@@catey62 5$??? WOW. I spent almost fifteen dollars on mine, of course it was an anniversary set which included an extra disc, The Invisible Boy and an episode of the Thin Man TV series With Peter Lawford and Phyllis Kirk that had Robby The Robot as the guest star.
I remember watching the "Forbidden Planet" as a young child with my parents at the Drive-In. I remember hiding on the floor in the back seat when the monster scene came on. Best Sci-Fi movie ever.
It's no wonder that Robbie's last TV appearance was on the "Banana Splits." How humiliating! Rumor has it, this decline in his career led to a deep depression and an addiction to Valvoline. I'm so glad to hear he got help and continues to work and bring joy to his many fans. You go, Robbie!
Sadly Robbie’s depression was caught by Marvin The Paranoid Android (from Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy) when they went on a blind date together. Marvin never recovered…
Every year when I'm wrapping Christmas presents for friends and family I will watch "Forbidden Planet", "The Day the Earth Stood Still" (original), and "The Time Machine" (original, nach)... It's part of family tradition! And the scene with Earl Holloway and Robbie about producing more booze always makes me laugh...
"Commander Addams, Robbie can play music, as you can see his head area does look like a juke box record player." Morbeus demonstrates one of Robbie's capabilities .
Enjoy and Travel The World! , I was 13 in 65 and totally in love with Angela Cartwright. She was my sole reason “besides spaceships” for watching the show. Ya, those robots were great!
Excellent recap! You've outdone yourself. My favorite movie of all time "Forbidden Planet" where my love of Robby the Robot still endures. "Lost in Space" won second place years later.
My grand-daughter, now four...loved Robby in the movie Forbidden Planet. Invariably she will ask to watch the movie when she comes over to spend some quality time with Pa Pa. This past Christmas...I had purchased her a 14" walking and talking Robby the Robot Actually I had gotten it three months earlier and wanted to give it to her but my wife kept saying wait until Christmas. You should have seen her eyes light up when she opened the box. The one I got her was brand new in the box...but I went on to get a used one for my brother and myself...it is fun to relive shared memories. "Forbidden Planet" holds up to this day.
Not sure about that remake. The trend recently for large cast, psycho-drama/dream sequence based sci-fi tells me where they would go with this one: ids out all over the place, a weird wallowing in past personal trauma and a focus on the venting of long pent-up workplace clashes. And as for Robbie? He (or she) would undoubtedly be portrayed as fully human-looking, with a subplot in which he (or she) a) gets "possessed" by the projected thoughts and feelings of the diverse crew, b) temporarily becomes the Krell/Morbius's killing machine and c) learns to be a real boy (or girl). When I think of this movie being remade, I'm sure I've already seen it countless times in countless movies and tv shows that weren't called Forbidden Planet! Which speaks to the iconic nature of the original - but also means that, for a modern audience (even those who have NEVER seen the actual movie before) there would be absolutely nothing new under the Altairian sun with this story
Hay Jonny, have just watched this and the other composition for the movie FP. It's quite clear to me and I'm sure everyone else that this is a work of love and passion for you. Great work.
The horizontal rotating ring scanner was removed while Robby was appearing in an episode of Lost in Space "The Condemned of Space" because the set designed for that episode had doorways too narrow for Robby's head with the scanners to fit through. The scanner was never seen on Robby again until he was restored. It was likely lost by the Lost in Space crew.
Forbidden Planet, The Day the Earth Stood Still, War of the Worlds, This Island Earth, and several Star Trek movies were my weekly fix as a child of the late 80's. The local Library had a VHS section where you could rent donated videos for free, and those were the ones I chose week in and week out lol. Forbidden Planet's invisible cat monster used to give me nightmares, and re-watching the movie a few years ago that creepy echoing roar brought back a nostalgic nervousness even as I'm 35 now. Robbie always be the best Robot in Sci-Fi history, sorry Data not even close!
Forbidden Planet is one of the most frightening movies I have ever seen. It still gives me chills to think about it and I am 56. I have always loved robots and still do. Robby is awesome!
I think this is probably the most comprehensive video on Robbie! The one thing that gave me a laugh was that the crew of the spaceship traveled millions of miles, had ray guns but were dumbfounded by a robot.
My grandson collects toy robots ,last Christmas I got him the Wal-Mart Robby the robot, he loved it ,now he looks for anything with Robby on it from Forbidden Planet to Star Trek, to the invisible boy, Twilight Zone, Lost in Space and more.
