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[[File:space_mutiny_-_orig1.jpg|frame|<small>The poster doesn't get the ''title'' right, and the golf carts didn't fly, but everything else is disturbingly accurate, including the railing kills.</small> ]]
[[File:space_mutiny_-_orig1.jpg|frame|<small>The poster doesn't get the ''title'' right, and the golf carts didn't fly, but everything else is disturbingly accurate, including the railing kills.</small> ]]


{{quote|''"Ahahah, good, good, back to the rusting septic system of this ''futuristic space ship!''"''
|'''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000|Tom Servo]]'''}}


''[[Space Mutiny]]'' (also known as ''Mutiny in Space'') is a 1988 legendarily bad science-fiction action film starring [[Reb Brown]] about, [[Sarcasm Mode|surprisingly enough]], a mutiny aboard the spaceship known as the ''Southern Sun''.
{{quote|''"Ahahah, good, good, back to the rusting septic system of this ''futuristic space ship!''"''|'''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV)|Tom Servo]]'''}}


The ''Southern Sun'' is a seedship, a spacefaring vessel full of colonists out to settle a new world. [[Generation Ships|Its voyage has lasted generations, so many of its inhabitants have been born and will die without ever setting foot on solid ground.]] This does not please the antagonist, [[Big Bad|Elijah Kalgan]] (not be confused with [[wikipedia:Calgon|Calgon]]), who conspires with the [[Space Pirates|pirates infesting the nearby Corona Borealis system]] and the ship's Chief Engineer MacPhearson. Kalgan hatches a plot to disrupt the ''Southern Sun'''s navigation systems and use the Enforcers, the ship's police force, to hijack the ship and direct it towards this system. At this point, the inhabitants of the ''Southern Sun'' will have no choice but to accept his 'generosity'.
'''''Space Mutiny''''' (also known as ''Mutiny in Space'') is a 1988 legendarily bad science-fiction action film starring [[Reb Brown]] about, [[Sarcasm Mode|surprisingly enough]], a mutiny aboard the spaceship known as the ''Southern Sun''.

The ''Southern Sun'' is a seedship, a spacefaring vessel full of colonists out to settle a new world. [[Generation Ships|Its voyage has lasted generations, so many of its inhabitants have been born and will die without ever setting foot on solid ground.]] This does not please the antagonist, [[Big Bad|Elijah Kalgan]] (not be confused with [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calgon Calgon]), who conspires with the [[Space Pirates|pirates infesting the nearby Corona Borealis system]] and the ship's Chief Engineer MacPhearson. Kalgan hatches a plot to disrupt the ''Southern Sun'''s navigation systems and use the Enforcers, the ship's police force, to hijack the ship and direct it towards this system. At this point, the inhabitants of the ''Southern Sun'' will have no choice but to accept his 'generosity'.


Kalgan sabotages the vessel's guidance system just as an important professor's shuttle is on a landing trajectory, causing it to crash [[Offscreen Crash|(offscreen)]]. The ship's pilot, [[The Hero|Dave Ryder]], is able to escape, but the professor dies in the explosion. This sabotage seals off the flight deck for a number of weeks, allowing Kalgan and the Enforcers to hold the entire population of the Southern Sun hostage. Commander Jansen and Captain Devers enlist Ryder's assistance, aided begrudgingly by Jansen's daughter [[Love Interests|Dr. Lea Jansen]], to regain control of the ship.
Kalgan sabotages the vessel's guidance system just as an important professor's shuttle is on a landing trajectory, causing it to crash [[Offscreen Crash|(offscreen)]]. The ship's pilot, [[The Hero|Dave Ryder]], is able to escape, but the professor dies in the explosion. This sabotage seals off the flight deck for a number of weeks, allowing Kalgan and the Enforcers to hold the entire population of the Southern Sun hostage. Commander Jansen and Captain Devers enlist Ryder's assistance, aided begrudgingly by Jansen's daughter [[Love Interests|Dr. Lea Jansen]], to regain control of the ship.


''[[Space Mutiny]]'' was filmed in [[Useful Notes/South Africa|South Africa]] during [[The Apartheid Era]] (a fact understandably not mentioned on the end credits - see also ''Prisoners of the Lost Universe'', ''Golden Rendezvous'', ''Hellgate'' etc), which some viewers think ties in to all the pseudo-fascistic goings-on (and explains the all-white cast, not that that was exactly unusual in Hollywood action movies of the time).
''[[Space Mutiny]]'' was filmed in [[South Africa]] during [[The Apartheid Era]] (a fact understandably not mentioned on the end credits - see also ''Prisoners of the Lost Universe'', ''Golden Rendezvous'', ''Hellgate'' etc), which some viewers think ties in to all the pseudo-fascistic goings-on (and explains the all-white cast, not that that was exactly unusual in Hollywood action movies of the time).


