Directed by Russ Mazzolla
Expectations: I’m just hoping it’s at least better than Kraa! was.
On the general scale:
On the B-movie scale:
Are you the kind of person whose attention span just can’t hang onto plot points for more than 20 minutes? Then Planet Patrol is the Full Moon movie for you! Edited from a few previous Full Moon films (Kraa! the Sea Monster, Doctor Mordrid, Subspecies & Robot Wars if you’re interested), Planet Patrol plays out like a weird pseudo-anthology film that attempts to tell one overarching story, but instead just feels like they spliced a bunch of shit from other movies together with a few mildly effective connecting scenes interspersed. Wonder why?
Planet Patrol begins in the same way that Kraa! the Sea Monster does — like exactly the same way — but the scene has been edited so that the evil plot hatched by the villains could literally be anything! So instead of leading into the events of Kraa!, we’re introduced to the Museum Planet AKA the museum from Doctor Mordrid. There the Planet Patrol get mixed up in a murder investigation involving a canister of dark goo, the Subspecies stealing the Bloodstone Pickory Stone, and the villain using said stone to conjure footage from Doctor Mordrid of the stop-motion dinosaur eating the guards. What’s a psychic Planet Patrol member to do in the face of such egregious crimes? Use her mind to bring the rest of the Doctor Mordrid footage to the screen, allowing the other dinosaur skeleton to come to life and battle the first, of course!
But they couldn’t stop there while I was still enjoying the movie, could they? Nope! By removing all the padding from the Kraa! footage, Planet Patrol needed some padding of its own. This comes in the form of the final segment, featuring the scorpion robot and its battle with the humanoid robot from the sorta sequel to Robot Jox, Robot Wars. Now, I greatly enjoyed Robot Wars, and I love a good stop-motion robot crunching into another stop-motion robot. The footage here is still as great as it always was, but the new scenes with the Planet Patrol just get in the way.
If you’ve never seen the films where the footage originates from, Planet Patrol may be quite the entertaining B-movie. If you’re a kid. Maybe. But if you have seen those films, then Planet Patrol is nothing more than a horrible attempt to sell you a new movie when there really isn’t one. Thankfully, they never produced the sequel that the ending (which is actually the end of Kraa! the Sea Monster) points towards, because with the amount of movies in the Full Moon universe there literally could have been hundreds of “planets” for these teens to “explore.”
Oh, and in case you were wondering, in between finishing Kraa! and this film they apparently fixed the shots where the green screen was visible, but that timecode in space was still hanging around! Phew, I almost thought they cared there for a second.