Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The Brother from Another Planet is a 1984 low-budget American science fiction film, written and directed by John Sayles. The film, starring Joe Morton as an escaped extraterrestrial slave trying to find a new life on Earth, is in the public domain.

    • $350,000
  2. 14 de set. de 1984 · The Brother from Another Planet: Directed by John Sayles. With Joe Morton, Rosanna Carter, Ray Ramirez, Yves Rene. A mute alien with the appearance of a black human is chased by outer-space bounty hunters through the streets of Harlem.

    • (6,4K)
    • Comedy, Sci-Fi
    • John Sayles
    • 1984-09-14
  3. Sinopse. An alien slave crash-lands in New York City while being pursued by two Men in Black bounty hunters. His attempt to find a place for himself on Earth parallels that of the immigrant experience. Cast. Joe Morton. The Brother. Rosanna Carter. West Indian Woman. Ray Ramirez. Hispanic Man. Yves Rene. Haitian Man. Peter Richardson. Islamic Man.

    • (76)
    • 2
    • John Sayles
  4. An escaped slave from an alien planet lands in New York City and tries to adapt to life on the streets of Harlem, where he gets a job as a repair man due to his amazing abilities at fixing machines. Meanwhile, he's pursued by two agents from his home world who are intent on returning there with him.

    • 109 min
    • 1834
    • Lynma
  5. Welcome to Harlem, Brother. A mute space alien crash-lands on Ellis Island. He blends in with New Yorkers, holds one-sided conversations, and fixes arcade machines. When two "men in black" start...

    • 109 min
    • 334,9K
    • Cult Cinema Classics
  6. "The Brother" (Joe Morton) is an alien and escaped slave on the run from his home planet. After he lands in New York City, he tries to adapt to life on the streets of Harlem.

    • (28)
    • Sci-Fi
    • R
  7. 7 de set. de 1984 · Synopsis by Hal Erickson. Filmmaker John Sayles' first bonafide box-office success, Brother from Another Planet centers on a black escaped slave from a faraway planet (Joe Morton) who finds himself on the mean streets Harlem. Though the locals are put off by the slave's inability to speak, they are won over by his technical wizardry.