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The Brother from Another Planet

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The Brother from Another Planet
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Sayles
Written byJohn Sayles
Produced byPeggy Rajski
Maggie Renzi
StarringJoe Morton
Darryl Edwards
Steve James
Bill Cobbs
David Strathairn
CinematographyErnest R. Dickerson
Edited byJohn Sayles
Music byMason Daring
John Sayles
Denzil Botus
Distributed byCinecom Pictures
Release date
  • September 7, 1984 (1984-09-07) (United States)
Running time
108 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$350,000[2]
Box officeover $4 million[2]

The Brother from Another Planet is a 1984 low-budget American science fiction film, written and directed by John Sayles.

The film stars Joe Morton as an escaped extraterrestrial slave trying to find a new life on Earth.[3] Due to an error in proper copyright protocols, the film became part of the public domain during its original release.[4]

The film was a moderate financial success, and critical reviews were largely positive. Morton's performance as The Brother was acclaimed, as he had no lines of dialogue and had to communicate entirely through facial expressions and body language.

Plot

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A mute space alien crash-lands his ship on Ellis Island. Other than his three-toed feet, which he keeps covered, he resembles a black human man. Because of his torn clothing, he is also viewed as a homeless man.

His extraterrestrial powers are shown in many encounters: When he lays his hand on a wall, he can hear the voices of those who once filled a building - he cannot speak, but he can listen with great sympathy. Misunderstanding the transactions in a mom-and-pop shop, he begins eating a head of lettuce and a tomato (he is a vegetarian); when the shopkeeper begins screaming at him in Korean, he magically opens the cash register and hands her money from it, but this leads her to call for the police outdoors. When pursued by a police officer down the street, he leaps to a high perch on the wall, and the officer cannot find him.

He manages to blend in with the people he encounters and engages in one-sided conversations with various denizens of New York City. In a memorable scene, he meets a card trickster on a train who accepts his silence and hesitance to select a card; the trickster narrates a fast funny story involving the face cards, then departs, showing the Brother that some New Yorkers are simply amicable and amusing without wanting anything in return.

He makes friends at Odell's friendly local bar in Harlem. Odell secures him housing with single mom Randy Sue Carter and her little son. Able to heal wounds and fix machines by hovering his hand over them, he repairs an arcade cabinet there and speeds up the workings of its video game, to the delight of patrons. This leads to local man Sam getting him a job as a handyman and technician at a video arcade.

When he observes drug use and its negative effects in Harlem, he reveals another power: He temporarily removes one of his eyes and uses it like a video camera. In this way, he is able to find the man supplying the drug dealers in Harlem, and thereafter to investigate them.

Two men in black, keen on the mute alien's whereabouts, begin to track him and interrogate the people he has encountered. They seek to return him to the planet from which he escaped. However, in a showdown at Odell's bar, the locals protect him from being taken away.

Cast

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Production

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Writing

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The premise for the film came about from a series of dreams Sayles had while making the film Lianna: the first involving alien car salesmen called Assholes from Outer Space, the second a film noir take on Bigfoot, and the third about an extraterrestrial who looks like a black man in Harlem, an idea which Sayles loved. Cherry-picking elements from the other two dreams, he wrote the first draft of the screenplay in a little under a week.[5]

According to a Daily Variety (July 10, 1984) article, Sayles wrote it while waiting to secure funding for Matewan (1987), and decided to go ahead first with The Brother.[6]

Financing

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Sayles spent part of his MacArthur Fellows "genius" grant on the film, which cost $350,000 to produce.[7]

Sayles also invested his own money acquired from cable sales of Return of the Secaucus 7, as well as writing fees for his work adapting The Clan of the Cave Bear and its sequel, The Valley of Horses.[5]

Filming

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The film was shot on location chiefly in Harlem, chiefly at night, with a predominantly black cast and crew, during four weeks in March 1984.[5][6]

Locations include:

Director of photography Ernest R. Dickerson told an interviewer in American Cinematographer that he shot with "high contrasts, keeping the color bright and saturated, yet still using natural colors." In order to emphasize the humanity of the characters, Dickerson said he strove for subtlety over the "razzle-dazzle" typical of science fiction movies.[6] Jessica Ritchey of the website RogerEbert.com wrote of the result, "The film is beautiful to look at too, shot in the warm golds and purples of twilight in New York City. Sayles and cinematographer Ernest R. Dickerson take advantage of that certain slant of light that can turn a city space from inviting to sinister in a moment. And the scrappiness of the film's few fantastical props and effects are a nod to Sayles' B-movie roots for New World Pictures, something current sci-fi films could do well to remember."[9]

