War of the Worlds (2005)
Facts
| Directed by | Steven Spielberg |
| Cast | Tom Cruise, Dakota Fanning, Tim Robbins, Miranda Otto, Justin Chatwin, Gene Barry, Ann Robinson and Lisa Ann Walter |
| Theatrical Release | June 29, 2005 |
| DVD Release | November 22, 2005 |
| Running Time | 116 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 678149439229 |
| Buy this item | $9.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 2 0:01 EST (details) 1 DVD, Paramount, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed - Dolby Digital 5.1) Or 93 new from $2.90, 262 used from $0.39, 10 collectible from $12.98 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Too cheezy |
| 3 stars out of 4 |
Few could deny that War of the Worlds has its share of flaws, but capable direction and special effects coupled with a few outstanding scenes make this film (just) worth recommending despite its ludicrous and abrupt ending. December 18, 2008
| No paddle steamers(sadly) but the ending is a bit of a "Cleveland Steamer"! |
The idea that the aliens had "pre-positioned" equipment was a bit crappy to be honest, why hadn't sewer or mining works discovered any of these previously? He would have been better doing the meteorite story more like the Wells version.
But if you remember the Wells version, the dialog was something like this.
Monday - "I encountered one of the Martian machines near the cricket pitch, the vexatious contraption had actually trod on the square making the wicket prepared for next Sundays game against Little Tuddlesdown quite unplayable. Fortunately, the one that last weekends match against Higher Lowerdown was played on remains in fair condition, and with a bit of rolling and cutting, should be acceptable for the game. The Vicar will not be pleased though. I am down to my last 4 clean collars."
Obviously this sort of stuff is not going to lead to a gripping film, particularly for U.S. audiences and I feel that Speelers therefore made a decent fist of re-imagining the book to a modern setting. The ending though, the ending. Sob....
December 12, 2008
| Terrifying Aliens, Mundane Family. |
The movie introduces is to Ray (Tom Cruise) and his ex-wife and kids. He is to watch the kids while his ex-wife is away for the weekend. During this time, Ray encounters a massive and strange electric storm and later on discovers it triggered massive machines buried underground that start destroying or harvesting man.
I have to say that the first encounter with the tripod is an amazing scene. When it finally stands erect and emits it's terrifying sound before battle, I couldn't help but feel an immense dread at the events that were to lie ahead. This is very effective movie making and right away put me in the place of the characters.
The film basically tries to top each encounter and it succeeds nicely. The next time we see a Tripod, it stands ominously over a town near the ferry. Once again, we hear the terrifying battle call of the tripod before it attacks and the panic swells. Moving on, we are treated with a Tripod under the water and then an amazing scene of several of them wrecking havoc on the town and people running for safety. The next time we see them is one of the most bizarre and terrifying moments in the movie, as they emit even stranger sounds as they do something to the soil for long periods of time. This mechanical noise as they did this was very unsettling and could drive anyone to panic. Beyond the probe and alien scenes (which were also effective), we are treated up close and personal to the cage and the organic looking insertion tube where the humans are processed. This is all amazingly good and terrifying stuff.
As far as the rest of the film, the characters are just not likable to care much about. Yes, I know there is divorce in the world but why do we always need broken marriages in movies? Ray isn't a likable guy and despite his heroics, he still doesn't come across as anything but a loser even at the end of the film. The family scenes, the crowds scenes and the driving scenes were pretty bland and just didn't do much for me. The TV reporter scene (at the plane crash) was very strange and badly acted and only served to help further the plot some. And the scene with Tim Robbins, outside the alien stuff, was just lacking. And the decision for Ray to kill him was just so out there. I know that may be a horror of war but it just didn't seem right. A good smack on the head or something might have sufficed.
The alien attack scenes were very effective and stayed with me for a long time and that carried the movie over the mundane family scenes. That alone makes this movie one of the best alien invasion movies ever made. December 3, 2008
| Good Movie |
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