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Strange Planet
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| Strange Planet | |
|---|---|
Cover of UK DVD. | |
| Directed by | Emma-Kate Croghan |
| Written by | Emma-Kate Croghan Stavros Kazantzidis |
| Produced by | Stavros Kazantzidis Bruno Charlesworth |
| Starring | Claudia Karvan Naomi Watts Tom Long Felix Williamson Hugo Weaving Alice Garner Aaron Jeffery |
| Cinematography | Justin Brinkle |
Production companies | Premium Movie Partnership Showtime Australia Strange Planet NSW Film and Television Office Australian Film Finance Corporation |
| Distributed by | New Vision Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 92 minutes |
| Country | Australia |
| Language | English |
| Box office | A$377,615[1] |
Strange Planet is a 1999 Australian dramedy film directed by Emma-Kate Croghan and starring Claudia Karvan, Naomi Watts, Alice Garner and Hugo Weaving. The film takes place in Sydney between New Year's Eve 1998 and January 2000. It was Croghan's follow up to Love and Other Catastrophes and used many of the same cast and crew.[2][3]
Plot
[edit]The film explores the lives of three male friends and three female friends over the course of one year. Judy has an affair with her married boss. Sally is a party girl open to all experiences. Alice is morally strict but feels stuck.
Ewan is a lawyer who hates the law. Joel is left by his wife. Neil is desperate for love.
Cast
[edit]- Claudia Karvan as Judy
- Naomi Watts as Alice
- Alice Garner as Sally
- Tom Long as Ewan
- Aaron Jeffery as Joel
- Gennie Nevinson as Therapist
- Felix Williamson as Neil
- Hugo Weaving as Steven
- Rebecca Frith as Amanda
- Ling-Hsueh Tang as Verna
- Helen Thomson as Lulu
- Marshall Napier as Robert
- Kate Beahan as Poppy
- Reg Mombassa as Judy's father (cameo)
Production
[edit]At one stage it was planned that the film would be shot at the same time as another movie, Revolver which would be directed by Emma Kate Croghan while Stavros Kazantzidis would make Strange Planet. However, in the end Croghan directed Planet and Revolver was never made.[4]
The time lapse footage of the Sydney Harbour Bridge was shot by a cameraman who was permitted to climb the bridge without a harness and spend 12 hours there overnight.[5]
Dusty Springfield personally cleared the film's usage of her recording of "The Look of Love" only days before her death in March 1999.[5]
Reception
[edit]The film was well-received critically but a disappointment commercially that received little marketing attention. In 2005, Croghan told The Age:
With Love and Other Catastrophes there was so much interest about the way the film had been made, and the fact that a very young woman (of 23) had directed the film seemed amazing to people... There was a lot of interest in the process and it got a lot of press coverage. Strange Planet didn't. There wasn't a story around it for people and the press to hook into.
Croghan is yet to direct another feature film.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Australian Films at the Australian Box Office", Film Victoria. Retrieved 12 November 2012
- ^ Tim Hunter, "Another World with Emma Kate Croghan", Cinema Papers, June 1999 p 22-25, 56
- ^ Andrew L Urban, "Emma Kate Croghan", Urban Cinefile. Retrieved 10 November 2012
- ^ Shan Jayaweera, "An Interview with Ken Sallows", Senses of Cinema, 13 June 2001. Retrieved 12 November 2012
- ^ a b Strange Planet Emma Kate-Croghan DVD commentary track, 1999.
- ^ Jim Schembri, "Aren't you...?", The Age, 6 May 2005. Retrieved 12 November 2012
External links
[edit]- Strange Planet at IMDb
- Strange Planet at Oz Movies
- Strange Planet at Rotten Tomatoes
- Strange Planet at Urban Cinefile
- Review at Variety
- Review at SBS Movie Show
Strange Planet
View on GrokipediaOrigins and Webcomic
Creation and Concept
Nathan W. Pyle, an American cartoonist born in 1982 and raised in Kettering, Ohio, developed an early interest in digital art after learning Adobe Illustrator from a cousin around age 10. After studying theology in college, he moved to New York City, where he worked at BuzzFeed and created viral content, including a series of GIFs offering survival tips for navigating the city that amassed millions of views on Reddit. This led to his first book, NYC Basic Tips and Etiquette (2013), a New York Times bestseller that humorously outlined unwritten rules for urban living. Pyle also published 99 Stories I Could Tell (2018), a doodlebook encouraging creative storytelling through simple prompts.[5][6][7] The concept for Strange Planet originated in early 2019 during a moment of domestic routine, when Pyle and his wife hid their toaster in a closet to tidy their apartment before guests arrived for her birthday celebration. This act of concealing everyday items struck Pyle as an oddly human behavior, inspiring him to sketch blue-skinned, three-fingered aliens observing and describing such mundane experiences—like consuming food or navigating relationships—with precise, overly technical language that highlights their absurdity. The first comic strip, depicting this "hiding" scenario, captured the essence of the series: aliens on a distant planet rephrasing familiar earthly activities in a literal, jargon-filled manner, such as referring to a hug as a "vibrating creature containment protocol."[5][6] Pyle launched the Strange Planet webcomic on Instagram under the handle @nathanwpylestrangeplanet in early February 2019, posting the inaugural strip on February 4. The series quickly resonated with audiences for its witty, relatable take on human quirks through an alien lens, leading to explosive early growth: the account reached 250,000 followers within three weeks and surpassed 2 million by May 2019. This viral success on social media paved the way for expansions into print books and a television adaptation.[5][8][9]Style and Themes