For the ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' version, please go to the [[Mystery Science Theater 3000 (TV)/Recap/S08 E20 Space Mutiny|episode recap page]].
For the ''[[Mystery Science Theater 3000]]'' version, please go to the [[Mystery Science Theater 3000/Recap/S08/E20 Space Mutiny|episode recap page]].
----
=== Tropes used in ''[[Space Mutiny]]'': ===


{{tropelist}}
* [[Artistic License Astronomy]]: "Constellation" is used as a meaningful locational term.
* [[Artistic License Astronomy]]: "Constellation" is used as a meaningful locational term.
* [[A-Team Firing]]: Lea among others had poor aim. With both Kalgan and Ryder's "speeders" bearing down on her, she fires at Kalgan... and [[Stop Helping Me|manages to hit Ryder's speeder]], [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero|temporarily disabling it]].
* [[A-Team Firing]]: Lea among others had poor aim. With both Kalgan and Ryder's "speeders" bearing down on her, she fires at Kalgan... and [[Stop Helping Me!|manages to hit Ryder's speeder]], [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero|temporarily disabling it]].
* [[Back From the Dead]]: Due to poor editing, a woman who was murdered reappears (as an extra) in the very next scene.
* [[Back from the Dead]]: Due to poor editing, a woman who was murdered reappears (as an extra) in the very next scene.
* [[Better to Die Than Be Killed]]: Steve Codell says he'd rather jump to his doom than join Kalgan (or be put on ice). He's just climbing over the railing when Kalgan gives him a push.
* [[Better to Die Than Be Killed]]: Steve Codell says he'd rather jump to his doom than join Kalgan (or be put on ice). He's just climbing over the railing when Kalgan gives him a push.
* [[Bridge Bunnies]]: Some of whom are dressed so scantily they may as well be Hugh Hefner Bunnies.
* [[Bridge Bunnies]]: Some of whom are dressed so scantily they may as well be Hugh Hefner Bunnies.
* [[The Captain]]: Commander Jansen.
* [[The Captain]]: Commander Jansen.
* [[Chase Scene]]: Done with ''floor waxers.''
* [[Chase Scene]]: Done with ''floor waxers.''
* [[The Chosen One]]: Ryder.
* [[The Chosen One]]: Ryder.
* [[Cool Starship]]: <s> The Galactica</s> The Southern Sun.
* [[Cool Starship]]: <s>The ''Galactica''</s> The Southern Sun.
* [[Covers Always Lie]]: Sort of. ''[http://agonybooth.com/recaps/Space_Mutiny_1988.aspx The Agony Booth]'' tells us that the VHS packaging claims the film features "''breathtaking special effects from the team that brought you [[Star Wars]]''." This is ''technically'' true, in the sense that the team that worked on ''[[Star Wars]]'' went on to do SFX for the original ''[[Battlestar Galactica Classic (TV)|Battlestar Galactica Classic]]'' series, [[Stock Footage]] from which was used for ''[[Space Mutiny]]''. The rest of the film's special effects, [[Special Effects Failure|on the other hand]]...
* [[Covers Always Lie]]: Sort of. ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20130917203738/http://www.agonybooth.com/recaps/Space_Mutiny_1988.aspx The Agony Booth]'' tells us that the VHS packaging claims the film features "''breathtaking special effects from the team that brought you [[Star Wars]]''." This is ''technically'' true, in the sense that the team that worked on ''[[Star Wars]]'' went on to do SFX for the original ''[[Battlestar Galactica (1978 TV series)|Battlestar Galactica]]'' series, [[Stock Footage]] from which was used for ''[[Space Mutiny]]''. The rest of the film's special effects, [[Special Effects Failure|on the other hand]]...
* [[Creator Backlash]]: The credited director, David Winters (whose other major contribution to the world of cinema was choreographing the dance routines in ''[[The Star Wars Holiday Special]]'') actually only directed a small portion of it, after which he quit due to family troubles. He wanted his credit changed to [[Alan Smithee]], but found out the hard way that the Director's Guild doesn't really care about the credits on low-budget exploitation films.
* [[Creator Backlash]]: The credited director, David Winters (whose other major contribution to the world of cinema was choreographing the dance routines in ''[[The Star Wars Holiday Special]]'') actually only directed a small portion of it, after which he quit due to family troubles. He wanted his credit changed to [[Alan Smithee]], but found out the hard way that the Director's Guild doesn't really care about the credits on low-budget exploitation films.
** For an encore, Neal Sundstrom, the director who was ''actually'' responsible for the bulk of the film, wasn't very happy with the finished product either, and elected to have a "co-director" title which was buried in the end credits.
** For an encore, Neal Sundstrom, the director who was ''actually'' responsible for the bulk of the film, wasn't very happy with the finished product either, and elected to have a "co-director" title which was buried in the end credits.
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* [[Department of Redundancy Department]]: "We keep this TOP CLASSIFIED SECRET."
* [[Department of Redundancy Department]]: "We keep this TOP CLASSIFIED SECRET."
