An Extraterrestrial Dictatorship On Earth come alien saboteurs from the “Planet of the eternal night”, which is located in the galaxy “Romania”. In their plans to destroy a number of strategic military facilities, and then conquer the Earth. Aliens are no different from humans, and therefore it is impossible to identify their agents (remember the later film Aliens Among Us by Carpenter). They also want to recruit a scientist to get secret spacecraft development. The protagonist-scientist, learning about this, under the guise of a traitor, learns about the intentions of the galactic dictator, and then goes to the “Planet of Eternal Night” to destroy the transmitter with which the “Overseer” controls subordinates. In this he helps his beloved woman and accidentally got into the spaceship champion boxer with his manager.
Well, the space race of the 50-60s did not bypass Mexico, which, although not in real life, but on film screens connected to it, packing in a fantasy film theme of dictatorship, close to the countries of South America in particular, and the whole world.
Trying to consider the film as a heroic-fantastic tape, there are no arguments in support, since the plot twists and turns are built on a huge number of alogisms and naive assumptions, which makes the film naive and even stupid. However, moving the picture into the context of the political situation in the world, much becomes clear. Behind the dictatorship of the “Overseer”, who lies to his subjects that his native planet will soon cease to exist, and therefore it is necessary to conquer the Earth, behind the total control of his subordinates, whom he can destroy in order to demonstrate his weapons, there is a dictatorship just on our planet Earth. And this military dictate, according to the authors, in different parts of the world: in Africa, Asia, and South America (see the map of the wars of those years). And the pacifist attitude of the heroes echoes the fact that we are facing an attempt to show world problems in an allegorical form. However, the attempt failed. Because of the rather frivolous narrative, the lack of serious drama and any deep characters, the film slides onto the shelf of children's fairy tales, but there it again does not belong.