Midway between planets, Shep Ramsey’s (Hulk Hogan) spaceship breaks down. As he waits for its repair, he rents a room in Charlie Wilcox’s (Christopher Lloyd) house and endures — and must get used to — the everyday trivialities of life in suburbia. But when two villainous bounty hunters come to town and threaten this peaceful bourgeois life, Shep convinces Charlie to help him defeat the evildoers.
American screenwriter and director—particularly of westerns—Burt Kennedy was the son of performers. He was part of their act, “The Dancing Kennedys”, from infancy. He served in World War II as a cavalry officer and was highly decorated. After the war he joined the Pasadena Community Playhouse, but was ousted after one play as an actor for missing rehearsal. He found a job writing radio programs such as “Hash Knife Hartley” and “The Used Story Lot”, then used his army fencing training to land work as a stunt fencer in films. Kennedy was hired to write 13 scripts for a proposed television program, “Juan and Diablo”, with plans for John Wayne’s Batjac Co. contract player Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez to star. The show was never produced, but Kennedy was kept on at Batjac to write films for producer Wayne. His initial effort, Seven Men from Now (1956), was a superb western, the first of the esteemed collaboration between director Budd Boetticher and star Randolph Scott. Kennedy wrote most of… read more
I'm glad I saw this on a VHS-quality YouTube bootleg. As awesome as a blu-ray would be, Hulk Hogan in 1080p would probably melt my eyeballs.
Just as hokey and formulaically awful as you'd expect, but it never quite reaches that bizarre point where it can transcend its terribleness in a fun cult movie kind of way. Already a goofy personality, Hulk Hogan still somehow manages to embarrass himself. A few small moments of amusing oddness is not enough to make it watchable for any real reason.