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I fixed the misspellings & bad punctuation as I examined the whole page.


* CreatorBreakdown: The lawsuit and failure of the movie caused Graeff to snap as later in 1959 he proclaimed in newspapers to be the second Jesus Christ. He planned to do several sermons around LA and even tried changing his name to Jesus Christ the 2nd before the the public backlash got him arrested.
* CreatorKiller: The film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting outed as Jesus Christ II by the LA Times (see CreatorBreakdown above) he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.

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* CreatorBreakdown: The lawsuit and failure of the movie caused Graeff to snap as later in 1959 he proclaimed in newspapers to be the second Jesus Christ. He planned to do several sermons around LA and even tried changing his name to Jesus Christ the 2nd before the the public backlash got him arrested.
* CreatorKiller: The film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock laughingstock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting outed as Jesus Christ II by the LA Times (see CreatorBreakdown above) he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.



* WhatCouldHaveBeen: After Graeff returned to the industry in 64 he attempted to sell a screenplay he wrote called ''Orf''. It's leaves some to wonder what the movie and Graeff's career would have been like had it been picked up.

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* WhatCouldHaveBeen: After Graeff returned to the industry in 64 '64 he attempted to sell a screenplay he wrote called ''Orf''. It's It leaves some to wonder what the movie and Graeff's career would have been like had it been picked up.
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-->'''Crow''': Really ''old'' teenagers from outer space!

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* WorkingTitle: ''Ray-Gun Terror'', ''Killers from Outer Space'', ''The Boy from Out of This World'' and ''Invasion of the Gargon''

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* WorkingTitle: ''Ray-Gun Terror'', ''Killers from Outer Space'', ''The Boy from Out of This World'' and ''Invasion of the Gargon''Gargon''.
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* CreatorKiller: The film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting ousted by the LA Times he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.

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* CreatorKiller: The film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting ousted outed as Jesus Christ II by the LA Times (see CreatorBreakdown above) he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.
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** Finland: ''Gargon Attacks''



* WhatCouldHaveBeen: After Graeff returned to the industry in 64 he attempted to sell a screenplay he wrote called ''Orf''. It's leaves some to wonder what the movie and Graeff's career would have been like had it been picked up.

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* WhatCouldHaveBeen: After Graeff returned to the industry in 64 he attempted to sell a screenplay he wrote called ''Orf''. It's leaves some to wonder what the movie and Graeff's career would have been like had it been picked up.up.
* WorkingTitle: ''Ray-Gun Terror'', ''Killers from Outer Space'', ''The Boy from Out of This World'' and ''Invasion of the Gargon''
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* BoxOfficeBomb: It was revealed in a lawsuit filed against Graeff by actors Bryan Grant and Ursula Pearson (who both invested in the movie and we're promised a share in the profits) that the movie never made any money during its run.

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* BoxOfficeBomb: It was revealed in a lawsuit filed against Graeff by actors Bryan Grant and Ursula Pearson (who both invested in the movie and we're were promised a share in the profits) that the movie never made any money during its run.
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* CreatorKiller: the film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting ousted by the LA Times he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.

to:

* CreatorKiller: the The film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting ousted by the LA Times he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.
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* BoxOfficeBomb: It was revealed in a lawsuit filed against Graeff by actors Bryan Grant and Ursula Pearson (who both invested in the movie and we're promised a share in the profits) that the movie never made any money during its run.



* CreatorBreakdown: The lawsuit and failure of the movie caused Graeff to snap as later in 1959 he proclaimed in newspapers to be the second Jesus Christ. He planned to do several sermons around LA and even tried changing his name to Jesus Christ the 2nd before the the public backlash got him arrested.
* CreatorKiller: the film's failure and the breakdown he had afterwards made Graeff a laughing stock in Hollywood which led him to vanish to the east coast. He briefly returned in 1964 to serve as an editor on ''The Wizard of Mars'' and tried to pitch another movie, but after getting ousted by the LA Times he left the industry again and committed suicide six years later.



* RealLifeRelative: David Love, who played Derek, was the real-life boyfriend of the director Tom Graeff (who also played Joe Rogers in the movie, using the stage name Tom Lockyear).

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* RealLifeRelative: David Love, who played Derek, was the real-life boyfriend of the director Tom Graeff (who also played Joe Rogers in the movie, using the stage name Tom Lockyear).Lockyear).
* ReclusiveArtist: Graeff vanished from Hollywood twice after the movie's release. [[note]] the first time was around 1960 when he moved to the east coast after the 2nd Jesus Christ incident and the other was in 1964 when he quit the film industry altogether and moved to La Mesa [[/note]] What he did during those periods before his death are a complete mystery.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen: After Graeff returned to the industry in 64 he attempted to sell a screenplay he wrote called ''Orf''. It's leaves some to wonder what the movie and Graeff's career would have been like had it been picked up.
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* ExecutiveMeddling: The distributor picked the title ''Teenagers From Outer Space'', figuring that it would attract the widest possible audience -- the working title was ''The Boy From Out of This World''. The title change had the side-effect of retroactively making Derek and Thor {{egregious}} cases of DawsonCasting.

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* ExecutiveMeddling: The distributor picked the title ''Teenagers From Outer Space'', figuring that it would attract the widest possible audience -- the working title was ''The Boy From Out of This World''. The title change had the side-effect of retroactively making Derek and Thor {{egregious}} JustForFun/{{egregious}} cases of DawsonCasting.
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** Although some FridgeLogic could apply here. The people on their planet may be human-like, but they might age physically at a different rate. Heck, that could explain Derek's innocence and naivete: he might actually be 12 or 13 compared to Thor and the TORTCHA! guy, who could be 17 or 18.
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* CompletelyDifferentTitle:
** France: ''The Martian Invasion''
** Mexico: ''Space Rebels''
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Hey Its That Guy and Hey Its That Voice examples are being cut per TRS.


* HeyItsThatGuy: The spaceship captain would later become[[UsefulNotes/McDonalds Ronald McDonald in the 1970s and 1980s]].
** Before that he was Siegfried's flunky in ''Series/GetSmart'' - "Ve don't ''torchah' here!':
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** Before that he was Siegfried's flunky in ''GetSmart'' - "Ve don't ''torchah' here!':

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** Before that he was Siegfried's flunky in ''GetSmart'' ''Series/GetSmart'' - "Ve don't ''torchah' here!':
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* DownerEnding: Real life example. Tom Graeff, the film's director, went a bit out there after the film's release, claiming himself to be Jesus Christ II, and never made another movie due to the bad press. He committed suicide at age 41.
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* DawsonCasting: ''Teenagers'' from outer space? To be fair, only ''one'' alien was supposed to be a teenager, and the title was a marketing gimmick common in the 50's to get high school students to come see your film (put "Teenage" in the title). The actor playing the "teen alien" is still too old.
* ExecutiveMeddling: The distributor picked the title ''Teenagers From Outer Space'', figuring that it would attract the widest possible audience -- the working title was ''The Boy From Out of This World''. The title change had the side-effect of retroactively making Derek and Thor {{egregious}} cases of DawsonCasting.
* HeyItsThatGuy: The spaceship captain would later become[[UsefulNotes/McDonalds Ronald McDonald in the 1970s and 1980s]].
** Before that he was Siegfried's flunky in ''GetSmart'' - "Ve don't ''torchah' here!':
* RealLifeRelative: David Love, who played Derek, was the real-life boyfriend of the director Tom Graeff (who also played Joe Rogers in the movie, using the stage name Tom Lockyear).

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