LondonNet Film Review
Journey To The Centre Of The Earth
The fantastical storyline which underpins the remake of Journey To The Centre Of The Earth may continually hark back to Jules Verne's mid-19th century novel, but Eric Brevig's film is unquestionably a 21st century beast...
Marrying state-of-the-art special effects with old-fashioned family morals, this rollicking romp is the first live-action picture of its kind to be shot in digital 3D. Sadly, only selected cinemas around the
American college professor Trevor Anderson (Brendan Fraser) is regarded as an eccentric by the scientific community for his unconventional theories on geology. Working alone for more than 10 years since the disappearance of his brother Max (Jean Michel Pare) on a field trip to
Journey To The Centre Of The Earth takes a good 30 minutes to move into second gear, introducing the characters and particularly the surrogate father-son relationship between Trevor and Sean. Once the trio makes the descent to the "world within a world" via runaway mine cars (a sequence that resembles a theme park ride), the narrative reverts to a series of polished set pieces, punctuated by an outpouring of grief from Hutcherson's tyke that leaves a lump in the throat. Fraser plies the same brand of joviality and machismo, which served him so well in The Mummy films, while Briem fans the flames of the obligatory romantic subplot. Characters never appear in grave danger, not even when they encounter an ill-tempered relative of Tyrannosaurus Rex. "Haven't you seen a dinosaur before?" shouts Sean. "Not with skin on it," blusters Trevor as the hulking carnivore gives chase. A feel-good coda leaves the door ajar for a sequel and an expedition to the lost city of
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