+D.E.B. B- Yes indeed- may Robby, the Daleks, and all other robonoids bring steaming electric death to all such humanoid scum!! Undo another person's good work at your peril!!
That’s a heck of an appearances list, I knew a few but I had no idea there were so many. Loving the multi-coloured moving background btw, that seemed to fit really well with this subject matter. Great video.
Marvin Milner? I remember Martin Milner (Adam 12).I watched the film several times and I'm still not certain if I saw panties or shadow when Anne Francis bent over! The robot was in the 18 Febuarius 1974 AD episode of "Columbo: Mind Over Mayhem" and in an episode of "Wonder Woman".
I was a young boy when Forbidden Planet opened in theaters. He was so amazing! Robby was the most amazing creature I had ever seen or even imagined. Thanks so much for putting together this video - it is fantastic! I have often wondered whatever happened to Robby in later years so finding out that he is still very much “alive and well” has made my day! Please keep up the great work!
Excellent Video, I own a B9 replica, but love Robby the robot, and still to this day can watch him without thinking someone is inside controlling it. I had no idea he was in so many shows
You can find a electronic lights and sound 1997 re issue of Robby the Robot from Trendmasters(Jakks Pacific) at Walmart as of right now for twenty bucks! Just got me one and man he is BEAUTIFUL
There was a science fiction/fantasy film convention in New York City in the 70's, produced by Famous Monsters magazine. One of the program events was a little stage show by, I believe, Bill Malone, featuring Robby, Gort, and Godzilla
Many posters for this film, including the thumbnail YOU used, show Robbie carrying Anne Francis - didn't happen in the movie, although Robbie carried Warren Stevens back to the house when he fried his brain in the 'Educator'.
I have a special twin disk version of the 50th anniversary edition of The Forbidden Planet on DVD and on it is a full copy of The Invisible Boy and also an episode of The Thin Man TV series with an episode called Robot Client.
Hi Jonathan, Robby formed one of my earliest TV memories. I was 2 years old in 1959 when I saw Robby on "Oh Susanna", The Gale Storm Show! In the cruise ship's cargo hold Gale and ZaSu find Robby by accident. Robby scared me so badly that his TV appearance remains one of my few coherent memories at so young an age.
Cars of the Stars museum was freaking awesome! They also had the ship from Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and so much more. Spent my 10th birthday inside there. Loved every moment of it! That was by far my best birthday ever. Also went next door to the wax Museum and enjoyed that tremendously too, but the rest of my family liked Cars of the Stars way more than wax people. I loved both, like I said, best birthday ever.
Checkout the ebook title "TITAN ONE" i think he plays a major character saving the humans from corporate murder. That story is at Amazon and Smashword. Not sure if he shows in the "VENUS PLAINS 88" story though.
I notice in the movie Forbidden Planet Robby's neon voice light lights up in a pattern almost like moving lips. This effect does no seem to be present in the restored Robby. I may be wrong but it looks like all the tubes light up together in a single flash instead of the up and down cascade seen in the film.
i made a 3D model of robbie some years ago and did a couple of short animations, on my channel. i also have thousands of reference photos and blueprints and the 3D model is purchasable.
I had a blueprint sheet that depicted EVERY Sci-Fi robot ever made from the Robby Robot body in some form or another. From Twilight Zone, Lost in Space, Forbidden Planet, etc., there must have been well over 20+ variants of that robot's design. 🌌🚀👽 The Project UFO Robby with the green eye, is my second favourite.
I have loved Robbie since a child OK I was born in 1955 so I am old and so is he. BUT I had NO idea he was used in so many movies and in so many versions. The creator more than earned his pay by designing and building him
F P is one of my favorites too! I had the Japanese b/o Robbie from the mid-50, which, if I had the box, would be worth at least $3000 today. I sold it cheap 30 years ago. Now, I have the wired remote control Robbie that walks and says lines from the movie, in the original voice. He's still great. (Robbie is a "He", right?)
Yes. He is my favorite robot. Also staring in forbidden planet it should be mentioned the sailor cook. Who had the hooch made. The invisible boy was a great movie also.
Wow! I've never before seen a shot of Lock Martin as Gort without his head on. You seem to have the only one! Thanks for saving a bit of history for future generations!
Thanks for giving Isaac Asimov credit for the Three Laws and for “I, Robot.” This book is a collection of short stories which he previously had published in a magazine (I think they were in “Astounding,” which is known as “Analog” today), so each chapter/story has a different “leading robot.” The first story is about a robot used as a companion for a six year old girl, and the robot is named Robby. After all, it’s the most obvious English name for a robot!
