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  1. The Brother From Another Planet. 1984 · 1 hr 48 min. R. Comedy · Sci-Fi. A mute alien with the appearance of a black human is chased by outer-space bounty hunters and finds sanctuary on the streets of Harlem. StarringJoe Morton Rosanna Carter Ray Ramirez. Directed byJohn Sayles. A mute alien with the appearance of a black human is chased by ...

  2. The Brother from Another Planet (1984) Directed by John Sayles For his fourth feature, John Sayles gave the well-worn sci-fi trope of the alien a revitalized punch with African American actor Joe Morton starring as a visitor from beyond the stars.

  3. Film. The Brother from Another Planet is een film uit 1984, geschreven en geregisseerd door John Sayles (voornamelijk bekend van Return of the Secaucus 7 ). De film bevindt zich momenteel in het publiek domein. In 2003 maakt de Amerikaanse producer King Britt het conceptalbum Adventures in Lo-Fi dat op de film is gebaseerd.

  4. Directed by John Sayles • 1984 • United States. Starring Joe Morton, Daryl Edwards, Steve James. In John Sayles’s witty urban spin on the runaway-slave narrative, a mute extraterrestrial (Joe Morton, in a remarkably expressive performance) crash-lands in Harlem after a spaceship accident and finds himself on the run from two mysterious ...

  5. Currently you are able to watch "The Brother from Another Planet" streaming on Plex for free. Synopsis An alien slave crash-lands in New York City while being pursued by two Men in Black bounty hunters.

    • 108 min
  6. Near the end of John Sayles’s The Brother From Another Planet (1984), the film’s unnamed protagonist (Joe Morton) looks out of a train’s back-window as it pulls away, thus leaving him to reflect on things the viewer can never really know. Now, this may be an issue to some, but to those that get the fundaments of art, Morton’s ‘ what ...

  7. The Brother From Another Planet is actually a highly thoughtful, humane, and yes, funny, portrait of what it's like to be an outsider in America. This was the first movie to be directed by John Sayles that I've seen, but from what I understand it's the only one to use any of the stuff he learned in his background writing exploitation movies for Roger Corman.