The Pieceworks authentic show worn costume card from our review box is of a shirt worn by Brendan Fraser as Trevor. In this box of Journey To The Center Of The Earth, there were two complete sets, plus some extra base cards. To allow collectors to be able to experience it in all it’s glory, they have been kind enough to include two pairs of 3D glasses in each box.Īs with almost all of Inkworks’ boxes of cards, they more than met their guarantee of at least one complete base set of cards in each box. In order to capture all the beauty of the 3D movie, Inkworks has created a great 3D work of art on these cards. “ Journey To The Center Of The Earth 3D by Inkworks is a truly unique card collecting experience! The 3D action in these cards is really one of the nicest looking card sets we’ve ever seen. Put on your 3D glasses (two pair in every box) and you’ll be transported to a world of eye-popping adventures and incredible creatures in this all 3D 50-card base set!” Inkworks announces the release of Journey to the Center of the Earth 3D Premium Trading Cards. “Take a wide-eyed three dimensional tumble to the center of the Earth! If 3D is indeed the future of movies, we're going to need something more substantial than Journey to the Center of the Earth to convince us.Excerpts from Non Sports update review, full review here Dramatically, however, this movie has not evolved beyond This is Cinerama, with its awesome roller coaster opening. Whatever kinks remain in 3D technology seem to have been worked out, and there are moments, especially involving a blue phosphorescent bird hovering in the air of the theatre, that are quite impressive. I don't think anybody can complain about his work here. Director Brevig supervised those effects on movies such as Pearl H arbor and The Day After Tomorrow. "I hate field work."Īll this is a rickety frame from which to hang 92 minutes of visual effects. "I just remembered something," Trevor says, as he hangs by his fingernails to the edge of a cliff. There's a bit of emotion (Josh cries over the memory of his defunct dad), a coming-of-age theme, a spark of romance between Trevor and Hannah, a sprinkling of obligatory humour in the face of death. Meanwhile, the characters utter lines from the kind of script that Hollywood screenwriters do in their sleep. The hard part is getting back to the surface. The party, through a series of accidents, eventually finds itself in the centre of the Earth, which has plant life, a sea, and some unpleasant prehistoric creatures. From then on the dramatic arc of the movie is simple. When they're trapped in a cave by a landslide, Sean begins to reconsider his blasé attitude. At least this is better than being a Canadian. "When does the whole adventure thing begin?" Sean asks, with only slightly diminished sarcasm. ![]() Sean goes with him and the two find themselves on a windswept mountain in Iceland with a local guide, Hannah (Anita Briem). Suddenly Trevor receives important signals of seismic activity in Iceland, which he must investigate immediately. "It's great," Sean says with cruel sarcasm. In Eric Brevig's 2008 version, the story begins when a scientist named Trevor (Fraser) takes charge of his 13-year-old nephew Sean (Josh Hutcherson) for a few days before the lad joins his mother in Ottawa. ![]() The makers of this movie do have an exciting story to build on, based on Jules Verne's 1864 sci-fi novel, subsequently filmed in 1959 with James Mason and crooner Pat Boone. How about the scene where the hero, played by Brendan Fraser, brushes his teeth, and then suddenly the audience finds itself looking up at his face from the bottom of the sink as the spit and water cascades, in glorious 3D, out of his mouth? They didn't think of that in 1953. The improved technology of Journey to the Center of the Earth promises to be more viable than these early efforts, but all depends on the imaginative use of that technology. ![]() ![]() I'm not sure the best way to do this is to echo the past – the way that yo-yo sequence echoes the paddleball, or a scene in which a breakneck trip down some underground railroad tracks in Journey to the Center of the Earth echoes a famous roller coaster scene in the 1952 spectacular This is Cinerama.Ĭinerama failed, just like early 3D. Journey to the Center of the Earth, along with other recent movies such as Beowulf, is meant to sell us on this notion. In 2008, moviegoers can put on 3D glasses that look like Ray-Bans to watch Journey to the Center of the Earth in 3D and see a yo-yo coming at them with even more devastating effect.Ī Hollywood school of thought predicts that 3D is the future of movies. Back in 1953 moviegoers willing to put on those awkward cardboard 3D glasses to watch the thriller House of Wax were treated to a wicked paddleball bouncing off the screen.
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