Planet 51 Jun 2026
While did not break box office records (grossing roughly $105 million against a $70 million budget), it found a second life on streaming and DVD.
In the vast canon of animated cinema, few concepts are as immediately engaging as a role reversal. We have spent decades watching humans fear the "other," trembling at the sight of flying saucers and little green men. But what if the script were flipped? What if the human was the alien, and the "monsters" were just suburban families living their daily lives? Planet 51
At the time of its release, Planet 51 was the most expensive film ever produced in Spain , with a budget of roughly $70 million. It represented a major milestone for Spanish animation, proving that European studios could compete with the visual fidelity of Hollywood giants like Pixar or DreamWorks. While did not break box office records (grossing
In the vast catalog of animated feature films, few have managed to achieve the unique duality of . Upon its release in 2009, it was often dismissed by critics as a derivative "reverse alien invasion" comedy. However, over a decade later, the film has cemented itself as a beloved cult classic—a sharp, nostalgic parody of 1950s sci-fi tropes wrapped in a surprisingly warm story about friendship and fear of the other. But what if the script were flipped
The citizens of have never actually seen an Earthling. They have only seen propaganda movies. General Grawl’s entire platform is based on fear of the unknown. When Chuck arrives, he is harmless—he just wants to go home—but the media spins him into a monster.