** "And there wasn't time to go to the auxiliary backup system."
** "And there wasn't time to go to the auxiliary backup system."
* [[Die Hard On an X|Die Hard On A Spaceship.]]
* [[Die Hard on an X|Die Hard On A Spaceship.]]
* [[Dude Looks Like a Lady]] (or is it Lady Looks Like A Dude?)
* [[Dude Looks Like a Lady]] (or is it Lady Looks Like A Dude?)
{{quote| '''Crow:''' [[This Is Spinal Tap|She's got a' armadillo down 'er trousers!]]}}
{{quote|'''Crow:''' [[This Is Spinal Tap|She's got a' armadillo down 'er trousers!]]}}
* [[Eye Awaken]] - "I'm sitting in something wet!"
* [[Eye Awaken]] - "I'm sitting in something wet!"
* [[Fan Disservice]]: Leah's fake seduction scene with the balding, flabby guard. Thanks for the zoom in on his pasty chest, movie.
* [[Fan Disservice]]: Leah's fake seduction scene with the balding, flabby guard. Thanks for the zoom in on his pasty chest, movie.
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* [[Greek Chorus]]: The Bellerians
* [[Greek Chorus]]: The Bellerians
* [[Groin Attack]]: Repeatedly. On the same guard.
* [[Groin Attack]]: Repeatedly. On the same guard.
* [[Hey It's That Guy]]: Kalgan is played by John Phillip Law, who starred in ''[[Danger Diabolik (Film)|Danger Diabolik]]'' and as the blind angel Pygar in ''[[Barbarella]]''. Reb Brown, AKA "He who has many names", also starred in ''[[Yor the Hunter From The Future]]'' as the title character, and played [[Captain America]] in a (mercifully) busted pilot movie. Let's not forget that the actor playing the Santa is Cameron Mitchell.
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]: Kalgan is played by John Phillip Law, who starred in ''[[Danger: Diabolik]]'' and as the blind angel Pygar in ''[[Barbarella]]''. Reb Brown, AKA "He who has many names", also starred in ''[[Yor, the Hunter from the Future]]'' as the title character, and played [[Captain America (comics)]] in a (mercifully) busted pilot movie. Let's not forget that the actor playing the Santa is Cameron Mitchell.
* [[I Did What I Had to Do]]: Verbatim from Ryder as he's [[What the Hell, Hero?|called out for letting Professor Spooner burn to death]].
* [[I Did What I Had to Do]]: Verbatim from Ryder as he's [[What the Hell, Hero?|called out for letting Professor Spooner burn to death]].
** It doesn't even make sense, since he was teleported out of the fire by an automatic ejection system.
** It doesn't even make sense, since he was teleported out of the fire by an automatic ejection system.
* [[I Have Your Wife|I Have Your Daughter]]: The mutineers attempt this by capturing Lea. Unfortunately, she's savvy enough to get out on her own.
* [[I Have Your Wife|I Have Your Daughter]]: The mutineers attempt this by capturing Lea. Unfortunately, she's savvy enough to get out on her own.
* [[I Meant to Do That]]: The filmmakers claim that ''Space Mutiny'' is supposed to be a spoof.
* [[I Meant to Do That]]: The filmmakers claim that ''Space Mutiny'' is supposed to be a spoof.
** The people with the distribution rights to the film don't. The packaging for the un-MSTed version of the film clearly states "It's Hilarious... But Not On Purpose".
** The people with the distribution rights to the film don't. The packaging for the un-MSTed version of the film clearly states "It's Hilarious... But Not On Purpose".
** Then there's the whole [[Creator Backlash]] thing (see above). They ''meant'' it to be bad, but still didn't want the blame?
** Then there's the whole [[Creator Backlash]] thing (see above). They ''meant'' it to be bad, but still didn't want the blame?
* [[Insistent Terminology]]
* [[Insistent Terminology]]
{{quote| '''David Ryder''': Listen lady!<br />
{{quote|'''David Ryder''': Listen lady!
'''Lea''': ''Doctor!''<br />
'''Lea''': ''Doctor!''
'''Ryder''': Doctor. }}
'''Ryder''': Doctor. }}
* [[Join or Die]]: Variant. Kalgan offers a technician who discovers his evil plot to either join or be cyrogenically frozen. The technician chooses a third option of dying. Kalgan obliges.
* [[Join or Die]]: Variant. Kalgan offers a technician who discovers his evil plot to either join or be cyrogenically frozen. The technician chooses a third option of dying. Kalgan obliges.
* [[Large Ham]]: Not only our hero Ryder, but Kalgan and his right-hand flunky MacPherson.
* [[Large Ham]]: Not only our hero Ryder, but Kalgan and his right-hand flunky MacPherson.
{{quote| '''Kalgan:''' I'm surrounded by incompetence! I'm being undermined by my own disciples!}}
{{quote|'''Kalgan:''' I'm surrounded by incompetence! I'm being undermined by my own disciples!}}
* [[Laughably Evil]]: Kalgan
* [[Laughably Evil]]: Kalgan
* [[May-December Romance]]: The Bellarians giving a lapd-- ''ahem'', imparting the truth to the captain.
* [[May-December Romance]]: The Bellarians giving a lapd-- ''ahem'', imparting the truth to the captain.
* [[Mickey Mousing]]: When MacPherson stabs a dissenting crew member.
* [[Mickey Mousing]]: When MacPherson stabs a dissenting crew member.
* [[Mooks]]: The Enforcers.
* [[Mooks]]: The Enforcers.
* [[Moral Dissonance]]: Ryder's [[Man On Fire|gruesome method]] of dispatching the helpless MacPherson.
* [[Moral Dissonance]]: Ryder's [[Man On Fire|gruesome method]] of dispatching the helpless MacPherson.
