Nukie

Nukie is a 1987 South African science-fiction film directed by Sias Odendaal and Michael Pakleppa, and based on an original story by Odendaal. The film stars Anthony Morrison, Steve Railsback, Ronald France, and Glynis Johns.[1] The plot concerns an alien, Nukie, who crash lands on Earth and seeks help from two children to reunite with his brother, Miko, who has been captured by the US government.[2] The film was considered a knock-off of Steven Spielberg's 1982 film E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial[3] and is also considered one of the worst movies ever made.

Nukie
1987 Release Poster
Canadian VHS poster for Nukie
Directed bySias Odendaal
Michael Pakleppa
Screenplay bySias Odendaal
Ben Taylor
Story bySias Odendaal
Produced byGregory Cascante
Joe Dreier
Rolf Frederick
Roy Sargeant
Albie Venter
Ian Walters
Frederik Botha
StarringAnthony Morrison
Steve Railsback
Glynis Johns
Ronald France
CinematographyAnthony Busbridge
Horst Schier
Edited byAvril Beukes
Illo Endrulat
Gaby Grausam
Gisela Haugg
Verena Neumann
Roelf van Jaarsveld
Scott Vickerby
Music byNic Pickard
Production
company
Lars International Pictures
Distributed byTrimark Pictures
Release date
1 July 1987 (South Africa)
Running time
95 minutes
CountrySouth Africa
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Two aliens, Nukie and Miko, crash on Earth and are separated. Nukie ends up in the African savanna while Miko falls into the hands of the Space Foundation in America. Miko reaches out to Nukie telepathically and informs him that he is being held captive. The head of the Space Foundation operation Dr. Glynn sends Dr. Eric Harvey to Nairobi to investigate the other crash site. During their experiments, the scientists discover that Miko is a being made of pure energy.

Nukie begins to explore his surroundings, coming across two children, Tiko and Toki, who can understand Nukie. He asks them for their help with finding America, but they run off vowing not to tell anybody about what has happened.

Sister Anne, the head of a Catholic mission, is contacted via radio to inform her that Dr. Harvey is on his way. Nukie comes across Charlie, a talking Chimpanzee, who speaks to Nukie but he claims he does not know about America. The Corporal attempts to shoot Nukie, but he teleports out of harm's way and saves Tiko and Toki from a mountain lion. The boys then agree to help Nukie find America. Nukie attempts to commandeer Dr. Harvey's helicopter but crashes it.

At the Space Foundation, Miko has started to befriend the supercomputer, the Electronic Digital Data Intelligence computer (nicknamed E.D.D.I), and convinces him to scan for Nukie. Dr. Harvey repairs the helicopter and takes off, tracking Nukie. Tiko and Toki are brought before the tribal chief Sangoma and are banished for bringing Nukie into their midst. The two later reunite with Nukie, who expresses disappointment over their banishment.

Tiko is bitten by a cobra and is taken back to the camp by Dr. Harvey while the Corporal arrives and shoots Nukie with tranquilizers. The tribe carries Nukie's unconscious body back to the village. Tiko tells Dr. Harvey and Sister Anne about Nukie's capture. E.D.D.I attempts once more to scan for Nukie, and manages to lock in on Toki.

Toki discovers the tribe has Nukie imprisoned in a cage and sneaks into the Corporal's truck as he transports Nukie, later freeing him at a trading post with Charlie. The Corporal finds Toki and holds him at gunpoint as Nukie and Charlie escape. Sister Anne is alerted to the Corporal's presence and distracts him long enough to allow the pair to escape. Nukie finds Tiko at the infirmary and heals him as Toki and Charlie arrive. Toki and Nukie decide to leave Tiko to recover and set off to find America.

Sister Anne attempts to contact Dr. Harvey but finds out that he has left for America and that the Corporal has been trying to sell Nukie. E.D.D.I attempts to free Miko, but cannot bypass the security system. Miko manages to escape with the help of Pamela Carter.

Nukie and Toki manage to evade the Corporal, who drives off the edge of a cliff into a river while attempting to run them down. Nukie ends up in the river too and goes over a waterfall, severely injuring him. Unable to contact Miko, Nukie suggests that the two of them try flying away. They manage to fly some of the way, but Nukie collapses from exhaustion and crashes.

Toki wishes for his family as well as Miko and Nukie to be with him. Following his wish, Tiko, their mother, and Sister Anne arrive. Tiko explains that Nukie is not a bad omen as the tribe claim, but a friend who is in need. Nukie then appears in his light form, and Dr. Harvey lands in his helicopter bringing Miko with him. Miko and Nukie greet each other and inform the humans that they have to leave. Charlie asks to join them, and the three turn into balls of light before flying away.

Cast

  • Anthony Morrison – Nukie & Miko
  • Siphiwe Mlangeni – Tiko
  • Sipho Mlangeni – Toki
  • Glynis Johns – Sister Anne
  • Steve Railsback – Dr. Eric Harvey
  • Ronald France – The Corporal
  • David Fox – Nukie
  • Sam Ntsinyi – Sangoma
  • Jabulile Phakane – Dube
  • Fats Dibeco (as Fats Dibeko) – Mpefu
  • Reed Evans – Dr. Barbara Rhinestone
  • Carin C. Tietze – Pamela Carter
  • Lester C. Muller – Dr. Norman Glynn
  • Marcel Schneider – Officer Connally
  • Calvin Burke (as Calvin E. Burke) – Dr. Bradley
  • Nghaupe Pheto – Hunter
  • Meshak Dlamini – Hunter
  • Siphiwe Nyaosi – Mpadi
  • Charlie the Chimpanzee (uncredited) – Charlie the Chimpanzee

