Prison Ship

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Prison Ship
Prison Ship (1986) Film Poster.jpg
Directed by Fred Olen Ray
Written byMiriam L. Preissel & Michael Sonye and Fred Olen Ray (original story)
Michael Sonye (screenplay by)
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography Paul Elliott
Edited byMiriam L. Preissel
Music byAnthony Harris
Production
companies
  • Viking International Pictures
  • Worldwide Entertainment Corporation
Distributed byJack H. Harris Enterprises
Release dates
  • 1986 (1986)(United States)
  • May 11, 1987 (1987-05-11)(France)
Running time
86 min.
Country United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$175,000 [1]

Prison Ship, also known as Star Slammer, Adventures of Taura, Part 1 , Starslammer: The Escape and Prison Ship Star Slammer, is a 1986 American science fiction film directed by Fred Olen Ray.

Contents

Plot

On the planet Arous, Captain Bantor (Ross Hagen), the Sovereign (Lindy Sykes) and the Inquisitor (Aldo Ray) attempt to quell an uprising of the defiant residents.

Freelance miner Taura is forced to defend herself against the marauding starship captain, Bantor. During their struggle, Taura causes Bantor to lose his hand in a volcanic acid plume. Taura is friendly to the locals and employees them in her mining operation. Bantor had attempted to claim the mined crystals for the Magistrate, leading to confrontation.

Taura is subsequently sentenced to a term aboard the prison ship, Vehemence, under the sadistic female warden, Exene. She finds life amid the other female inmates tough, but soon, gains their respect, making a friend in Mike.

Bantor then comes aboard Vehemence, now deranged as a result of losing his hand, seeking to obtain a mind control process that reduces the prisoners to zombies. His arrival proves to be Taura's chance to escape the prison ship or "star slammer" and return to home planet of Arous. [2]

Cast

Production

The film was shot at Roger Corman's New World studio on Main Street in Venice, California. Fred Olen Ray rented the studio for two weekends (four days). One day he spent shooting scenes for his film Biohazard. The other three days were spent filming footage for Prison Ship. Ray says he was inspired by Roger Corman making The Terror using left over sets from The Raven. Aldo Ray was hired for one day's work. Ray then used this footage to raise money to complete the picture. Funds were raised from Jack H. Harris. [1] The film has a scene, with the monster of "The Deadly Spawn". [3] The film is divided into chapters. One of Ray's first movies.

Reception

In Creature Feature, the movie received one out of five stars, calling the movie "hilariously bad," citing the script as the main problem [4] Austin Trunick writing for the website "Under the Radar" stated: "Star Slammer was shot quickly and on the cheap, but has far better production values than similar, bottom shelf sci-fi or women in prison flicks from the era. It hits most of the notes you’d expect from the genres – extraterrestrial dwarfs, robots, cat fights, a sadistic (female) warden, and forced combat". [5] Moria gave the movie two stars, finding it a cheesy parody of science fiction and serial movies. [6] TV Guide noted that the film was inept, finding it had many of the clichés of women in prison movies . [7]

Release

Cannes Film Festival May 11, 1987 and released widely in the same year [8]

Sequel

According to the end credits, a sequel called Chain Gang Planet was planned. [7]

Home Media

Available to stream on many services as of July 2021. [9]

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References

  1. 1 2 Fred Olen Ray, The New Poverty Row: Independent Filmmakers as Distributors, McFarland 1991 p 180-183
  2. "The Adventures of Taura: Prison Ship Star Slammer (1986)". 27 May 2007.
  3. Star Slammer reuses the many-toothed monster from The Deadly Spawn (1982).
  4. Stanley, J. (2000) Creature Feature: Third Edition
  5. Trunick, Austin. "Star Slammer". Under the Radar. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  6. "The Adventures of Taura: Prison Ship Star Slammer (1986)". 27 May 2007.
  7. 1 2 "Star Slammer".
  8. "Prison Ship".
  9. "Youtube star slammers - Bing video".