* [[Neutral Female]]: Lea's attempts to help out in a firefight are marginally effective at best. At worst, she does more damage to Ryder than to Kalgan, because she shoots ''Ryder's'' go-kart.
* [[Neutral Female]]: Lea's attempts to help out in a firefight are marginally effective at best. At worst, she does more damage to Ryder than to Kalgan, because she shoots ''Ryder's'' go-kart.
* [[No OSHA Compliance]]: Averted, [[Railing Kill|big time]].
* [[No OSHA Compliance]]: Averted, [[Railing Kill|big time]].
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** Note that they have exactly no impact on the plot. It's fairly obvious the part was added after everything else was shot, since except for the one brief scene with Santa no-one they interact with ever shows up in the main story even as mooks.
** Note that they have exactly no impact on the plot. It's fairly obvious the part was added after everything else was shot, since except for the one brief scene with Santa no-one they interact with ever shows up in the main story even as mooks.
* [[Parody Retcon]]: Assuming you don't take Mrs. Cameron's insistence that this was a [[Stealth Parody]] at face value, of course.
* [[Parody Retcon]]: Assuming you don't take Mrs. Cameron's insistence that this was a [[Stealth Parody]] at face value, of course.
* [[People Jars]]: Kalgan tends to freeze prisoners (or [[You Have Failed Me|failure subordinates]]) in cryogenic suspension rather than kill them outright. This is actually a fairly canny move, as once he's taken over the ship he can thaw them out so they can still be useful to him. Unfortunately the movie didn't have a budget for a cryogenics lab so they just hung four or five guys wrapped in plastic up on a coat rack.
* [[People Jars]]: Kalgan tends to freeze prisoners (or [[You Have Failed Me...|failure subordinates]]) in cryogenic suspension rather than kill them outright. This is actually a fairly canny move, as once he's taken over the ship he can thaw them out so they can still be useful to him. Unfortunately the movie didn't have a budget for a cryogenics lab so they just hung four or five guys wrapped in plastic up on a coat rack.
* [[The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything]]: Not the actual pirates in the movie, who at least try to do something, but this trope does apply to Captain Devers.
* [[The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything]]: Not the actual pirates in the movie, who at least try to do something, but this trope does apply to Captain Devers.
* [[Punch Clock Villain]]: The Mortuary Keeper is just there running the facility where failed Mooks are frozen until necessary. He may work for the villain, but when the heroes arrive he asks if they need help or would like a cup of tea. He also answers all their questions about the [[Big Bad]]'s [[Evil Plan]]. He doesn't really seem evil at all.
* [[Punch Clock Villain]]: The Mortuary Keeper is just there running the facility where failed Mooks are frozen until necessary. He may work for the villain, but when the heroes arrive he asks if they need help or would like a cup of tea. He also answers all their questions about the [[Big Bad]]'s [[Evil Plan]]. He doesn't really seem evil at all.
** You could arguably count Lobster Boy and the Enforcers as a whole, though they're at the very least openly mean-spirited.
** You could arguably count Lobster Boy and the Enforcers as a whole, though they're at the very least openly mean-spirited.
* [[Railing Kill]]: The [[Trope Namer]], seeing as they appear in abundance. Hell, it even appears in the poster above.
* [[Railing Kill]]: The [[Trope Namer]], seeing as they appear in abundance. Hell, it even appears in the poster above.
* [[Red Right Hand]]: MacPhearson's limp.
* [[Red Right Hand]]: MacPhearson's limp.
* [[Relationship Reboot]]: Blast Hardcheese and Doctor Lady do this.
* [[Relationship Reboot]]: Blast Hardcheese and Doctor Lady do this.
* [[Romance On the Set]]: The awkward romance between Dave and Lea is a major contrast to real life - Reb Brown (Dave) and Cisse Cameron (Lea) fell in love during the Ted Knight Show back in 1979, and are still married today.
* [[Romance on the Set]]: The awkward romance between Dave and Lea is a major contrast to real life - Reb Brown (Dave) and Cisse Cameron (Lea) fell in love during the Ted Knight Show back in 1979, and are still married today.
* [[The Schlub Pub Seduction Deduction]]. Lea on the doughy henchmen.
* [[The Schlub Pub Seduction Deduction]]. Lea on the doughy henchmen.
* [[Screaming Warrior]]: What Ryder is supposed to sound like.
* [[Screaming Warrior]]: What Ryder is supposed to sound like.
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* [[Sexy Discretion Shot]]: After the final make-out session, the camera cuts to a shot of the whatever's engines flaring as it boosts upwards across the screen.
* [[Sexy Discretion Shot]]: After the final make-out session, the camera cuts to a shot of the whatever's engines flaring as it boosts upwards across the screen.
* [[Shaped Like Itself]]: Ryder mentions an "auxiliary backup system."
* [[Shaped Like Itself]]: Ryder mentions an "auxiliary backup system."
