Video&Audio Camera&Photo DVD Movies
At the Earth's Core dvd movie.
Home » DVD Movies » Art Home » Local » United Kingdom » General

United Kingdom • Music/Musicals
United Kingdom • Action/Adventure
United Kingdom • Gay/Lesbian
United Kingdom • Comedy
United Kingdom • Drama

At the Earth's Core
buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
At the Earth's Core List Price: $14.95


Features
 Anamorphic
 Closed-captioned
 Color
 Dolby
 DVD-Video
 Subtitled
 Widescreen
 NTSC

In Theaters : July, 1976
DVD Release : 20 November, 2001
[ + Zoom ]   [ Buy Now ] DVD : This item is currently not available.
At the Earth's Core description
High adventure and hooty special effects make At the Earth's Core a colorful camp treat. Doug McClure plays David Innes, the brawn to Dr. Abner Perry's brains. The two have developed the Iron Mole, a vehicle that bores through solid rock. A test run goes too well and before you know it they're neck-deep in scantily clad cave women and telepathic lizard-birds. Peter Cushing has a good time playing against his usual type as the absentminded Professor Perry, while McClure sticks to cigar-chomping macho swagger. Older kids will enjoy the colorful sets and fire-breathing animals, while adults will get a kick out of the hilariously outdated gender politics. At the Earth's Core is well worth turning off your brain and taking a look. DVD version includes the original trailer and French and Spanish subtitles. --Ali Davis
At the Earth's Core Customer Reviews
  1     2     3  
♥♥♥♥♥ Burroughs by name, burrows by nature!
Before Luke Skywalker, there was Doug McClure... His John Dark-Kevin Connor fantasy adventures were a mainstay of Summer holiday movies in the days before Star Wars: they weren't masterpieces, they didn't boast state-of-the-art special effects, but they were exactly what an audience of kids wanted from a film back in the mid 70s.

At the Earth's Core is highly enjoyable, catching just the right tone for the appropriately named Burroughs' pulp adventure about Victorian inventor Peter Cushing and the inevitable Doug McClure ending up in the underground world of Pelucidar and battling its evil telepathic fighting dinosaurs. This time the puppets are gone in favor of men in monster suits, which is a lot more fun if you're willing to suspend your disbelief, and if you're not there's always Caroline Munro's cleavage to look at. Aside from what may well be Peter Cushing's worst performance, an irritating but dottier rehash of his movie Dr Who ("You can't mesmerize me, I'm British!"), it's easily the best of the John Dark-Kevin Connor-Doug McClure fantasy adventures, surprisingly well directed and boasting an atmospheric use of color. Never especially good at exterior scenes, Alan Hume's photography gains immensely from the control a studio set gives him (the film was shot entirely on soundstages) to paint a luridly vivid world worthy of a pulp novel cover. Not high art but definitely great Saturday matinee fun.
  1     2     3