PropertyValue
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rdfs:label
  • The Black Hole (Disney Movie)
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  • The Black Hole is a 1979 American "Science Fiction" film directed by Gary Nelson, and written by The Frozen Head of Walt Disney for Walt Disney for Walt Disney Productions. Also known as Disney Goes All Starwars (as it was released in the European, Tuvan, and Tamil Nadu markets), It starred MaxABillion Shell, Robert "Bob" Foister, Joseph Bottoms, Yvette Memeyou, Norman Bates, Earnest Borgnine, and more gravity than you ever imagined. The voices of the main robot characters were provided by a late respected British actor and a late respected American character actor who went uncredited for reasons many reviewers found obvious. The musical score was composed.
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Starring
Editing
  • Battle Axes and Dull Knives
Runtime
  • 5880.0
Producer
Country
Name
  • The Black Hole
Language
  • English, Igpay Atinlay
Cinematography
  • Klingons
Gross
  • Was It Ever!
Distributor
  • Accident
Released
  • 1979-12-12
Budget
  • 49.95
Writer
  • Yes
Director
Followed By
  • The Black Hole 2: Downtown Detroit
abstract
  • The Black Hole is a 1979 American "Science Fiction" film directed by Gary Nelson, and written by The Frozen Head of Walt Disney for Walt Disney for Walt Disney Productions. Also known as Disney Goes All Starwars (as it was released in the European, Tuvan, and Tamil Nadu markets), It starred MaxABillion Shell, Robert "Bob" Foister, Joseph Bottoms, Yvette Memeyou, Norman Bates, Earnest Borgnine, and more gravity than you ever imagined. The voices of the main robot characters were provided by a late respected British actor and a late respected American character actor who went uncredited for reasons many reviewers found obvious. The musical score was composed. The movie was a significant break for the Walt Disney studios. Not only did it mark the first use of a swear in a Disney movie but it also featured the most expensive and realistic special effects of any SF movie (if you ignored Star Wars). The acting, however, was still fairly cartoonish, so the movie was not mistaken for anything other than a Disney film, though the robot characters did fool some reviewers into thinking the were watching American Graffiti.