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"Journey" redo will score with junior explorers

Sun Jun 29, 2008 11:30pm EDT
Cast members Josh Hutcherson (L) and Anita Briem pose at the premiere of ''Journey to the Center of the Earth'' at the Mann Village theatre in Westwood, California June 29, 2008. The movie opens in the U.S. on July 11. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

By Michael Rechtshaffen

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - If Scholastic had published "Journey to the Center of the Earth," the 1864 Jules Verne classic might have resembled Warner Bros.' kid-friendly telling of the oft-filmed sci-fi yarn.

Shot implementing a 3-D process that's easy on the eyeballs and a lighter touch that ensures things don't get too intense for younger adventurers, this first feature by veteran visual effects supervisor Eric Brevig has its transporting, if benign, charms.

Granted the other-worldly excursion has that prefab, carefully calibrated feel of a theme park ride. The New Line & Walden Media presentation, which opens July 11, should play well with its targeted family demographic, especially in RealD-equipped theaters.

Where Verne's original novel started out in Germany and the 1959 James Mason-Pat Boone version was set in Scotland, the junior edition takes place in America (technically Montreal), where Brendan Fraser's Trevor Anderson is a college professor and expert in the field of plate tectonics.

Anderson and his brother Max also had been on the verge of a major geological breakthrough prior to the latter's disappearance in an expedition in Iceland years earlier.

Now, Anderson and his brother's teenage son, Sean (Josh Hutcherson), attempt to pick up his trail with the help of a pretty Icelandic mountain guide (Anita Briem) and a dog-eared copy of the Verne novel.

Director Brevig -- working from a serviceable if safe on the surface script credited to Michael Weiss and the busy team of Jennifer Flackett & Mark Levin -- keeps things moving along at a pleasant clip (with the help of a trio of editors) while coaxing amiably energetic performances out of his three leads.

He also manages to steer clear of most of those hoary, "comin'-at-ya"-type 3-D cliches in his use of the flexible Fusion System process developed by James Cameron and cinematographer Vince Pace, instead relying on the added dimension to heighten the hyper-real imagery, overseen by visual effects supervisor Christopher Townsend.

Wonder if he saved enough unused footage for that theme ride?

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter



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