C3PO's design was based on the "Maria robot" from Fritz Lang's 1927 film, Metropolis. Artoo on the other hand, could be Robby's great great great great great great grandson. LOL.
I think 'The Invisible Boy', filmed 13 years before Colossus: The Forbin Project, is the first movie about a super computer trying to take over the world. Robby fans will enjoy it.
Note that the evil computer isn't merely trying to take over the world ... it wants to destroy all forms of life //throughout the universe//, or any thing that might evolve into a living entity, leaving it the sole form of consciousness. When it orders Robby to kill Doctor Merinoe and his son, Robby smashes the feedback system. I could go on ad infinitum but I'd rather let others voice their own views
Who didn't like Robby and B9? Dr. Smith could have field days calling them a bunch of names. What an act the three of those and a few smaller robots would be!!
I'm not too sure but I believe Robbie the robot made his first appearance in a movie starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn in a movie called I believe the desk set.? I believe the movie was made in 1953 or 1954.
The studio model of the Space Cruiser also made an appearance in the only episode of the Twilight Zone where there was literally no dialogue. Agnes Morehead played a lonely Woman who was being tormented by its tiny inhabitants in what appeared to be a house in a forlorn countryside. Finding the table sized Flying Saucer on her roof she destroyed it but as the camera pulled back its revealed to have been for Earth with USAF marking on its caved in top. The music from the film was ground breaking since it was the first totally electronic score and might of gotten an Oscar nomination but the rules stated that members of a music union/profession had to have played/composed it for an award. Indeed many of the iconic SciFi props met an unhappy fate from the period and the ships along with the cobra like heat Ray projectors from War of the World's were given to a Boy Scout Scrap drive because they were made out of Copper. Robbie the Robot's popularity helped it survive and the original equipment from 1930s Frankenstein was used in Mel Brooks classic comedy take on story decades later because some one had wanted it to survive as well. In an odd way no other Cinematic Robot has been as advanced or skilled as Robbie and few fictional rivals can claim to be his equal in the last 60+ yrs...
I met Robbie the Robot back in the ‘60s at Harry’s Ace Hardware on Magazine Street in New Orleans. I was around four or five years old at the time. He scared the hell out of me and everyone else, as the man in the robot suit was obviously drunk. Robbie was rude and crass, much to the audience’s surprise. He made a little girl blow up a balloon until it popped in her face, the entire time yelling at her to, “BLOW!!! BLOOOW!!!!! BLOOOOOOOOW!!!!!!!!!” The children were terrified and the adults were mortified! Then, at the end of the event, Robbie gave everyone ‘autographed’ black and white 8” X 10” photographs of himself that came out of the horizontal slats in his ‘neck’. I remember crying a lot, and the evening was most traumatic for all who attended.
I remember seeing the torso and head, mounted on a movable platform instead of having legs. I think it was in an episode of The Love Boat, where he was supposed to be the invention of some genius kid. But Forbidden Planet is the best place to get accquainted with Robby. That film is credited (rightly or wrongly) as being the first one where the robot was not depicted as some kind of hostile device which is threatening all of humanity, but instead as a safe and obedient helper. It might possibly also be the first movie featuring a robot where said robot survives unscathed to the end of the film. ;)
In a way you're right. Gort, from 1953's "Day the Earth Stood Still" does menace Earth, but only after he and Klaatu are threatened & Klaatu is shot -- twice. (Spoilers? Still? After 66 years?) Patricia Neal's character gives the pass-phrase, though, and averts disaster. Gort also survives the movie and probably outlives Klaatu. Got to go now and watch the scene... YOU know which one!
And let's not forget another immense landmark: Louis and Bebe Barron's awesome electronic soundtrack. Personally, it's the first thing I have in mind when I recall my early memories of this film, first seen on TV in the early 60s.
Robby is a close second for me for my favorite movie robots. My absolute favorite robot was always the "Death Probe" from the "Six Million Dollar Man". That one showed up in two episodes, one in it's original form, then they repainted it black, and put a dome on top that fired lasers, and added weapons to it. Then they ruined the thing by making it goofy looking and putting it in the movie "Heartbeeps" as the "Crimebuster" robot. To this day, it's two appearances in "The Six Million Dollar Man" are my favorites. That robot both terrified and fascinated me when I was a kid.
That was just...wow!!! I am 66 and I love this video. What a history lesson. Thanks for sharing...
