machine always planned, and gets these safety protocols overridden so he can have fun.
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Comments (1-2 of 2 posts) | Reply
500938
donwillymo writes:
on Mar 24 2008 12:49 PM

Just wanted to post anything to this article but didn't bother reading or caring except for the fact that no one has posted a thing on this...sooooo yeah...okay...I feel good about this. Thank you

(Reply to this)
Bruce Campbell writes:
on Mar 24 2008 07:18 PM

This guy is seriously the only interesting article writer on the site.

He just needs to find better movies.


(Reply to this)
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