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mahatmakanejeeves

(57,600 posts)
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 02:37 PM Jul 2021

On this day, July 18, 1951, Klaatu and Gort landed on the Ellipse.

Last edited Tue Aug 10, 2021, 08:35 PM - Edit history (1)

Jul 18th 1951 - Klaatu finds a laundry ticket with this date on the suit he stole #DayTheEarthStoodStill



Sat Jul 18, 2020: On this day, July 18, 1951, Klaatu and Gort landed on the Ellipse.

The timeline for that movie is way out of whack. For that matter, so is the trip that Klaatu and Patricia Neal took to get to Professor Barnhardt's home. The way they take makes no sense.

Early on, we are told it is a beautiful spring day in Washington. Later on in the movie, Mr. Carpenter checks a laundry receipt. There is a date on that receipt. Someone took that information and came up with Klaatu and Gort's landing day.

Take it with a grain of salt.

The Day the Earth Stood Still - timeline

1951

Wednesday 18th July: Klaatu arrives on Earth with Gort and a cautionary message to halt experiments with violence, atomic energy, and space travel. (Washington DC)

From my favorite movie:



Prelude - Outer Space - Radar
10,292 views•Nov 8, 2014

Bernard Herrmann - Topic
2.67K subscribers

Provided to YouTube by Routenote

Prelude - Outer Space - Radar · Bernard Herrmann (conductor), Bernard Herrmann Ensemble

The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951 Film Score)

℗ Classic Film Scores

Let's show the first few minutes:



The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) title sequence
9,506 views•Sep 24, 2017

MovieTitles
9.74K subscribers

Title sequence from The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)

I first saw The Day the Earth Stood Still on NBC's Saturday Night at the Movies, in about 1961. The elevator scene still terrifies me.



The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) - Power Outage
25,661 views•Jul 30, 2013

Andy Friedhof
73 subscribers



The Day The Earth Stood Still
51,494 views•Feb 25, 2008

mikesbigyellowtaxi
60 subscribers

Final moments from this 1951 classic B movie starring Michael Rennie.



Does All This Frighten You? - The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951)
316 views•Mar 9, 2020

Henry Stites
117 subscribers

Barnhardt : Tell me, Hilda, does all this frighten you? Does it make you feel insecure? Hilda : Yes, sir, it certainly does. Barnhardt : That's good, Hilda. I'm glad.
10 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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On this day, July 18, 1951, Klaatu and Gort landed on the Ellipse. (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2021 OP
Klatu. Barada. Nicto. WheelWalker Jul 2021 #1
A correction ... Jeebo Jul 2021 #2
I am surprised it came out in 1951. I probably first doc03 Jul 2021 #3
The first time I saw it was when it was shown on mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2021 #8
Later in the movie ... mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2021 #5
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Jul 2021 #6
Isn't that great? There really is a professor Barnhardt's house. You can walk right up to it. NT mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2021 #7
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Jul 2021 #9
More about that taxi ride: mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2021 #10
My husband and I love this movie... Blue Dawn Jul 2021 #4

Jeebo

(2,026 posts)
2. A correction ...
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 04:01 PM
Jul 2021

I've seen that movie umpteen times. It's one of my favorite movies EVER. Like you, I saw it for the first time when NBC showed it on that Saturday night in 1961. It had a profound effect on me then, at age 11, and it still affects me deeply now. The music is wonderful; I think it's as good an example as anybody can find of a movie soundtrack that complements the movie perfectly.

Now for the correction: Klaatu didn't go to Professor Barnhardt's home with Patricia Neal's character, but with her son, her little boy. The boy was showing Klaatu around D.C. and that was one of the places they visited. The elevator scene you reference is between Klaatu and Patricia Neal's character, and yes, it is a very important scene in the movie.

If you haven't seen it already, don't watch that awful remake with Keanu Reeves. It is truly dreadful; when they made that movie they completely forgot what made the original so good. They totally ruined it. Which is what usually happens when they start taking liberties with original classics.

-- Ron

doc03

(35,363 posts)
3. I am surprised it came out in 1951. I probably first
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 04:36 PM
Jul 2021

saw it around 1960 I would have been around 12.

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,600 posts)
8. The first time I saw it was when it was shown on
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 05:58 PM
Jul 2021

NBC Saturday Night at the Movies. It scared the living daylights out of me.

NBC Saturday Night at the Movies

NBC Saturday Night at the Movies was the first TV show to broadcast in color relatively recent feature films from major studios. The series premiered on September 23, 1961, and ran until October 1978, spawning many imitators. Previously, television stations had been only been able to show older, low-budget, black-and-white films that wouldn't be shown at movie theaters. In the late 1970s, competition from cable television and home video led to a decline in viewership.

{snip}

History

Background and early history

Further information: List of NBC Saturday Night at the Movies titles

{snip}

For its 1961–62 television season, NBC obtained the rights to broadcast 31 post-1950 movie titles from 20th Century Fox, although only 30 were actually telecast that season (one film, The Seven Year Itch, not being televised until the start of the 1963 season). On September 23, 1961, Saturday Night at the Movies premiered with the 1953 Marilyn Monroe–Lauren Bacall–Betty Grable film How to Marry a Millionaire, presented "In Living Color". Some of the other movies shown were The Day the Earth Stood Still (March 3, 1962) and No Highway in the Sky (March 24, 1962). (Having been filmed in Cinemascope, a Fox specialty from 1953 to 1967, many of these films had to be severely panned-and-scanned to fit the invariable full screen television aspect ratio of the time.)

{snip}

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,600 posts)
5. Later in the movie ...
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 05:47 PM
Jul 2021
Now for the correction: Klaatu didn't go to Professor Barnhardt's home with Patricia Neal's character, but with her son, her little boy. The boy was showing Klaatu around D.C. and that was one of the places they visited. The elevator scene you reference is between Klaatu and Patricia Neal's character, and yes, it is a very important scene in the movie.