* [[Slasher Smile]]: For no readily apparent reason, Lea sports one of these while accidentally firing on Ryder's Enforcer kart... thus making her shooting at Ryder not appear accidental at all.
* [[Slasher Smile]]: For no readily apparent reason, Lea sports one of these while accidentally firing on Ryder's Enforcer kart... thus making her shooting at Ryder not appear accidental at all.
* [[Space Clothes]]: An unfortunate double standard seems to be set: women often wear Space Leotards (though some do get to wear actual uniforms), the men mostly...don't. The captain wears a silvery muumuu.
* [[Space Clothes]]: An unfortunate double standard seems to be set: women often wear Space Leotards (though some do get to wear actual uniforms), the men mostly...don't. The captain wears a silvery muumuu.
* [[Stealth Parody]]: Again, taking Cisse Cameron's word for it, this film was still perhaps ''too good'' at emulating the films it was trying to spoof.
* [[Stealth Parody]]: Again, taking Cisse Cameron's word for it, this film was still perhaps ''too good'' at emulating the films it was trying to spoof.
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** More of a parody of movie making itself than the sci-fi genre, though.
** More of a parody of movie making itself than the sci-fi genre, though.
* [[Stripperiffic]]: Female crewmembers besides Lt. Lamont all dress like [[American Gladiators]].
* [[Stripperiffic]]: Female crewmembers besides Lt. Lamont all dress like [[American Gladiators]].
* [[Stock Footage]]: All the space footage was taken from ''[[Battlestar Galactica Classic (TV)|Battlestar Galactica Classic]]'''s stock footage.
* [[Stock Footage]]: All the space footage was taken from ''[[Battlestar Galactica (1978 TV series)|Battlestar Galactica]]''{{'}}s stock footage.
** The Ship in this movie flies in the opposite direction from the original.
** The Ship in this movie flies in the opposite direction from the original.
* [[Stock Sound Effect]]: The movie used the same "red alert," sound effect used in [[Star Trek]].
* [[Stock Sound Effect]]: The movie used the same "red alert," sound effect used in [[Star Trek]].
* [[Strapped to An Operating Table]]: Kalgan's interrogation of Lea, which involves a whirring laser used to burn out her teeth. Lamest. Torture. Ever.
* [[Strapped to An Operating Table]]: Kalgan's interrogation of Lea, which involves a whirring laser used to burn out her teeth. Lamest. Torture. Ever.
** And the laser sounds exactly like a dentist's drill. And it works "not unlike ancient dental equipment. Not that you'd know anything about that."
** And the laser sounds exactly like a dentist's drill. And it works "not unlike ancient dental equipment. Not that you'd know anything about that."
* [[Teleporters and Transporters]]: This is how Ryder "ejects" from his crashing ship. It's also how they enable Reb Brown to leave a "ship" that's stock footage from ''[[Battlestar Galactica Classic (TV)|Battlestar Galactica Classic]]''.
* [[Teleporters and Transporters]]: This is how Ryder "ejects" from his crashing ship. It's also how they enable Reb Brown to leave a "ship" that's stock footage from ''[[Battlestar Galactica (1978 TV series)|Battlestar Galactica]]''.
* [[This Is a Drill]]: Yet it's supposed to be a laser, despite the loud drill sounds.
* [[This Is a Drill]]: Yet it's supposed to be a laser, despite the loud drill sounds.
* [[Too Dumb to Live]] - Engineer Parsons. At first the faction of mutinous engineers led by MacPhearson aren't actually that bothered by Parsons' refusal to join in the mutiny... until he says these words which, unsurprisingly, proved to be his last:
* [[Too Dumb to Live]] - Engineer Parsons. At first the faction of mutinous engineers led by MacPhearson aren't actually that bothered by Parsons' refusal to join in the mutiny... until he says these words which, unsurprisingly, proved to be his last:
{{quote| "This is mutiny! This is treason! Which I warn you I must report!"}}
{{quote|"This is mutiny! This is treason! Which I warn you I must report!"}}
** Also the engineers that MacPhearson kills in the big fight near the film's climax. Their response to a man shooting wildly in their direction is apparently to ignore him and hope he'll go away.
** Also the engineers that MacPhearson kills in the big fight near the film's climax. Their response to a man shooting wildly in their direction is apparently to ignore him and hope he'll go away.
** Lea makes a wall-banger of a decision to go nip out from the bridge, ''after'' she and Big McLargeHuge have discussed the fact that the mutiny is ongoing. This allows Lea to grab the [[Distress Ball]] and be held hostage for...about 10 minutes.
** Lea makes a wall-banger of a decision to go nip out from the bridge, ''after'' she and Big McLargeHuge have discussed the fact that the mutiny is ongoing. This allows Lea to grab the [[Distress Ball]] and be held hostage for...about 10 minutes.
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[[Category:Space Mutiny]]
[[Category:Space Mutiny]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Pages Needing an Entry Pimp]]
[[Category:Mystery Science Index 3000]]
[[Category:Films of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Cult Classic]]

