"Journey to the Center of the Earth" Review
From: Film Gecko   57 days 5 hours 58 minutes ago
Channel: Entertainment Film & TV
Movie: Journey to the Center of the Earth in 3-D In Theaters: July 11, 2008
Runtime: 92 minutes Directed by: Eric Brevig
MPAA Rating: PG for intense adventure action and some scary moments Three and half GeckoGecko Rating:

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Journey to the Center of the Earth is a fun action flick. It probably won’t win any awards, because there are other movies with more action, better special effects, and just about everything else. But don’t let that stop you from seeing it, because for a PG-rated family film — and 3-D, too — it’s loads of fun.

Brendan Fraser plays Trevor Anderson, a geology professor who’s in danger of being downsized out of his college department. When not teaching class, he’s been continuing the work of his brother, Max, who disappeared several years earlier while studying volcanic tubes, i.e. express lanes into the center of the earth.

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journey2 When Max’s son, Sean (Josh Hutcherson) arrives for a 10-day visit (much to his chagrin), Trevor is ready to send him home after stumbling upon some data that might prove Max’s theory. No way, says Sean. He’s not getting dumped.

So the two embark on a journey to Iceland, where they meet up with an old scientist’s daughter, Hannah Asgeirsson (Anita Briem), who doesn’t believe any of this earth’s core business, even though her dad was studying the same theories. But she’s willing to guide them up the mountain for a fee. A few horrible missteps later, and the trio is sent hurtling into the earth’s core, where they find all sorts of fantastical creatures, plants, oceans, and adventures.

This is the sort of movie where you have to just let go, and be willing to accept what you see, for the sake of movie fun. The world beneath the earth is a fantasy filled with wonder — tiny, electric-blue birds, mammoth mushrooms, flesh-eating fish, and several prehistoric creatures, not all of which are friendly.

journey6 The movie would have been good even without 3-D, but with it, a panoply of things jump off the screen at you, including a big glob of dinosaur mucus. But none of it is gross or violent enough to turn you off. It’s rated PG, with just the right amount of action and, of course, a little romance thrown in.

Brendan Fraser continues to be the guy who’s a little frayed around the edges, but always with a raised eyebrow and a comic turn. Anita Briem has a few credits to her name, most notably as Jane Seymour in Showtime’s The Tudors. She does a great job here of playing the strong female undeterred by a few dinosaurs or several-mile drop into the earth.

And I’m enjoying seeing Josh Hutcherson’s career unfold. He’s growing into a fine actor. Here, he plays a 13-year-old, but could easily pass for 16 or 17. According to his IMDB page, he’s 15.

Go see Journey to the Center of the Earth, and take your family. There are a few scary parts, but it’s fine for kids 10 and older.

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Images: Journey to the Center of the Earth, Warner Bros. Pictures, 2008

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