Author
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Topic: Journey to the Centre of the Earth
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Hugh Thompson Scott
Film God
Posts: 3063
From: Gt. Clifton,Cumbria,England
Registered: Jan 2012
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posted January 30, 2013 09:02 PM
At long last, a digest of one of my favourite Jules Verne adventures I imported the film from Germany, so obviously the language is of that country, no problem, it's a very well known story. So the projector was threaded up, the Marketing Logo hit the screen then the first bars of Bernard Herrmans score and the usual Letraset titles lead us into the role call by James Mason as Prof. Lindenbrook, of his intrepid band of explorers before their descent into the earth.On their way,they find a crystal cave, cause a flood, and Pat Boone as Alec McKeowan manages to get lost and stumble into the camp of Count Saknussem, a rival of Lindenbrook. He wounds the young man when Alec refuses to carry the Counts equipment.The balance is restored when the Professor turns the tables on his adversary.The big Icelander known as Hans, spies a trail of duck feathers leading toward an outcrop of rocks where the Count is occupied, realising that the Count has eaten his feathered friend, the guide attacks the Count, who after a struggle is buried in a rock fall. The film then moves to what is left of Atlantis and the discovery of an earlier explorer, a skeletal finger points the way out.Unfortunately the escape route is blocked by rock, but gunpowder left in the dead explorers satchel, solves that problem, although the blast also rouses the dormant volcanoe and a huge liizard that tries to consume them but is covered in molten lava as the heroes are thrown up through the chimney of the volcanoe while being protected from the lava by means of a huge altar stone. The heroes are discharged into the sea, and the final scenes are on the steps of Edinburgh University with original end titles. I was disappointed in the way that the German editor missed the point of the whole exercise, no mention of their encounter with the Dimetrodons, the mushroom forest, or the Saknussem Ocean with the raft/whirlpool sequence that was integral to the plot as this was the centre of the earth.What we have are chunks of the film that serve as a souvenir, rather than a condensation of the whole.A pity as in 18 minutes the story together with the scenes mentioned could have been incorporated and a worthwhile digest might have been formed. The sound is loud and clear, the picture was something of a letdown, being slightly faded and dark, very similar to the 400' "Raiders" I used to have. The film is presented "letterboxed" The packaging is excellent as you would expect from Marketing, is the blue box enclosed lid type.
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