Latest revision as of 13:49, 17 March 2022

The poster doesn't get the title right, and the golf carts didn't fly, but everything else is disturbingly accurate, including the railing kills.

"Ahahah, good, good, back to the rusting septic system of this futuristic space ship!"

Space Mutiny (also known as Mutiny in Space) is a 1988 legendarily bad science-fiction action film starring Reb Brown about, surprisingly enough, a mutiny aboard the spaceship known as the Southern Sun.

The Southern Sun is a seedship, a spacefaring vessel full of colonists out to settle a new world. Its voyage has lasted generations, so many of its inhabitants have been born and will die without ever setting foot on solid ground. This does not please the antagonist, Elijah Kalgan (not be confused with Calgon), who conspires with the pirates infesting the nearby Corona Borealis system and the ship's Chief Engineer MacPhearson. Kalgan hatches a plot to disrupt the Southern Sun's navigation systems and use the Enforcers, the ship's police force, to hijack the ship and direct it towards this system. At this point, the inhabitants of the Southern Sun will have no choice but to accept his 'generosity'.

Kalgan sabotages the vessel's guidance system just as an important professor's shuttle is on a landing trajectory, causing it to crash (offscreen). The ship's pilot, Dave Ryder, is able to escape, but the professor dies in the explosion. This sabotage seals off the flight deck for a number of weeks, allowing Kalgan and the Enforcers to hold the entire population of the Southern Sun hostage. Commander Jansen and Captain Devers enlist Ryder's assistance, aided begrudgingly by Jansen's daughter Dr. Lea Jansen, to regain control of the ship.

Space Mutiny was filmed in South Africa during The Apartheid Era (a fact understandably not mentioned on the end credits - see also Prisoners of the Lost Universe, Golden Rendezvous, Hellgate etc), which some viewers think ties in to all the pseudo-fascistic goings-on (and explains the all-white cast, not that that was exactly unusual in Hollywood action movies of the time).

