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The Last Starfighter

Alex Rogan was a small town boy with big dreams. But in his wildest dreams, he never suspected that tonight he would become The Last Starfighter.
1984 | 101m | English

(48906 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Nick Castle
Writer: Jonathan R. Betuel
Staring:
Details

Video game expert Alex Rogan finds himself transported to another planet after conquering the video game The Last Starfighter, only to find out it was just a test. He was recruited to join the team of best Starfighters to defend their world from the attack.
Release Date: Jul 13, 1984
Director: Nick Castle
Writer: Jonathan R. Betuel
Genres: Adventure, Action, Science Fiction
Keywords flying car, android, trailer park, laser gun, shapeshifting, space marine, fighter pilot, games, alien, 1980s, arcade game, universal translator
Production Companies Universal Pictures, Lorimar Film Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $28,733,290
Budget: $15,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Lance Guest Alex Rogan
Robert Preston Centauri
Chris Hebert Louis Rogan
Kay E. Kuter Enduran
Dan Mason Lord Kril
Dan O'Herlihy Grig
Catherine Mary Stewart Maggie Gordon
Barbara Bosson Jane Rogan
Norman Snow Xur
John O'Leary Rylan Bursar
George McDaniel Kodan Officer
Charlene Nelson Rylan Technician
John Maio Friendly Alien
Robert Starr Underling
Al Berry Rylan Spy
Wil Wheaton Louis' Friend
Marc Alaimo Hitchhiker
Vernon Washington Otis
Bunny Summers Mrs. Boone
Peggy Pope Elvira
Peter Nelson Jack Blake
Suzanne Snyder Cheerleader
Meg Wyllie Granny Gordon
Name Job
Nick Castle Director
James D. Bissell Art Direction
Craig Safan Original Music Composer
Ron Cobb Production Designer
Glenn R. Wilder Stunt Coordinator
Brian E. Frankish First Assistant Director
King Baggot Director of Photography
Irene Mariano Casting
Marlin Hall Key Grip
Faye Brenner Script Supervisor
Larry Keys Best Boy Electrician
Don High Set Designer
Carroll Timothy O'Meara Editor
Charles Hatcher Dolly Grip
Al Yaylian Boom Operator
Tracy Farrington Property Master
George Holmes Gaffer
Linda Spheeris Set Decoration
Michael Wiegand Assistant Property Master
Robert Inklekofeer Leadman
Barbara Miller Casting
James Linn Costumer
Robert Fletcher Costume Designer
Rodney Veto Best Boy Grip
Debbie Smith Production Coordinator
Richard J. Beban Second Assistant Camera
Lauren Palmer ADR Editor
Darrell Pritchett Special Effects
Kevin Pike Special Effects
John L. Jensen Production Illustrator
Jeffrey A. Okun Visual Effects Coordinator
Werner Keppler Makeup Artist
Kim C. Friese Production Manager
Jack Solomon Production Sound Mixer
Roger Gebhard First Assistant Camera
William James Teegarden Set Designer
Daniel J. Johnson Music Editor
Bub Asman Sound Editor
Bill Cresant Transportation Coordinator
Michael Lantieri Special Effects
James Camomile Special Effects
Richard J. Bayard Construction Coordinator
Mark Mueller Songs
Fred J. Brown Supervising Sound Editor
Beverli Eagan Set Designer
Richard Denault Second Assistant Director
Stephen E. Bridge Camera Operator
Wayne R. Campbell Transportation Captain
David Franco Music Supervisor
Michele Sharp Sound Editor
Conrad M. Gonzalez Assistant Editor
Geoffrey Ryan Location Manager
Ken Johnson Music Editor
Claudia Sumner Visual Effects Supervisor
Jonathan R. Betuel Screenplay
Richard Malzahn VFX Artist
Name Title
Edward O. Denault Producer
Gary Adelson Producer
John Whitney Jr. Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 19 27 15
2024 5 21 28 15
2024 6 18 36 13
2024 7 25 47 12
2024 8 23 43 15
2024 9 16 19 11
2024 10 20 34 13
2024 11 17 42 13
2024 12 17 22 12
2025 1 17 24 11
2025 2 13 19 3
2025 3 6 19 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 2 3 1
2025 6 2 3 1
2025 7 2 3 1
2025 8 2 2 1
2025 9 3 5 1
2025 10 3 5 2

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Year Month High Avg
2025 10 969 969
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 811 924
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 961 980
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 916 916
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 642 781
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 647 788
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 733 733
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 886 886
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 613 763

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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

