Friday, June 3, 2016

Review of Journey 3 - From the Earth to the Moon Full Movie

Review of Journey 3 - From the Earth to the Moon Full Movie: The film journey has been successfully achieved, as will soon be free to follow his adventure fiction movie. Yes, you read that right. If the card launches its third version of the film. The series had finally gotten the attention of movie lovers. It was said by a well known that the film is ready for release in 2016 is still no exact time discussed in the message above. 



The first sequel of the film series was issued July 11, 2008. It was entitled "Journey to the Center of the Earth 3-D" with Josh Hutcherson as "Sean Anderson," Brendan Fraser as "Professor Trevor Anderson" and Anita Briem Hannah Ericsson. a blockbuster at more than $ 241 million has been obtained; apparently well known and has been favored by millions of people. Therefore, in 2012, producers Beau Flynn, Tripp Vinson and Charlotte Huggins with the production of New Line Cinema, had launched waited for another version of this series of films. January 19, 2012, Journey 2: The Mysterious Island released in Australia on February 11 the same year, 2012 was followed by the United States.


Aside from the plot of the story, but was due to huge models and celebrities Successful added that has become the protagonist of the story, too. Dwayne Johnson as' stepfather, Hank Parsons was "Sean Anderson" (Josh Hutcherson) and the addition of Vanessa Hudgens as "Kailani Laguatan" to the end of Sean's love interest. As mentioned most popular celebrities added a spark to this series of films and won more than $ 315 million at the box office success Imagine that amount. The third sequel of the movie The journey is not to announce that a lot of fans that are sure expect to stumble 3: From the Earth to the Moon. And to be clear, it said in a well - known that the source of the third sequel writers have been announced for Carey Hayes and Chad Hayes and the film is scheduled to be released in 2016.

One of the most tedious and uneventful movies I have ever witnessed! Scenes consisted of redundant talking to fill a movie that could have been covered in 30 minutes, some guy has created power X. decides to go to the moon in the aim to come back to Earth! The excitement would lay in the last part, but unfortunately, the film provided nothing but a few yawns.


From the Earth to the Moon is terrible film. It is about a business and inventor who creates a new power source called Power X. The special effects are dated. George Sanders and Joseph Cotten give good performances regardless. The script was disappointing. Bryon Haskin tried to make this movie believable. I thought the movie was disappointing and would not see it again.

i love george sanders. but this was RKO studios last movie, so its already low budget was slashed, so any special effects they had planned were cheapened. so get ready for fireworks and weird noises! i didn't like that dumb little thing at the end with "jules verne" talking to the camera about invention or some shit. for old sci-fi, it's amusing, but not good. there's a pipe labeled "Inertia Gas." how fun is that?!

Sort of bland interpretation of the Jules Verne book (I guess, I have never read it). The duality of Cotten's and Sander's characters motivations and clouded philosophies is about the only thing I took away from this. The cameo by "Jules Verne" was lame.

About the most pointless film I've ever seen. After a slow start that seems to be competing with 2001 for showing all of space bureaucracy, though not nearly as effectively or to any purpose, the plot finally kicks in about halfway through the film. There's another planet directly opposite ours that always stays on the opposite side of the sun. A crew is sent to explore it and promptly crashes only to find out they're mysteriously back on Earth. Gosh, I wonder where they could actually be. Could it possibly be an identical but opposite Earth?

Admittedly this was made even more obvious since it was the plot of a Red Dwarf episode. It's a sad sad day when a TV comedy as silly as Red Dwarf can follow an idea through to its inevitable conclusion better than you can. Here the "differences" are idiotically simplistic and meaningless, like the fact that people are left-handed and write backwards. Hey, just like a mirror, get it? A mirror world? Isn't that clever! At least Red Dwarf added some interesting differences, like the fact that time was passing backwards. Worse yet we're expected to take this concept seriously here when five seconds' thought would show how dumb it is. And this mystery is the main conflict for the last forty minutes.

And then everybody dies.

No, I'm not even kidding about that. With no idea where to go once their boring revelation has been made they decide to simply kill off all the characters in an (admittedly pretty cool) explosion, except for one man who's shown years later in a retirement home recounting this story to a nurse. Note that this is the first time we have even a hint that this film is being told in flashback. Pathos? Mystery? Bah! And in a crowning moment of lameness that brings our film to its long overdue end, the old man sees his reflection in a mirror and charges at it in his wheelchair smashing into it and killing himself. Because it's a mirror world! Get it? Pretty clever, huh?

I've never seen a film try so hard to be intelligent and thought-provoking without even having one single creative idea. This film is a waste of celluloid. Not even bad enough to be charmingly awful, except in the final minutes. Avoid.

Released as Doppelgänger in Europe, this was Gerry and Sylvia Anderson's first foray into live-action cinema, even though the Thunderbirds films had been flops. Universal saw the potential for this mind-bending science fiction project and got Robert Parrish, (Casino Royale (1967) and The Bobo (1967)), to direct it, despite best intentions, it comes out a bit half-baked, despite good special effects. In 2069, it's discovered on an unmanned mission to the Sun that there's a planet on the other side of the sun on Earth's same orbital path. EUROSEC director Jason Webb (Patrick Wymark) has to plan a manned mission to this other planet before the East get their first, and with funding from NASA, gets American astronaut Colonel Glenn Ross (Roy Thinnes) and British astrophysicist Dr John Kane (Ian Hendry) to man the mission to the other planet. But, things start going awry when they get there, everything is reversed, even the print in books. But, on this earth, there's Jason Webb (Patrick Wymark), who claims they aborted the mission three weeks into their flight, which Ross denies. It's a product of it's time, although it has some brilliant special effects by Anderson regular Derek Meddings, but we've seen it all before on Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlett. It does seem like this was padded out a bit to make it movie length. It's quite trippy in places, but you can tell 2001: A Space Odyssey was a big influence.

I first saw this film when I was a child of about 14. I remeber enjoying it greatly. The story had the potential to be something really great, but unfortunately the let Gery Anderson of Thunderbirds fame create long and meandering special effects sequences which break the story up too much - its like "yes I get the fact the ship is docking, it has been for the last three minutes". Maybe this is a reflection on the very fast editing of todays films, maybe its me being too harsh. I still think the idea for the story is great though.

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