Forbidden Planet is my favorite 1950's Sci Fi movie, if not one of my top ten movies. Thank you for posting this.
Same here!
I have the DVD of it.picked it up in a bargain bin at a music store for about 5$
@@catey62 I picked it up as first day purchases the second it came out on both DVD & Blu-ray. I'm now hoping & waiting for a 4K release.
Me too.
I've got the UK bluray steelbook, still the "prettiest" steelbook I own, and with an awesome movie to boot.
@@catey62 5$??? WOW. I spent almost fifteen dollars on mine, of course it was an anniversary set which included an extra disc, The Invisible Boy and an episode of the Thin Man TV series With Peter Lawford and Phyllis Kirk that had Robby The Robot as the guest star.
I remember watching the "Forbidden Planet" as a young child with my parents at the Drive-In. I remember hiding on the floor in the back seat when the monster scene came on. Best Sci-Fi movie ever.
It's no wonder that Robbie's last TV appearance was on the "Banana Splits." How humiliating! Rumor has it, this decline in his career led to a deep depression and an addiction to Valvoline. I'm so glad to hear he got help and continues to work and bring joy to his many fans. You go, Robbie!
Sadly Robbie’s depression was caught by Marvin The Paranoid Android (from Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy) when they went on a blind date together. Marvin never recovered…
Every year when I'm wrapping Christmas presents for friends and family I will watch "Forbidden Planet", "The Day the Earth Stood Still" (original), and "The Time Machine" (original, nach)... It's part of family tradition! And the scene with Earl Holloway and Robbie about producing more booze always makes me laugh...
Actually that's Earl Holliman.
Yes Forbidden Planet and the Day the Earth Stood Still are two of the best sci-fi my movies from the fifties!!!!!!!
You cannot forget "This island Earth", "War of the worlds", and "Earth vs. the flying saucers" Those are the best 5.
Johnny Hawkins, I agree with you completely, though I also remember "Them" as well, which was mentioned below.
Couldn't agree more! They're my favorites too!
@@DGOODWIN19 don't forget "The Thing" original :)
I'm glad to know that Robby is in good hands right now. He's part of cinematic history.
"Commander Addams, Robbie can play music, as you can see his head area does look like a juke box record player."
Morbeus demonstrates one of Robbie's capabilities .
@@johnbockelie3899 today we have Honda's Azimo who can walk without a person inside !
It was great growing up in the 60's having Robby and the B-9 as friends!
Enjoy and Travel The World! , I was 13 in 65 and totally in love with Angela Cartwright. She was my sole reason “besides spaceships” for watching the show. Ya, those robots were great!
Excellent recap! You've outdone yourself. My favorite movie of all time "Forbidden Planet" where my love of Robby the Robot still endures. "Lost in Space" won second place years later.
I remember very well watching Forbidden Planet as a kid, I think Anne Francis kickstarted me into puberty!
LOL!
She was smoking.
I bet Honey West didn't hurt.
@@howardmiller5381 Honey West is almost forgotten now, but for those who remember... Yes, yes, yes!
I couldn't have said it better.
My grand-daughter, now four...loved Robby in the movie Forbidden Planet. Invariably she will ask to watch the movie when she comes over to spend some quality time with Pa Pa. This past Christmas...I had purchased her a 14" walking and talking Robby the Robot Actually I had gotten it three months earlier and wanted to give it to her but my wife kept saying wait until Christmas. You should have seen her eyes light up when she opened the box. The one I got her was brand new in the box...but I went on to get a used one for my brother and myself...it is fun to relive shared memories. "Forbidden Planet" holds up to this day.
The Munchkin set from the Wizard of OZ was reused as the scientist's garden in Forbidden Planet.
Robbie should have received a life time award.
forbidden planet, hands down my favorite classic sci fi movie ever
Forbidden Planet is my #2. The very best SF feature of all time is The day the Earth Stood Still - the 1951 version, not the 2008 travesty.
Mine too , I'd love to see a remake.
@@joebutlersnr7017 I'll drink to that!
@@joebutlersnr7017 I'll drink to that!
Not sure about that remake. The trend recently for large cast, psycho-drama/dream sequence based sci-fi tells me where they would go with this one: ids out all over the place, a weird wallowing in past personal trauma and a focus on the venting of long pent-up workplace clashes.
And as for Robbie? He (or she) would undoubtedly be portrayed as fully human-looking, with a subplot in which he (or she) a) gets "possessed" by the projected thoughts and feelings of the diverse crew, b) temporarily becomes the Krell/Morbius's killing machine and c) learns to be a real boy (or girl).