Anjuli M. Singh of the American Film Institute reports, "In order to emphasize the humanity of the characters, Dickerson said he strove for subtlety over the 'razzle-dazzle' typically seen in science fiction films. Given the film's low budget and Sayles's focus on characters over science fiction elements, few special effects were attempted. For a scene at the Baby Grand nightclub in which the filmmakers needed a smoky atmosphere but could not afford a smoke machine, gaffers smoked cigarettes and blew smoke behind actress Dee Dee Bridgewater (Malverne ). As filming permits for the subway were difficult to attain, the card trick scene that takes place in a moving subway car was filmed in an out-of-service car on display in a subway museum. The second-to-last scene of the film, in which “The Brother” looks out the window of a moving subway car, was shot illicitly with a hidden camera inside a working subway car, since the crew had not obtained permission to shoot there."[6]

Themes

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Director John Sayles has described The Brother from Another Planet as being about the immigrant experience of cultural assimilation.[10] Extras from the film described it as "The Black E.T. movie."[11]

Two aliens who resemble white men hunt for the Brother to return him to their planet. They consider the Brother an inferior race not because of his skin color, but because he has three toes.

Reception and legacy

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On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 89% based on 28 critical reviews, with an average rating of 7.1/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Featuring director John Sayles trademark humanity and an expressive performance from Joe Morton, The Brother from Another Planet is an observant, dryly comic sci-fi gem."[12]

Variety called The Brother from Another Planet a "vastly amusing but progressively erratic" film structured as a "series of behavioral vignettes, [many of which] are genuinely delightful and inventive"; as it continues, the film "takes a rather unpleasant and, ultimately, confusing turn."[1] Vincent Canby called it a "nice, unsurprising shaggy-dog story that goes on far too long" but singled out "Joe Morton's sweet, wise, unaggressive performance."[13] Roger Ebert gave the film three-and-a-half stars out of four, saying "the movie finds countless opportunities for humorous scenes, most of them with a quiet little bite, a way of causing us to look at our society", noting that "by using a central character who cannot talk, [Sayles] is sometimes able to explore the kinds of scenes that haven't been possible since the death of silent film."[14]

The A.V. Club, in a 2003 review of the film's DVD release, said the film's superhero scenes are "often unintentionally silly, but again, Sayles shapes a catchy premise into a subtler piece, using Morton's 'alien' status as a way of asking who deserves to be called an outsider in a country born of outsiders"; commenting on the DVD, they noted its "marvelous" audio commentary track by Sayles, "who moves fluidly from behind-the-scenes anecdotes to useful technical tips to unpretentious dissections of his own themes."[15]

Paul Attanasio wrote: "Sayles is no storyteller; despite the verve of its language, The Brother From Another Planet eventually sags of its own weight. And all his movies are hampered by an almost shocking ignorance of filmmaking fundamentals -- he just doesn't know where to put his camera. The movie would have benefited from more attention to the bounty hunters, whose difficulties with Harlem culture would have balanced the Brother's strange ease of assimilation. Instead, the plot takes a centrifugal turn as the Brother roots out a scag baron whose drugs are poisoning the community."[16]

The film has become a cult classic.[17][18]

Accolades

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Sundance Film Festival - Special Jury Recognition (1985)[19]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Variety Staff (December 31, 1983). "The Brother From Another Planet". Variety. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  2. ^ a b Gerry Molyneaux, John Sayles, Renaissance Books, 2000, p. 135.
  3. ^ Brother From Another Planet: The Movie That Brought Historic Black Experiences to Sci-Fi - MovieWeb
  4. ^ Critics At Large : Digging into the Past: Watching Public Domain Films Online
  5. ^ a b c Jones, Alan (September 1984). "The Brother from Another Planet". Cinefantastique. p. 15. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d Singh, Anjuli M. "The Brother from Another Planet (1984)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  7. ^ Nayman, Adam (February 24, 2023). "The Brother From Another Planet Reimagined What It Meant To Be Lost In America". Downtime. Jambys. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  8. ^ "The Brother from Another Planet (1984)". On the Set of New York. May 2015. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  9. ^ Ritchey, Jessica (February 13, 2017). "How to Live in This World: On The Brother from Another Planet". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  10. ^ Jawetz, Gil (June 6, 2002). "The Return of The Brother from Another Planet: The John Sayles Interview". DVDtalk.com. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  11. ^ Harmetz, Aljean (25 October 1983). "John Sayles is Secure at Last". The New York Times.
  12. ^ "The Brother from Another Planet". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  13. ^ Vincent Canby (September 14, 1984). "Sayles's Brother". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  14. ^ Roger Ebert (January 1, 1984). "The Brother From Another Planet". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  15. ^ Noel Murray (October 14, 2003). "Return Of The Secaucus 7 (DVD) / Men With Guns (DVD) / The Brother From Another Planet (DVD) / Lianna (DVD)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
  16. ^ Attanasio, Paul (1984-11-16). "Listen to 'Brother'". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-04-26.
  17. ^ Roeper, Richard (April 20, 2020). "'Time Warp' sheds light on cult movies and the diehards who love them". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  18. ^ Fiedler, Martynne (25 Jan 2024). "48 Facts About The Movie The Brother From Another Planet". Facts.net. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  19. ^ 1985 Sundance Film Festival Archived 2012-01-31 at the Wayback Machine sundance.org
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