Got it. I'm referring to a later scene.

SPOILER WARNING FOR ANYONE WHO HAS NOT SEEN THE MOVIE

The Day the Earth Stood Still

{snip}

Plot

{snip}

When Helen and her boyfriend Tom Stevens go out, Klaatu babysits Bobby. The boy takes Klaatu on a tour of the city, including a visit to his father's grave in Arlington National Cemetery; Klaatu learns that most of the deceased are soldiers killed in wars. They also visit the Lincoln Memorial.

Klaatu poses a question to Bobby, "Who's the greatest living person?" Bobby suggests Professor Barnhardt. Bobby takes Klaatu to Barnhardt's home, but the professor is out. Klaatu writes an equation on a blackboard to assist Barnhardt with a celestial mechanics problem; he leaves his contact information with the suspicious housekeeper.

{snip}

That's the scene you're talking about. But, later on ...

{snip}

Klaatu reveals his true identity to Helen and asks for her help.

Helen and Klaatu decide to visit Barnhardt. On the way, he tells her that should anything happen to him she must go to Gort and say, "Klaatu barada nikto." Their taxi is spotted and hemmed in. Klaatu is shot dead, and Helen rushes to the saucer.

{snip}

Those are the scenes where the taxi Klaatu and Patricia Neal are in takes this incomprehensible route to get to professor Barnhardt's house. They go every which way, and it doesn't make any sense.

Do you know that there really is a professor Barnhardt's house? Although most of the movie was shot on a back lot in California, there really is a house in DC that appears in the movie. It's north of Logan Circle. I've never been by it. I should make the effort to see it.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Movie Tourist Blogspot The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)

{snip}

Klaatu and Bobby go to Professor Barnhardt's house - 1609 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC





{snip}

HTH. Thanks for writing.

Response to mahatmakanejeeves (Reply #5)

Response to mahatmakanejeeves (Reply #7)

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,600 posts)
10. More about that taxi ride:
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 06:00 PM
Jul 2021
Gort Revisits DC 60 Years After The Day the Earth Stood Still

Posted on February 13, 2012 by Dead Man

{snip}

The Bizarre Cab Ride Through “Zone 5”

In the climactic sequence of The Day the Earth Stood Still, Klaatu hops into a cab with Helen Benson at Mrs. Crockett’s boarding house. He is clearly in a hurry to get to Professor Barnhardt’s house, and according to Google maps the trip from 1412 Harvard St. NW to 1609 16th St. NW should have taken four minutes, involving no more than three turns (south on 14th St. NW, west on U St. NW, and south on 16th St. NW). The cab driver, however, perhaps sensing that Klaatu is an alien and unfamiliar with the streets of Washington DC, takes him on a sightseeing of our nation’s capital.

Executing “Plan Baker,” the army in hot pursuit of Klaatu arrives at Mrs. Crockett’s boarding house just after Klaatu and Helen leave in the cab. Bobby’s friend Sammy tells the soldiers that they headed north on 14th St. (which would be the wrong direction) but shortly after that we see the cab pass by the Capitol building, which is well to the south. What started out as a 1.3 mile trip lasting four minutes is now going to be at least five times as long (according to Google maps this would be a 6.7 mile trip lasting 24 minutes). The next place we see the cab is when it passes in front of the Warner Building, which is at 1299 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. This actually makes some sense given the huge detour they’ve already taken. The commanding officer then asks the men to report the position they see the cab. “Heading west on 15th Street at Treasury Place,” is the first report. Well, this doesn’t really make sense since 15th St. runs north-south, but 15th St. does go by the Treasury, so let’s just give the soldier the benefit of the doubt and assume he meant that the cab had turned north toward Prof. Barnhardt’s house. The next report is that, “the target vehicle is turning west into Massachusetts Avenue.” OK, well Massachusetts Ave. goes northwest, but close enough in this case. Turning (north)west onto Massachusetts Ave. from 15th St. would mean that they are just a block away from Scott Circle. The cab driver should then take 16th St. NW from the Scott Circle, and then it’s just four blocks to Prof. Barnhardt’s, making up for that crazy idea of taking Helen and Klaatu to the Capitol. But then… “Yellow cab heading northwest at Columbia Road and Connecticut.” Oh wow, where is this cab driver going? Heading northwest at Columbia Road and Connecticut Ave. would mean they not only stayed on Massachusetts Ave. through Scott Circle, but they’ve also gone through Dupont Circle and are now the better part of a mile away from Professor Barnhardt’s house about to head across Rock Creek Park. At that point the commanding officer gives a puzzling order, “Block off all streets intersecting Connnecticut Avenue on a line from Wisconsin to the park”. I assume he means Wisconsin Ave. and Rock Creek Park, but he might just as well be referring to the state of Wisconsin for the confusion this order would no doubt have caused. Wisconsin Ave. is several blocks to the west of Rock Creek Park and several of the streets intersecting Connecticut Ave. west of the park do not go through to Wisconsin Ave. No matter, though. Immediately after that he gives the order, “all vehicles close in.” The next time we see the cab it is going through the Connecticut Ave. underpass at Dupont Circle, so the cab driver must have turned around at some point. When they emerge from the underpass they are surrounded by military vehicles and Klaatu takes off on foot only to be gunned down a second time. Had they made it to Professor Barnhardt’s house, the route would have looked something like this:

{snip the map, which isn't there anyway}

Blue Dawn

(892 posts)
4. My husband and I love this movie...
Sun Jul 18, 2021, 05:33 PM
Jul 2021

....and have seen it numerous times.

We especially like the message at the end, a warning to mankind.

Pretty awesome.

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