When I think of this movie being remade, I'm sure I've already seen it countless times in countless movies and tv shows that weren't called Forbidden Planet! Which speaks to the iconic nature of the original - but also means that, for a modern audience (even those who have NEVER seen the actual movie before) there would be absolutely nothing new under the Altairian sun with this story
Hay Jonny, have just watched this and the other composition for the movie FP. It's quite clear to me and I'm sure everyone else that this is a work of love and passion for you. Great work.
I can't believe how many shows over the years hosted a recreated Robby, all I remember was The Invisible Boy.
The horizontal rotating ring scanner was removed while Robby was appearing in an episode of Lost in Space "The Condemned of Space" because the set designed for that episode had doorways too narrow for Robby's head with the scanners to fit through. The scanner was never seen on Robby again until he was restored. It was likely lost by the Lost in Space crew.
Forbidden Planet, The Day the Earth Stood Still, War of the Worlds, This Island Earth, and several Star Trek movies were my weekly fix as a child of the late 80's. The local Library had a VHS section where you could rent donated videos for free, and those were the ones I chose week in and week out lol. Forbidden Planet's invisible cat monster used to give me nightmares, and re-watching the movie a few years ago that creepy echoing roar brought back a nostalgic nervousness even as I'm 35 now. Robbie always be the best Robot in Sci-Fi history, sorry Data not even close!
Forbidden Planet is one of the most frightening movies I have ever seen. It still gives me chills to think about it and I am 56. I have always loved robots and still do. Robby is awesome!
This is a Beautiful ! wonderful ! Documentary/History About Robby. Thank you Soooo Much! Just made my Month !
I think this is probably the most comprehensive video on Robbie! The one thing that gave me a laugh was that the crew of the spaceship traveled millions of miles, had ray guns but were dumbfounded by a robot.
Robbie will always be the coolest movie prop ever.
Thanks for posting. I was aware of the Forbidden Planet movie and the Lost in Space episode but was not aware of all the other appearances.
Thank you, Jonathan. That was really good and fun and very worth watching., and I am glad Robby is still working and happy!
Stay tuned for a Forbidden Planet video
@@JonnyBaak Cool! Though I seem to be alone, I have long felt that Forbidden Planet was in large part the template for Star Trek.
Allen Lam I believe that’s common knowledge, at least in Sci-Fi fandom.
@@cha5 It pleases me to read that, cha5. Thanks.
Forbidden planet, what a brilliant piece of cinematic excellence.
Monsters of the Id.
My grandson collects toy robots ,last Christmas I got him the Wal-Mart Robby the robot, he loved it ,now he looks for anything with Robby on it from Forbidden Planet to Star Trek, to the invisible boy, Twilight Zone, Lost in Space and more.
How could anyone vandalize Robby? I swear, some people...
Bragging rights to bad-assery...a perverted impulse to despoil & mar.
Please try to convince me that our species isn't over due for a good culling.
Some people just can't be happy unless they are ruining someone else's joy or work. These are the miserable ones of the world.
+D.E.B. B- Yes indeed- may Robby, the Daleks, and all other robonoids bring steaming electric death to all such humanoid scum!! Undo another person's good work at your peril!!
Blasphemy!! How could even the most moronic idiot do that???
I just watched this again last night. love this movie, the best classic in my opinion.
Robbie is my favourite robot too!
Altaira: Robbie, I must have a new dress right away!
Robbie: Agaaiinn????
I always liked his subtle humour 😊
Paraphrased: "Diamonds would take too long to crystallise. Would star sapphires do instead?"
@@melkiorwiseman5234
Well...
If they're large enough!
5, 10 and 15 carats, and on hand!
Thank you Robbie!
"Is sixty gallons sufficient?"
Imo THE best syfy movie from the 1950s. First saw it on TV at age 10 and have loved it ever since.
Extremely well done video...subscribed!
That’s a heck of an appearances list, I knew a few but I had no idea there were so many. Loving the multi-coloured moving background btw, that seemed to fit really well with this subject matter. Great video.
When you're the most expensive prop ever made people have to get their use.
Robby was also in an episode of Wonder Woman titled ‘spaced out’
My nickname has always been Robby, so the robot has always had a special place in my heart.
Robby the Robot was a gentleman (like his builder) and in one famous moment he answered a question by explaining that he was giving himself an Oil Job
you forgot one. Robby also appeared in a episode of Futurama living on a island of outdated robots. His name was changed to Sinclair 2K though
I'm older now. But one my fondest toys was a light up walking Robbie.
