IMDb RATING
4.4/10
8.1K
YOUR RATING
The adaptation of Star Wars.The adaptation of Star Wars.The adaptation of Star Wars.
Füsun Uçar
- Bilgin'in Kizi
- (as Füsün Uçar)
Muhip Arciman
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Mustafa Basalan
- Oglan
- (uncredited)
Elif Baysal
- Kraliçe
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Celaleddin Enis Doruk
- Tanri
- (uncredited)
Sadettin Erbil
- Wizard
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Alex McCrindle
- Jan Dodonna
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Abdurrahman Palay
- Murat
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Nihat Yigit
- Earthling
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe material from Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977) was spliced in from an anamorphic print, while this movie was shot in academy format, which put the Star Wars footage in the wrong aspect ratio. The Death Star looks more like a Death Egg.
- GoofsDuring the cantina fight, Murat hits the red fluffy monster in the face and opens the gap between the head and body of the monster costume, briefly revealing the stuntman's neck.
- Alternate versionsThere was a 92 minute version, with the opening credits superimposed over the Star Wars footage, and additional scenes. This version was put out on a German Betamax tape.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Magic Sword (1962)
Featured review
Raiders of the Lost Cause....
I like this movie.
No, really; this is one of the most unrestrained, joyously goofy, lovingly bone-headed endeavors put on film since Jerry Lewis took to the camera.
But it's not a comedy! I THINK it isn't, anyway.
Think you've seen it all? Check out this: "Dünyayi kurtaran adam" (or "Turkish Star Wars" or "The Man who Saves the World" or whatever alias it has in Witness Protection now) not only borrows but begs and steals elements and music from "Star Wars" (natch), "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Flash Gordon"; many scenes simply run clips from "Star Wars" interspersed in otherwise non-space scenes, probably just to keep reminding you this is taking place in a galaxy far far away....
But then the film-makers throw in their own special FX.
Oh brother.
Red-cell tints, back projection, jerky stop-motion brains (don't go there), shag-rug aliens, party masks (one alien is a red-colored devil mask, complete with goatee, widow's peak and horns! MAN!!), toilet paper-wrapped zombies, and...and....
Okay, caught my breath. Get this: there are a lot (and I do mean A LOT) of scenes where they play the "SW" clips through a partially blocked-out screen. What; the camera suddenly developing glaucoma?
And the heroes? Two non-Solos who wear polyester shirts (that blue one with the two yellow flowers on the chest - STYLIN'!) and give karate kicks and chops and sport physiques like any well-schooled middle-aged banker would possess. Nice hair, though.
As far as the dialogue goes, couldn't get a word of it. I don't speak Turkish, but who needs dialogue; this is apparently not a movie that takes great pains to make a brave new world.
So it's dumb, gratuitously thick and probably illegal. But it IS funny. Maybe that was the goal, after all?
Ten stars and a Golden Glove for "Dünyayi kurtaran adam". Buy a copy today...hey, anyone know George Lucas' birthday?
No, really; this is one of the most unrestrained, joyously goofy, lovingly bone-headed endeavors put on film since Jerry Lewis took to the camera.
But it's not a comedy! I THINK it isn't, anyway.
Think you've seen it all? Check out this: "Dünyayi kurtaran adam" (or "Turkish Star Wars" or "The Man who Saves the World" or whatever alias it has in Witness Protection now) not only borrows but begs and steals elements and music from "Star Wars" (natch), "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Flash Gordon"; many scenes simply run clips from "Star Wars" interspersed in otherwise non-space scenes, probably just to keep reminding you this is taking place in a galaxy far far away....
But then the film-makers throw in their own special FX.
Oh brother.
Red-cell tints, back projection, jerky stop-motion brains (don't go there), shag-rug aliens, party masks (one alien is a red-colored devil mask, complete with goatee, widow's peak and horns! MAN!!), toilet paper-wrapped zombies, and...and....
Okay, caught my breath. Get this: there are a lot (and I do mean A LOT) of scenes where they play the "SW" clips through a partially blocked-out screen. What; the camera suddenly developing glaucoma?
And the heroes? Two non-Solos who wear polyester shirts (that blue one with the two yellow flowers on the chest - STYLIN'!) and give karate kicks and chops and sport physiques like any well-schooled middle-aged banker would possess. Nice hair, though.
As far as the dialogue goes, couldn't get a word of it. I don't speak Turkish, but who needs dialogue; this is apparently not a movie that takes great pains to make a brave new world.
So it's dumb, gratuitously thick and probably illegal. But it IS funny. Maybe that was the goal, after all?
Ten stars and a Golden Glove for "Dünyayi kurtaran adam". Buy a copy today...hey, anyone know George Lucas' birthday?
helpful•12120
- Mister-6
- Aug 14, 2002
- How long is The Man Who Saved the World?Powered by Alexa
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- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Man Who Saves the World
- Filming locations
- Goreme, Turkey(Most of the exteriors)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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By what name was The Man Who Saved the World (1982) officially released in India in English?
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