Production

Michael Pakleppa, a distributor of films in Germany, optioned Nukie long before it was shot and without reading the script but was impressed by the poster which gave the impression of E.T. but in an African setting.[4] Upon seeing the film, Pakleppa was flabbergasted by the end product and said of the viewing experience:


We thought we’d all die.There was no South Africa. There were hardly any extraterrestrials. We basically just saw discussions between a nun and a helicopter pilot, who were going on and on about how stupid Black people are, or something. Imagine that again and again and again, at extreme length, and nothing else.[4]

After discussing the experience with executive producer Gregory Cascante, the two tried to make a new edit of the film in the hopes of removing the racism, but after the process they only had about 40 minutes worth of usable footage.[4] Pakleppa then made several trips to South Africa with a small crew and worked with the film's writer and director Sias Odendaal to try and salvage the film.[4] The crew encountered many issues with the production specifically with the animatronics for the aliens which were poorly constructed and designed to be worked by small children who could only wear the suits for three to four minutes at a time before risking suffocation.[4] By the time the film had finished a lengthy post production process, Pakleppa's own company refused to release the film and instead went directly to television while also having its foreign rights sold off to various distributors.[4]

Reception

Witney Seibold of /Film writes that "Nukie is only remarkable for how undeniably terrible it is", noting that it appears on lists of the worst films ever made.[5] Critic Brad Jones, the creator and star of the web series The Cinema Snob, selected Nukie as the worst film he has ever seen.[6] British film magazine Total Film described Nukie as an "atrocity heralded by some as the 'most painful movie ever made'".[7] Total Film listed it in separate articles as the worst kids movie ever made and one of the worst science-fiction films ever made.[8][7] HUMO also included it on a list of the worst science-fiction movies ever made, while AlloCiné listed it as one of the worst films of the 1980s.[9][10]

Simon Abrams of Politico compared Nukie to another E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial knock-off, Mac and Me. Abrams wrote that Nukie was worse than Mac and Me, adding that it was "probably the most incompetent E.T. ripoff of any time period ... While Mac and Me was just rotten and ill-conceived, Nukie is uniquely perplexing."[11] Comic Book Resources described it as E.T.'s "most infamous imitator" and reported that it is "regarded as one of the worst movies ever made".[12]

VHS auction

The Milwaukee-based production company Red Letter Media spent nearly a decade collecting Nukie VHS tapes after fans began mailing them copies of the film.[13][5] Despite this, they never watched the film until December 2022, when they released a special episode about the practice of grading VHS tapes following a VHS copy of Back to the Future auctioning for $75,000.[14][15] The group had one copy of the movie professionally graded, while the others were destroyed using a woodchipper to inflate the graded tape's value. The graded tape was then auctioned off on eBay with proceeds going to charity, selling for $80,600.[16][17] The results of the auction made Nukie the most expensive VHS tape in history.[18]

See also

References

  1. Sauter, Michael. "NUKIE". EW.com. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  2. "Nukie". www.tcm.com. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  3. "One-Word Weird-A-Thon | American Cinematheque". americancinemathequecalendar.com. Archived from the original on 12 May 2017. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  4. "'The worst film ever': the story behind Nukie, the forgotten ET knock-off". Dazed Digital. 26 August 2023.
  5. Seibold, Witney (13 January 2023). "The Nukie Controversy Explained: Destroying Crappy Movies For Charity". /Film. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  6. Phalin, Mike (26 August 2016). "Schlock and the Snob: An Interview With Brad Jones". Dread Central. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  7. Winning, Joshua (8 November 2011). "50 Worst Kids Movies". Total Film. GamesRadar+. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  8. Winning, Joshua (30 June 2014). "25 Worst Science-Fiction Films". Total Film. GamesRadar+. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  9. Stockman, Erik (4 August 2022). "De beste, de slechtste en de heetste: Humo selecteert de sciencefiction-films die u moet hebben gezien". HUMO (in Dutch). Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  10. Palanchini, Corentin (24 July 2021). "Nos pires films des années 80, de Mac et moi aux Crados". AlloCiné (in French). Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  11. Abrams, Simon (1 October 2011). "In the year of Spielberg, a reminder of his most shameless imitators". Politico. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  12. Trinos, Angelo Delos (15 August 2022). "10 Copycat Films That Are Worse Than What They're Ripping Off". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
  13. Bergeson, Samantha (13 January 2023). "Red Letter Media YouTubers Raise $80K for Charity Selling Sealed Cult Sci-Fi Movie 'Nukie'". IndieWire. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  14. Marshall, Julia (13 January 2023). "YouTubers 'Red Letter Media' donate $80K to St. Jude's Hospital, Wisconsin Humane Society". TMJ4. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  15. Lloyd, Andrew. "YouTubers said they destroyed over 100 VHS tapes of an obscure 1987 movie to increase the value of their final copy. They sold it on eBay for $80,600". Insider. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  16. Newgent, Sean (10 January 2023). "VHS copy of forgotten 'E.T.' knock-off 'Nukie' sells for $80,600". KGUN-TV. Archived from the original on 11 January 2023. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  17. Snellgrove, Chris (7 January 2023). "VHS Tape Sells For $80,000 After YouTubers Destroy All Other Copies In A Wood Chipper". GIANT FREAKIN ROBOT. Retrieved 9 January 2023.
  18. Possa, Julia (9 January 2023). "VHS de filme trash é leiloado por US$ 80 mil – o maior valor da história". Giz Brasil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 12 January 2023.
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