I never had a Robbie. I'd have loved one. I did have a Big Loo though. I'm still pissed my Mom gave him away to another kid.
Older brother had one. Even as well used as it was would be worth a bit to a collector.
Awesome video thanks Robby is one of my favorite robots
Robby also made at least one appearance on Red Skelton's TV program.
I love Robby and have several figures of him, but my favorite is The B-9 Robot from Lost in Space.
Marvin Milner? I remember Martin Milner (Adam 12).I watched the film several times and I'm still not certain if I saw panties or shadow when Anne Francis bent over! The robot was in the 18 Febuarius 1974 AD episode of "Columbo: Mind Over Mayhem" and in an episode of "Wonder Woman".
My oldest and best memory of Leslie Nielsen. 1956
Thanks for posting this video. I grew up with Robby and I learned so much in your documentary.
I was a young boy when Forbidden Planet opened in theaters. He was so amazing! Robby was the most amazing creature I had ever seen or even imagined. Thanks so much for putting together this video - it is fantastic! I have often wondered whatever happened to Robby in later years so finding out that he is still very much “alive and well” has made my day! Please keep up the great work!
Excellent Video, I own a B9 replica, but love Robby the robot, and still to this day can watch him without thinking someone is inside controlling it. I had no idea he was in so many shows
You can find a electronic lights and sound 1997 re issue of Robby the Robot from Trendmasters(Jakks Pacific) at Walmart as of right now for twenty bucks! Just got me one and man he is BEAUTIFUL
There was a science fiction/fantasy film convention in New York City in the 70's, produced by Famous Monsters magazine. One of the program events was a little stage show by, I believe, Bill Malone, featuring Robby, Gort, and Godzilla
It was also the first movie franchise toy. To be sold... I had one as a kid. It had red shoes.. They sold like crazy. As damn near every kid had one.
Many posters for this film, including the thumbnail YOU used, show Robbie carrying Anne Francis - didn't happen in the movie, although Robbie carried Warren Stevens back to the house when he fried his brain in the 'Educator'.
It was the original “click-bait”!
The uncredited voice for Robby was the veteran actor and voice artist Marvin Miller.
3:58 minutes into this documentary supports your statement.
Also to be found in the TV series, "The Millionaire".
@@howardmiller5381 I saw the film in '56 at age 7, but immediately recognized the voice of "Michael Anthony," when I heard Robby speak.
I have a special twin disk version of the 50th anniversary edition of The Forbidden Planet on DVD and on it is a full copy of The Invisible Boy and also an episode of The Thin Man TV series with an episode called Robot Client.
Did you get the collectible tin box version with the figurine of Robby.? I did. :-)
Forbiden planet in my opinion was the first really well done syfy movie. The special effects for its day of the monster was very good.
I'm glad the picture of Cyclops Robby with Sybil Danning turned up
Astounding amount of research and great archival material. Fantastic video!!
I remember an episode of Lynda Carter’s Wonder Woman where It showed up in a Sci Fi Convention.
Linda Carter, grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr👌
She spells her name with a y. I know too much about her.
@@1pcfred
She can spell her name, or my name for that matter, any way she wants.
I remember seeing him on Mork and Mindy.
Interesting history for this iconic robot.
Hi Jonathan, Robby formed one of my earliest TV memories. I was 2 years old in 1959 when I saw Robby on "Oh Susanna", The Gale Storm Show! In the cruise ship's cargo hold Gale and ZaSu find Robby by accident. Robby scared me so badly that his TV appearance remains one of my few coherent memories at so young an age.
Cars of the Stars museum was freaking awesome! They also had the ship from Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and so much more. Spent my 10th birthday inside there. Loved every moment of it! That was by far my best birthday ever. Also went next door to the wax Museum and enjoyed that tremendously too, but the rest of my family liked Cars of the Stars way more than wax people. I loved both, like I said, best birthday ever.
Checkout the ebook title "TITAN ONE" i think he plays a major character saving the humans from corporate murder. That story is at Amazon and Smashword. Not sure if he shows in the "VENUS PLAINS 88" story though.
Forbidden planet was my favourite Sc Fi film. I never saw The Invisible Boy but I will have a search now. Thank you for the fascinating information.
Actually, nobody ever "saw" the invisible boy.
Robby is chosen to be the template for all Protections in Fallout.
The Mork and Mindy episode is a real tear jerker.