For the Mystery Science Theater 3000 version, please go to the episode recap page.

Tropes used in Space Mutiny include:
  • Artistic License Astronomy: "Constellation" is used as a meaningful locational term.
  • A-Team Firing: Lea among others had poor aim. With both Kalgan and Ryder's "speeders" bearing down on her, she fires at Kalgan... and manages to hit Ryder's speeder, temporarily disabling it.
  • Back from the Dead: Due to poor editing, a woman who was murdered reappears (as an extra) in the very next scene.
  • Better to Die Than Be Killed: Steve Codell says he'd rather jump to his doom than join Kalgan (or be put on ice). He's just climbing over the railing when Kalgan gives him a push.
  • Bridge Bunnies: Some of whom are dressed so scantily they may as well be Hugh Hefner Bunnies.
  • The Captain: Commander Jansen.
  • Chase Scene: Done with floor waxers.
  • The Chosen One: Ryder.
  • Cool Starship: The Galactica The Southern Sun.
  • Covers Always Lie: Sort of. The Agony Booth tells us that the VHS packaging claims the film features "breathtaking special effects from the team that brought you Star Wars." This is technically true, in the sense that the team that worked on Star Wars went on to do SFX for the original Battlestar Galactica series, Stock Footage from which was used for Space Mutiny. The rest of the film's special effects, on the other hand...
  • Creator Backlash: The credited director, David Winters (whose other major contribution to the world of cinema was choreographing the dance routines in The Star Wars Holiday Special) actually only directed a small portion of it, after which he quit due to family troubles. He wanted his credit changed to Alan Smithee, but found out the hard way that the Director's Guild doesn't really care about the credits on low-budget exploitation films.
    • For an encore, Neal Sundstrom, the director who was actually responsible for the bulk of the film, wasn't very happy with the finished product either, and elected to have a "co-director" title which was buried in the end credits.
  • Curb Stomp Battle: A Colony Ship that's old enough to have over a dozen generations of people on it can somehow take on three Space Pirate ships and win in a few seconds.
    • Any time Ryder fights, he wins.
  • Dawson Casting: Lea (very obviously), Ryder (less obviously, making the former example all the more glaring).
  • Defrosting Ice Queen: At first, Lea hates Ryder, blaming him for the death of her friend the professor. Of course, she falls for him the very next scene.
  • Department of Redundancy Department: "We keep this TOP CLASSIFIED SECRET."
    • "And there wasn't time to go to the auxiliary backup system."
  • Die Hard On A Spaceship.
  • Dude Looks Like a Lady (or is it Lady Looks Like A Dude?)

David Ryder: Listen lady!
Lea: Doctor!
Ryder: Doctor.

  • Join or Die: Variant. Kalgan offers a technician who discovers his evil plot to either join or be cyrogenically frozen. The technician chooses a third option of dying. Kalgan obliges.
  • Large Ham: Not only our hero Ryder, but Kalgan and his right-hand flunky MacPherson.

Kalgan: I'm surrounded by incompetence! I'm being undermined by my own disciples!