You have been recruited by The Star League to defend the frontier against Xur and the Ko-Dan Armada. The Last Starfighter is directed by Nick Castle and written by Jonathan R. Betuel. It stars Lance Guest, Robert Preston, Catherine Mary Stewart, Dan O'Herlihy and Norman Snow. Music is by Craig Sa ... fan and cinematography by King Baggot. Story sees Guest as Alex Rogan, an everyday teenage boy who upon breaking the high-score record on a trailer park arcade game, suddenly finds himself recruited by an alien defence unit to fight an evil army out in space. The advancements of computers and all their devilish electronic off shoots have rendered many of the pioneering effects films of yesteryear as rudimentary antiques. Where once films like "Tron" and "The Last Starfighter" blazed the trail that many would follow over the years, now they seem, if you believe the multitude of new era reviews for them, to hold only nostalgia value to video game players who were still at school in the early 1980's. That's something of a disservice, for although they do indeed rely in the main on effects work and razz dazzle 80's credibility, the stories are enjoyably fantastical and not without thought and merit. The Last Starfighter is one of the better ones because it manages to be both an exciting and sweet picture, one that is completely disarming. Certainly it marries Spielberg homespun values with George Lucas operatics, but in the form of its teen protagonist it also dots the fantasy canvas with angsty worth. So much so that now when one revisits the film with older eyes, we can appreciate more fully that young Alex is in a rut, the crossroads of his life, a life he's struggling to make sense of. Also more appreciation can now be made of the relationship Alex has with Grig (O'Herlihy), his flight navigator up in the galaxy, someone whom he calls a Gung-Ho iguana! This relationship is nicely drawn, here is where Alex finds not only his friend, but also his father figure, something he doesn't have the privilege of down on Earth. Whilst up there fighting an intergalactic battle, Alex on Earth has been replaced by a Replicant Beta Model to ensure he is not missed. Here is where much of the film's fun is gleaned from. Interesting to note that originally this arc in the film wasn't to be that huge, but test screenings encouraged director Castle into a rethink. And the film is the better for it as the Beta tries to keep the flame going with the girlfriend (Stewart adorable girl next door type) and ensure he's not found out by any Ko-Dan spies! Here Guest earns his corn, it's a very good duel performance from the youngster and it's a shame his career never really took off post the film's release. However, none of this means the film is full of depth, it still remains a very simple story full of fantastical incredulity. But the underlying message of improving oneself, not settling for second best, is rich and puts some potency in the narrative. Still, it's safe to say that most tuning into The Last Starfighter want whizz bang space adventure frolics, which thankfully we do get. The effects are of course variable, though not as cheap looking in High Definition as one expected, while the action is nicely constructed by Castle and his team. The villains led by a Po-faced Norman Snow make their mark, while Robert Preston, a legend to Western and film noir fans in the 40's and 50's, gives a wonderfully sweet and affecting turn as Centauri, the game inventor who whisks Alex away to the planet Rylos for his life changing challenge. More than just a film for nostalgists and gamer types, Last Starfighter is pretty solid entertainment from its core to the outer layers. 7/10

May 16, 2024
JPV852
8.0

Didn't grow up watching this, though sort of heard of it over the years, but gave it a watch and immensely liked it, even with the cheesy game-like graphics/effects. Lots of fun and liked the lead actor, Lance Guest. Definitely has some replay value down the road. **3.75/5** ...

Jun 23, 2021
FilipeManuelNeto
4.0

**Overall, it's a decent movie, if not a very good one.** There is no doubt that, if there is something that marked sci-fi in the 80s, it was arcade games and the popularization of information technology and the personal computer, with the potential that this allowed in everyone's life. However, ... I have some doubts about the quality of the films it spawned. In this case, the film begins by showing us a young teenager addicted to a gaming machine who, after beating the last levels of the game, is taken in a futuristic car by a stranger to discover that everything the machine showed was real, and it was in reality true training to find and recruit space pilots for a war in a faraway galaxy, in the best “Star Wars” style. Of course, the movie also has a hormone-filled romance in the middle. Upon seeing the film, I was a little skeptical about the script and its verisimilitude, but after a bit of reading, I came to discover that, nowadays, there are a lot of digital military systems, and even weaponry, that are made in such a way that be more easily controlled by soldiers who have already had some contact with computer games, and have some dexterity with this type of entertainment. This is something quite ingenious, and also perverse, on equal measures: ingenious because of their pragmaticism, perverse because it puts "innocent" video games on an equal footing with real weapons, which destroy and kill real people. Philosophies aside, the film seems to me more accessible and more interesting than others of the same genre and from the same era. The script isn't particularly clever, and it's not difficult to predict the course of events, but it does things reasonably effectively. The cast is not the strong point of the film. We don't have any major actors involved here, and the whole movie looks like it was made with fairly amateur actors. Lance Guest was credible in the role of the hero, and he does what he needs to, but without great competence and in a relatively weak way. Robert Preston is a little better, but he doesn't have much to do other than be the movie's Yoda. Catherine Mary Stewart appears simply because someone thought the hero had to have a minimally attractive girlfriend. Technically, the film bets heavily on cinematography, which is reasonably well done, and on good visual and sound effects, which do their job well and look realistic, even if they are a huge distance from what we can do today, which makes the film quite dated but still nice.

Dec 25, 2022
Geronimo1967
7.0

Just think back to when you spent hours on your Atari games console playing space invaders, without realising that one day you might save the world? Well "Alex" (Lance Guest), a bored teenager living in a trailer park doing odd jobs might just prove to be just such a man. Well, at least this is what ... "Centauri" (Robert Preston) thinks and leaving a perfectly plausible android doppelgänger in his place, recruits our young man to prevent the evil "Kril" (Dan Mason) and "Enduran" (Kay Kuter) and their overwhelmingly superior force of spacecraft from conquering us all. Can he do it? Can he thwart the cunning plan? It's quite a fun fantasy adventure this, Guest joins in wholeheartedly as does Preston and there are plenty of special effects to drown out the occasionally boo-hiss romantic elements with "Maggie" (Catherine Mary Stewart). There is plenty of humour, too - mostly from Preston and Guest makes for an easy on the eye hero for all to get behind. It's actually stood the test of time quite well, as many simple ideas do, and I really quite enjoyed it.

Jun 08, 2023