VCI Vault Classics: Killings at Outpost Zeta (1980) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of VCI Entertainment

Every now and again a film however large or small can and often does generate a cult following vicariously through another intellectual property with little to no affiliation to it other than a pictorial or sonic sample.  Particularly with electronic artists whether it be Aphex Twin, DJ Shadow, Nine Inch Nails or Meat Beat Manifesto, there’s usually a sound sample or a picture from some obscure forgotten cult science-fiction/horror film in the music itself or thematically there are kindred interests. 
 
Such is the case of the Scottish electronic duo Boards of Canada and their 1995 debut EP record Twoism which is notable for featuring on the cover a key image from cult film producer-director-composer Robert Emenegger and Allan Sandler’s 1980 sci-fi/horror cheapie Killings at Outpost Zeta.  Though the album Twoism was a success, the project that inspired it still languishes in obscurity for better or worse depending on your point of view.  While not necessarily on par with Planet of the Vampires or Alien in terms of extraterrestrial monsters terrorizing a crew of astronauts scaling the planetary surface, its lo-fi ambience and notable cast members still leaves a sleepily infectious impression.

 
In the time-honored tradition of alien horror films ala It! The Terror from Beyond Outer Space, a rescue team of astronauts organized by Commander Craig (Paul Comi) is dispatched after several pathfinder teams sent to investigate the planet Zeta go missing.  The plan is to colonize and cleanse Zeta’s unbreathable atmosphere of sulfuric gases, but with up to twelve people missing a team comprised of medical doctor Linda Saunders (Jaqueline Ray), biologist Dr. Carol Sisco (Hildy Brooks), officers Sigmund (Stanley Wojno) and Gore (Jackson Bostwick) is thrown together replete with body bags on the chance someone may die on the dangerous mission. 
 
Despite early warning signs including a bloody capsule imploring any and all turn back, the crew lands on the outpost and discovers the dead missing pathfinders vampirically drained dry of their blood.  Not long after (seen via fish-eye lensed first person POV shots), the crew is terrorized by an unseen alien creature which seems to be blending into the rocky terrain of Zeta ala Apollo 18 and its moon rock monsters.  Later in a frank lift from Forbidden Planet, a protective laser fence is installed to ward off the alien attackers which we learn were previously a peaceful species of creature until invasive human expeditions gradually made them hostile. 

 
Pretty much made for easy television exhibition with next to no gore, no real sex or violence to speak of while still feeling like the filmmakers walked off the sets of Galaxy of Terror or Forbidden World with their own costumes and cameras, Killings at Outpost Zeta is the product of what became known on television as the Sandler/Emenegger team responsible for such sci-fi oriented fare as the 1974 documentary film UFOs: Past, Present and Future narrated by none other than Rod Serling.  

While clearly cheap and the kind of thing you’d scroll past on cable TV in the wee hours of the morning, the film as such is better remembered for its dreamy spacey ambient electronic keyboard soundtrack by co-director and conceptualist Emenegger which can easily be found online.  Hearing the soundtrack while glossing through still photos of the film suggest a spacey Delta Space Mission by way of Rock and Rule sort of starfield phantasmagoria and sleepy spookiness. 

 
Unfortunately the actual film which did get a standalone VHS release in both 1987 and 1989 while now being a Tubi and Vudu streaming exclusive is kind of a sleepy slog.  Though running a brisk ninety-two minutes, Killings at Outpost Zeta tends to meander and never fully engages as a thriller or science fiction.  Still the costumes, set design of the spaceship and score by Emenegger will invariably draw curious Boards of Canada fans and cult sci-fi aficionados in for a peek.  The film’s cinematography by Jose Luis Mignone who also worked on the cult horror film Frogs with its orangey surface photography of desert landscapes with sulfuric smog bubbling out looks fine enough though the source material remains blurry and damaged. 

 
More of a music video piece with traces of floaty ambient soundscapes that would grow more prominent with the rise of IDM music in the 1990s than an outright horror film, Killings at Outpost Zeta ostensibly is a cult project for the works it would later inspire yet sadly the actual film isn’t all that much to write home about.  Co-producer Ann Spielberg’s brother Steven would go on to do many great things, but even that association only goes so far.  In the scheme of interplanetary monster movies Killings at Outpost Zeta is one of the weaker ones but if you see the soundtrack album on vinyl record store shelves, buy it with confidence immediately!

--Andrew Kotwicki