Event Horizon buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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Features
• PAL
In Theaters : 15 August, 1997 |
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Event Horizon description
Drawing from Andrei Tarkovsky's heady science fiction meditation Solaris by way of Alien and Hellraiser, this visually splendid but pulpy piece of science fiction schlock concerns a mission in the year 2047 to investigate the experimental American spaceship Event Horizon, which disappeared seven years previously and suddenly, out of nowhere, reappeared in the orbit of Neptune. Laurence Fishburne stars as mission commander Captain Miller and Sam Neill is Dr. Weir, the scientist who designed the mystery ship. Miller's T-shirt- and army-green-clad crew of smart-talking pros finds a ship dead and deserted, but further investigations turn up blood, corpses, dismembered body parts, and a decidedly unearthly presence. It turns out that the ship is really a space-age haunted house where spooky (and obviously impossible) visions lure each of the crew members into situations they should know better than to enter. The ship is gorgeously designed, borrowing from the dark, organic look of Alien and adding the menacing touch of teeth sprouting from bulwark doors and clawlike spikes inexplicably shooting out of the engine room floor. Unfortunately the film is not nearly as inventive as the production design--it turns into a woefully inconsistent psychic monster movie that sacrifices mood for tepid shocks--but the special effects are topnotch, and ultimately the movie has a trashy B movie charm about it. --Sean Axmaker |
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Event Horizon Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ |
Hey, I liked It.
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| Event Horizon is not the bad film a lot people make it out to be. While it seems to be a rip-off of Alien, the film is really an homage to that film and quite a good one, too. In places, the movie could have used just a bit more gore, but otherwise it is a good film for people who like sci-fi and horror films; it's not a bad way to spend an afternoon. My only real complaint is that the DVD is in letterbox version and that cuts away vital parts of the scenery. This is a problem with too many DVDs; we should be given the option of having both full screen and letterbox for those who like it. I don't. |
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