¡Robby the robot designer Robert Kinoshita (1914-2014 at 100 years old)! written at 12:34 PM Pacific Daylight Savings Time on Thursday, 1 August 2019
Wow what a wonderful, nostalgic documentary.
Ty 🙏 so much for the time and research it took to put this together. 💯
Absolutely magical ✨
one of my acting teachers told me Shakespeare's The Tempest was the basis of this movie
Its mentioned in the video @ 0:55.
They all say that. If you searched hard enough, you could claim a Shakespearean link for every film from "Citizen Kane" to "Plan 9 From Outer Space"!
Like all comedy shows are derivative of I Love Lucy.
I love Robby the Robot. This was a fantastic look at an illustrious history of a pop culture icon. Well done
I notice in the movie Forbidden Planet Robby's neon voice light lights up in a pattern almost like moving lips. This effect does no seem to be present in the restored Robby. I may be wrong but it looks like all the tubes light up together in a single flash instead of the up and down cascade seen in the film.
In the original manga version of Battle Angel Alita, Robby can be seen in Daisuke Ido‘s stockpile of robots.
I have Forbidden Planet on dvd and is one of my favorites
Fantastic! Thank you! He is my favorite too.
i made a 3D model of robbie some years ago and did a couple of short animations, on my channel. i also have thousands of reference photos and blueprints and the 3D model is purchasable.
Robby the Robot has had a longer career than most actors. His residuals must keep his swimming pool filled with WD-40.
Well the robot looks adorable so that too.
Yes but I am sure he would trade it all in for one more hug from Anne Francis.
Altaira: "Robby where have you been? I beamed and beamed".
Robby: "I was giving myself an oil job".
Robbie's "Forbidden Planet" car alone was also used in a 'Twilight Zone' episode..."The Rip Van Winkle Affair".
Great review, thanks for posting such a comprehensive guide of Robbies acting career 👍🏻
Robby had a wide ranging career and most certainly deserves a star on the walk of fame. And Robot from lost in space.
I had a blueprint sheet that depicted EVERY Sci-Fi robot ever made from the Robby Robot body in some form or another. From Twilight Zone, Lost in Space, Forbidden Planet, etc., there must have been well over 20+ variants of that robot's design. 🌌🚀👽
The Project UFO Robby with the green eye, is my second favourite.
I'm with you as Robby being my all time favorite robot!
I’m 65 years old. Nuff said 👍🏻
I have loved Robbie since a child OK I was born in 1955 so I am old and so is he. BUT I had NO idea he was used in so many movies and in so many versions. The creator more than earned his pay by designing and building him
F P is one of my favorites too! I had the Japanese b/o Robbie from the mid-50, which, if I had the box, would be worth at least $3000 today. I sold it cheap 30 years ago. Now, I have the wired remote control Robbie that walks and says lines from the movie, in the original voice. He's still great. (Robbie is a "He", right?)
Robby was also in an episode of Gilligan's Island...that was missed in this video
Yes. He is my favorite robot. Also staring in forbidden planet it should be mentioned the sailor cook. Who had the hooch made. The invisible boy was a great movie also.
I watched "Forbidden Planet" as a kid. Still remember Robby. Thank you.
Wow! I've never before seen a shot of Lock Martin as Gort without his head on. You seem to have the only one! Thanks for saving a bit of history for future generations!
Thanks for giving Isaac Asimov credit for the Three Laws and for “I, Robot.” This book is a collection of short stories which he previously had published in a magazine (I think they were in “Astounding,” which is known as “Analog” today), so each chapter/story has a different “leading robot.” The first story is about a robot used as a companion for a six year old girl, and the robot is named Robby. After all, it’s the most obvious English name for a robot!
R2-D2, C3P0 met your granddad.
C3PO's design was based on the "Maria robot" from Fritz Lang's 1927 film, Metropolis. Artoo on the other hand, could be Robby's great great great great great great grandson. LOL.
Mj
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He was also in an episode of Gilligan’s Island.
I think 'The Invisible Boy', filmed 13 years before Colossus: The Forbin Project, is the first movie about a super computer trying to take over the world. Robby fans will enjoy it.
You're correct. There's a time-travel subplot that reveals Robby is exactly the same Robby seen in "Forbidden Planet".
@@edwinland2406 Yes, I remember the hint is in a photo in the lab. I'm gonna watch it again tonight. I have the DVD.
Colossus: The Forbin Project is a classic cold war sci fi thriller. Great flick.