  • Laughably Evil: Kalgan
  • May-December Romance: The Bellarians giving a lapd-- ahem, imparting the truth to the captain.
  • Mickey Mousing: When MacPherson stabs a dissenting crew member.
  • Mooks: The Enforcers.
  • Moral Dissonance: Ryder's gruesome method of dispatching the helpless MacPherson.
  • Neutral Female: Lea's attempts to help out in a firefight are marginally effective at best. At worst, she does more damage to Ryder than to Kalgan, because she shoots Ryder's go-kart.
  • No OSHA Compliance: Averted, big time.
    • Mainly because the spaceship's sets were mostly a real-world factory.
  • The Omniscient Coven of Vagueness: Oh yes -- a group of gauze-clad Space Witches called Bellerians show up early in the film, and proceed to do nothing for the rest of the film except exposit Fauxlosophically about the plot and dance in gauze.
    • Note that they have exactly no impact on the plot. It's fairly obvious the part was added after everything else was shot, since except for the one brief scene with Santa no-one they interact with ever shows up in the main story even as mooks.
  • Parody Retcon: Assuming you don't take Mrs. Cameron's insistence that this was a Stealth Parody at face value, of course.
  • People Jars: Kalgan tends to freeze prisoners (or failure subordinates) in cryogenic suspension rather than kill them outright. This is actually a fairly canny move, as once he's taken over the ship he can thaw them out so they can still be useful to him. Unfortunately the movie didn't have a budget for a cryogenics lab so they just hung four or five guys wrapped in plastic up on a coat rack.
  • The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: Not the actual pirates in the movie, who at least try to do something, but this trope does apply to Captain Devers.
  • Punch Clock Villain: The Mortuary Keeper is just there running the facility where failed Mooks are frozen until necessary. He may work for the villain, but when the heroes arrive he asks if they need help or would like a cup of tea. He also answers all their questions about the Big Bad's Evil Plan. He doesn't really seem evil at all.
    • You could arguably count Lobster Boy and the Enforcers as a whole, though they're at the very least openly mean-spirited.
  • Railing Kill: The Trope Namer, seeing as they appear in abundance. Hell, it even appears in the poster above.
  • Red Right Hand: MacPhearson's limp.
  • Relationship Reboot: Blast Hardcheese and Doctor Lady do this.
  • Romance on the Set: The awkward romance between Dave and Lea is a major contrast to real life - Reb Brown (Dave) and Cisse Cameron (Lea) fell in love during the Ted Knight Show back in 1979, and are still married today.
  • The Schlub Pub Seduction Deduction. Lea on the doughy henchmen.
  • Screaming Warrior: What Ryder is supposed to sound like.
  • Sexy Discretion Shot: After the final make-out session, the camera cuts to a shot of the whatever's engines flaring as it boosts upwards across the screen.
  • Shaped Like Itself: Ryder mentions an "auxiliary backup system."
  • Slasher Smile: For no readily apparent reason, Lea sports one of these while accidentally firing on Ryder's Enforcer kart... thus making her shooting at Ryder not appear accidental at all.
  • Space Clothes: An unfortunate double standard seems to be set: women often wear Space Leotards (though some do get to wear actual uniforms), the men mostly...don't. The captain wears a silvery muumuu.
  • Stealth Parody: Again, taking Cisse Cameron's word for it, this film was still perhaps too good at emulating the films it was trying to spoof.
    • If this is actually true, if this movie actually was intended to be a parody from the beginning, the simple fact that nobody buys that it was intentionally this bad is a testament to what an incredible job they did. This is a perfect storm of terrible, the entire cast is fascinatingly inept, mugging and stumbling and chewing the scenery over dialogue so awkwardly bad and yet so eminently quotable while the jaw-droppingly ridiculous special effects fight for screentime with laughable costuming and hilarious action scenes and impossible-to-ignore gaffs like a murder victim popping up as an extra in the foreground of the very next scene. Everything about this movie is at the exact perfect pitch of So Bad It's Good, to the point where it becomes So Bad Its Brilliant. In essence, if this actually is a Stealth Parody, the makers of this movie are unsung and forgotten geniuses of film, worthy of mention in the same sentence as the likes of Mel Brooks in his prime.
    • More of a parody of movie making itself than the sci-fi genre, though.
  • Stripperiffic: Female crewmembers besides Lt. Lamont all dress like American Gladiators.
  • Stock Footage: All the space footage was taken from Battlestar Galactica‍'‍s stock footage.
    • The Ship in this movie flies in the opposite direction from the original.
  • Stock Sound Effect: The movie used the same "red alert," sound effect used in Star Trek.
  • Strapped to An Operating Table: Kalgan's interrogation of Lea, which involves a whirring laser used to burn out her teeth. Lamest. Torture. Ever.
    • And the laser sounds exactly like a dentist's drill. And it works "not unlike ancient dental equipment. Not that you'd know anything about that."
  • Teleporters and Transporters: This is how Ryder "ejects" from his crashing ship. It's also how they enable Reb Brown to leave a "ship" that's stock footage from Battlestar Galactica.
  • This Is a Drill: Yet it's supposed to be a laser, despite the loud drill sounds.
  • Too Dumb to Live - Engineer Parsons. At first the faction of mutinous engineers led by MacPhearson aren't actually that bothered by Parsons' refusal to join in the mutiny... until he says these words which, unsurprisingly, proved to be his last:

"This is mutiny! This is treason! Which I warn you I must report!"

    • Also the engineers that MacPhearson kills in the big fight near the film's climax. Their response to a man shooting wildly in their direction is apparently to ignore him and hope he'll go away.
    • Lea makes a wall-banger of a decision to go nip out from the bridge, after she and Big McLargeHuge have discussed the fact that the mutiny is ongoing. This allows Lea to grab the Distress Ball and be held hostage for...about 10 minutes.
  • You Look Familiar: The actress playing Lt. Lamont appears as an extra on the bridge... in a scene that immediately follows Lamont's death. Whoops.
  • Younger Than They Look: Lea.
  • Zeerust: The future looks a lot like The Eighties.