The visual style of Strange Planet employs a minimalist four-panel format, featuring simple line drawings of blue-skinned aliens with large, expressive eyes and sparse backgrounds that prioritize dialogue and facial expressions over detailed environments.[5][1] This clean, pastel-hued aesthetic creates a sense of universality, allowing readers to project human experiences onto the genderless, raceless "Beings" without distraction from ornate visuals.[5] The humor in the webcomic is rooted in absurdist comedy, achieved through the aliens' literal and overly technical reinterpretations of everyday human norms, such as describing hunger as "I require sustenance" or tanning as "sun damage."[1][5] This approach draws from science fiction tropes of alien anthropologists observing and misunderstanding Earth customs, turning mundane activities into comically detached commentaries that highlight their inherent oddities.[10] Recurring themes center on satire of ordinary life events, including holidays, technology usage, parenting, and social interactions, often explored through the aliens' emotional detachment to underscore universal feelings like joy, sadness, and confusion.[1][5] By framing these scenarios from an outsider's perspective, the comic probes the absurdities of human rituals and behaviors, celebrating their complexity while inviting reflection on shared emotional experiences.[10] The characters are archetypal "Beings" without names or consistent personalities, encompassing roles such as parents, offspring, and friends to enable episodic flexibility and broad relatability across strips.[5] This design choice reinforces the comic's thematic focus on universality, as the aliens serve as blank slates for human projection rather than developed individuals.[1] Strange Planet has been compared to earlier works like Gary Larson's The Far Side for its deadpan humor and observational satire, as well as the early 20th-century comic strip Mr. Skygack, from Mars by A. D. Condo, which similarly featured an alien misinterpreting human society.[10][11] These influences align with Pyle's emphasis on everyday absurdities viewed through an extraterrestrial lens, evolving the trope for modern audiences.[12]Print and Merchandise
Book Publications
The book publications of Strange Planet represent a direct extension of the webcomic's popularity, compiling its humorous strips into accessible print formats while introducing new content tailored to diverse audiences. Published primarily by HarperCollins imprints such as Morrow Gift, the series emphasizes the webcomic's signature style of literal interpretations of human experiences through the lens of blue-skinned aliens, making the humor relatable and suitable for all ages. The inaugural volume, Strange Planet, was released on November 19, 2019, as a hardcover collection of early webcomic strips depicting everyday milestones like education, relationships, and leisure activities. It quickly achieved commercial success, debuting at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list and ranking among Publishers Weekly's top-selling graphic novels of the year. Subsequent releases expanded the series with varied formats and themes. Stranger Planet, published on June 16, 2020, adopts a memoir-like structure with new illustrations exploring traditions, emotions, and interpersonal dynamics. Greetings from Strange Planet, a postcard set issued on September 15, 2020, functions as a holiday-themed companion, featuring 26 illustrated cards for sharing festive messages.[13] Later titles include interactive and reflective formats. Strange Planet: Existence Chronicle, a guided journal published on December 1, 2020, prompts readers to chronicle personal experiences alongside comic illustrations. The Strange Planet Activity Book, released on September 14, 2021, offers puzzles, mazes, and drawing prompts inspired by the series for children and fans.[14] The picture book Strange Planet: The Sneaking, Hiding, Vibrating Creature, released on June 1, 2021, centers on pet-themed stories, following a young alien's discovery of a mysterious "vibrating creature" (a cat) and its role in family life; it also reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list.[15] The publication strategy ties releases to ongoing webcomic updates, ensuring fresh content while prioritizing broad accessibility through hardcover collections, activity books, and journals that encourage creative engagement with the series' whimsical universe.[16]| Title | Publication Date | Format | Key Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strange Planet | November 19, 2019 | Hardcover collection | Early strips on life milestones [#1 NYT bestseller] |
| Stranger Planet | June 16, 2020 | Hardcover collection | New content on traditions and emotions |
| Greetings from Strange Planet | September 15, 2020 | Postcard set | Holiday-themed illustrations |
| Strange Planet: Existence Chronicle | December 1, 2020 | Guided journal | Reflective prompts on daily life |
| Strange Planet: The Sneaking, Hiding, Vibrating Creature | June 1, 2021 | Picture book | Pet discovery and family bonds [#1 NYT bestseller] |
| Strange Planet Activity Book | September 14, 2021 | Activity book | Puzzles and creative exercises |
| Tuck Me In!: A Science Bedtime Story | September 2, 2025 | Picture book | Bedtime science explanations |
