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Journey to the Center of the Earth
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Movie Review
Journey to the Center of the Earth (PG)
Pete Hammond
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Hollywood.com Says
You may have the feeling you are on a roller coaster that never stops--especially in 3D--but this
Journey
is tremendously exciting for every member of the family.
Story
Jules Verne’s classic 1864 novel has inspired many film and TV versions. None has matched the success of the penultimate 1959
Journey
which starred
James Mason
and
Pat Boone
and remains a baby-boomer favorite and classic of the sci-fi genre. That could change with this clever remake--ingeniously filmed in 3D--which goes directly back to the source material of the book and comes off like an endless thrill ride. This updated tale begins with the daily travails of American professor Trevor Anderson (
Brendan Fraser
) who has never gotten over the mysterious disappearance of his brother Max several years earlier. When Max’s son Sean (
Josh Hutcherson
) pays a visit bearing a box of Dad’s papers, the Trevor discovers hand-written notes in a copy of an original Jules Verne book suggesting his brother may have found a way to confirm Verne’s theories about a direct volcanic entrance into the center of the earth. With nephew in tow and the book in hand, the twosome set out for Iceland on their own perilous journey to test Max’s thesis and trace his steps. There they are joined by Hannah (
Anita Briem
), a skeptical mountain guide who agrees to show them the way--though she highly doubts they find anything resembling Verne’s imagined lost world of natural wonders and roaming dinosaurs. But stranger things have happened, right?
Acting
Anchoring the proceedings with enough derring-do to suggest he would be ideally cast as the next Indiana Jones, if
Harrison Ford
ever wants to hang up his hat,
Fraser
has just the right amount of authority, cynicism and dry wit to make us connect to a down and out professor whose “crazy” geological beliefs have torched his reputation. Key to liking this guy is clearly the fun
Fraser
has in playing him.
Hutcherson
is thankfully a little looser in this flick than the spiritually-driven boy he played in
Bridge To Terabithia
, even though the two films share odd similarities, especially with their descent from mundane real life into fantasy adventures any kid would salivate over.
Briem
nicely rounds out the threesome as the reluctant guide trying to deny the beliefs of her own late father, a Verne disciple who, as it turns out, shared the same dreams of the two nascent adventurers she now finds herself shepherding to parts unknown. In a relatively minor role
SNL
’s
Seth Meyers
also turns up early on as a disbelieving colleague of Andersons.
Direction
Oscar-winning visual effects veteran
Eric Brevig
(
Total Recall
), makes his directorial debut and turns out to be perfectly chosen for what is, after all, an effects- driven summer ride. Leaving a lot of the talkiness and exposition of Verne’s book (and previous film versions) on the cutting room floor, Brevig cuts right to the chase in this breezy 90-minute guilty pleasure. He clearly knows today’s moviegoers have the attention span of a mosquito, so he piles on the action but still manages to keep the sense of wonder crucial to the story alive. Best of all the 3D technology, which has been part of Hollywood for over half a century, is still remarkable to behold, even in the CGI era. Rather than just selected sequences, the entire film has been shot with 3D in mind so expect to have lots of objects hurled directly at you--none more effectively than a scene in which our explorers encounter flying fish. And even without the glasses prepare to hold your breath and hang on for a great time at the movies.
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