@@herbbluntman2287 Here the Eric Breden talking about Colossus in 4 min. video: ua-cam.com/video/ba0ZhyVTodw/v-deo.html
Note that the evil computer isn't merely trying to take over the world ... it wants to destroy all forms of life //throughout the universe//, or any thing that might evolve into a living entity, leaving it the sole form of consciousness. When it orders Robby to kill Doctor Merinoe and his son, Robby smashes the feedback system. I could go on ad infinitum but I'd rather let others voice their own views
Who didn't like Robby and B9? Dr. Smith could have field days calling them a bunch of names. What an act the three of those and a few smaller robots would be!!
I have the vinyl record soundtrack to the film. It is the only time I had seen Lesley Nielsen with hair that was not white.
I'm not too sure but I believe Robbie the robot made his first appearance in a movie starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn in a movie called I believe the desk set.? I believe the movie was made in 1953 or 1954.
Spellbinding is an accurate way to sum this movie up. Great review, very enjoyable.
Thanks for the info.. I've always liked that robot and the Lost In Space robot.
The studio model of the Space Cruiser also made an appearance in the only episode of the Twilight Zone where there was literally no dialogue. Agnes Morehead played a lonely Woman who was being tormented by its tiny inhabitants in what appeared to be a house in a forlorn countryside. Finding the table sized Flying Saucer on her roof she destroyed it but as the camera pulled back its revealed to have been for Earth with USAF marking on its caved in top. The music from the film was ground breaking since it was the first totally electronic score and might of gotten an Oscar nomination but the rules stated that members of a music union/profession had to have played/composed it for an award. Indeed many of the iconic SciFi props met an unhappy fate from the period and the ships along with the cobra like heat Ray projectors from War of the World's were given to a Boy Scout Scrap drive because they were made out of Copper. Robbie the Robot's popularity helped it survive and the original equipment from 1930s Frankenstein was used in Mel Brooks classic comedy take on story decades later because some one had wanted it to survive as well. In an odd way no other Cinematic Robot has been as advanced or skilled as Robbie and few fictional rivals can claim to be his equal in the last 60+ yrs...
I met Robbie the Robot back in the ‘60s at Harry’s Ace Hardware on Magazine Street in New Orleans. I was around four or five years old at the time. He scared the hell out of me and everyone else, as the man in the robot suit was obviously drunk. Robbie was rude and crass, much to the audience’s surprise. He made a little girl blow up a balloon until it popped in her face, the entire time yelling at her to, “BLOW!!! BLOOOW!!!!! BLOOOOOOOOW!!!!!!!!!” The children were terrified and the adults were mortified!
Then, at the end of the event, Robbie gave everyone ‘autographed’ black and white 8” X 10” photographs of himself that came out of the horizontal slats in his ‘neck’. I remember crying a lot, and the evening was most traumatic for all who attended.
superb ..a great video learnt a lot thank you.
I remember seeing the torso and head, mounted on a movable platform instead of having legs. I think it was in an episode of The Love Boat, where he was supposed to be the invention of some genius kid.
But Forbidden Planet is the best place to get accquainted with Robby. That film is credited (rightly or wrongly) as being the first one where the robot was not depicted as some kind of hostile device which is threatening all of humanity, but instead as a safe and obedient helper.
It might possibly also be the first movie featuring a robot where said robot survives unscathed to the end of the film. ;)
In a way you're right.
Gort, from 1953's "Day the Earth Stood Still" does menace Earth, but only after he and Klaatu are threatened & Klaatu is shot -- twice.
(Spoilers? Still? After 66 years?)
Patricia Neal's character gives the pass-phrase, though, and averts disaster.
Gort also survives the movie and probably outlives Klaatu.
Got to go now and watch the scene... YOU know which one!
And let's not forget another immense landmark: Louis and Bebe Barron's awesome electronic soundtrack. Personally, it's the first thing I have in mind when I recall my early memories of this film, first seen on TV in the early 60s.
Great video i remember it well and great movies to !!!
Robby is a close second for me for my favorite movie robots. My absolute favorite robot was always the "Death Probe" from the "Six Million Dollar Man". That one showed up in two episodes, one in it's original form, then they repainted it black, and put a dome on top that fired lasers, and added weapons to it. Then they ruined the thing by making it goofy looking and putting it in the movie "Heartbeeps" as the "Crimebuster" robot. To this day, it's two appearances in "The Six Million Dollar Man" are my favorites. That robot both terrified and fascinated me when I was a kid.