Earth to Echo - Ein Abenteuer so groß wie das Universum
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter receiving a bizarre series of encrypted messages, a group of kids embark on an adventure with an alien who needs their help.After receiving a bizarre series of encrypted messages, a group of kids embark on an adventure with an alien who needs their help.After receiving a bizarre series of encrypted messages, a group of kids embark on an adventure with an alien who needs their help.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
- Emma
- (as Ella Linnea Wahlestedt)
- Marcus Simms
- (as Alga Smith)
- Calvin Simms
- (as Cassius Willis)
- Bar Patron #2
- (as Marilyn Giacommazzi)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The trailer hooked me in but i didn't buy in to the marketing so much as to see this in the theater and in all honesty it doesn't have to be watched in the theater to be appreciated. This movie could have very well been made in a month and cost maybe 3 million.
It is true Echo has very little screen time but I didn't notice because as the movie went along I realized what I was watching was not about echo it was about the 3 boys friendship. The basic premise of the film is that a construction company is buying up this entire neighborhood and the boys are all moving. The boys decide to spend their last night together trying to figure out a mystery. I was really invested in all of the boys and laughed a lot too. Being a 23 year old watching what is naturally a child's movie I barely ever do. The shaky was annoying but it actually made sense for this movie and again kept me invested. Personally I think this film was an 8. Writing was spot on, main actors were great the shots were excellent, music was great and the CGI was tastefully used.
Watch this with your kid (my second graders loved it) or on a rainy day.
Funny with lots of heart, the movie was really well done, with great acting from the mostly young cast. The kids acted and spoke like real kids. Dealing with real problems like divorce, adoption, awkwardness with the opposite sex, and having to move away from friends, there is a lot here for the audience to relate to.
I initially thought that there wasn't a whole lot of character development with the Echo character, but in hindsight, the movie had little to do with Echo and more to do with the kids' journey - on their last night together - to get Echo home.
Too often do I find myself nodding off at these kids movies. This isn't the kid movie you think it is. Lots of action, suspense, and humor - with an edge, yet I'm pretty sure there is no profanity...and no violence. Here is a little gem that I fear that will get lost in the mix of all of the other Summer blockbusters, but hopefully a little word-of-mouth can make this a surprise hit.
The film opens in a perfectly ordinary suburban neighbourhood in America, one that's about to be levelled for the construction of a brand new highway. This does not sit well, of course, with a trio of best buddies who must move away from one another: cocky, camera-crazy Tuck (Brian 'Astro' Bradley); sensitive foster child Alex (Teo Halm); and nervous, earnest Munch (Reese Hartwig). The day before the moving trucks arrive, the boys decide to investigate a mystery: their phones have been scrambled with what looks like a map. Their discovery brings them a new friend - the pining Echo of the film's title - but also a host of stern, unwavering adults determined to keep Echo grounded.
It's not much of a plot, and Earth To Echo marches forward with near-resolute predictability. There's a scared kid who wants to turn back (Munch), an argument threatens to break up a friendship (Tuck leaves Alex behind at a crucial point, which touches a sore nerve), they pick up a fourth wheel in the form of feisty Emma (Ella Wahlestedt). Some of the messages suggested in the havoc and chaos of the film, especially when Echo's enemies on Earth draw closer, are a little murky. Not one of the adults comes across as a fully-rounded character: they're played either as outright villains or peripheral comic relief.
That being said, there's an undeniable spark of life to the film, one shaded with the electric charge and colour of childhood: a time when friends made are friends made for life, and moral choices come in far fewer shades of grey. Viewed through the eyes of its young protagonists - and their counterparts in the audience - the film is a rollicking joy-ride, bursting with energy and packed with thrilling action beats. Echo, too, is wonderfully designed, a tiny, adorable bundle of metallic beeps and chirps. The found-footage approach gets a little belaboured by the end, switching perspectives from spy-cam to security footage, but it also allows intimate, cheeky access to this little band of brothers.
The film rests quite squarely upon the shoulders of its young actors, and they are very good indeed. In fact, they seem almost perfectly at home in front of the various cameras, their banter so natural that it feels improvised rather than scripted. Halm shines as brooding heartthrob-in-the-making Alex, his personal history bonding him almost instantly with poor, lonely Echo. Bradley is all swagger, his bossiness barely concealing the almost casual neglect he suffers at home. The real standout, however, is Hartwig, who invests Munch with a big, quaking heart: he brings to vivid life a little boy who would ordinarily be the butt of many a playground joke, but who, alongside his best buddies, gets to be something of a hero here.
There's no denying that Earth To Echo will feel terribly familiar in parts, and painfully predictable in others. But it's a film that manages to charm and surprise in spite of itself: the characters are lively, the story engaging, and the special effects far better than some earlier scenes would suggest. It operates with plenty of modern trappings - each kid has a smartphone, cameras are everywhere - but is really a sweet, old-fashioned story about the deep, magical friendships forged in the heart and fire of childhood.
That being said, there is nothing overt that you want to hide your little ones from, they will just probably fall asleep as my 4 year old did. If you have a 12 year old and you want to see a movie with them, then this is the perfect movie for you.
Wusstest du schon
- Wissenswertes"Earth to Echo" was produced and financed by Walt Disney Pictures. After chairman Alan F. Horn saw a final cut, it was put in turnaround and was purchased by Relativity Media.
- PatzerWhen the kids are driving the car, it is in park the whole time.
- Zitate
[last lines]
Tuck: When you're a kid you think you're invisible. You think you can't make a difference. We're not kids anymore. We know now that we can do anything. Having a friend light-years away taught us that distance is just a state of mind. If you're best friends, then you always will be... No matter where you are in the universe.
- Crazy CreditsAfter the credits, we see Alex pointing out his phone is acting all weird again.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Troldspejlet: Folge #52.7 (2015)
- SoundtracksThe Mighty Rio Grande
Written by Jeremy Galindo, Christopher Royal King, Raymond Brown, and Andrew Miller
Performed by This Will Destroy You
Courtesy of Magic Bullet Records
By arrangement with Dark Operative Publishing
Top-Auswahl
- How long is Earth to Echo?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizielle Standorte
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Llamando a Ecco
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 13.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 38.934.842 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 8.364.658 $
- 6. Juli 2014
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 45.681.062 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 31 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1