Exploración inmersiva e innovadora del planeta Tierra a través de los ojos de dos seres humanos.Exploración inmersiva e innovadora del planeta Tierra a través de los ojos de dos seres humanos.Exploración inmersiva e innovadora del planeta Tierra a través de los ojos de dos seres humanos.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 1 nominación en total
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
"Postcard from Earth" isn't just a movie; it's a sensory immersion designed to showcase the mind-blowing capabilities of the Las Vegas Sphere. While the film's opening moments felt a touch slow and perhaps a little abstract, it quickly blossoms into a breathtaking visual journey. Once the Sphere's immersive potential is fully unleashed, the experience is nothing short of awe-inspiring. The film itself, a celebration of our planet's natural wonders, is beautifully crafted, but let's be honest: the Sphere is the true star. The sheer scale, clarity, and enveloping nature of the visuals create an experience that transcends traditional cinema. It's a technological marvel, a testament to human ingenuity. "Postcard from Earth" is a worthy vehicle for this groundbreaking venue, and while the film is enjoyable, the Sphere itself is an absolute must-see, a glimpse into the future of entertainment. Prepare to have your perceptions of visual media completely redefined.
There's nothing quite like going to the gaudiest city in the world and entering the brightest building in the world, an electronic marvel costing north of $3 billion, and then getting lectured on how humans have ruined the pristine Earth. Beautiful images on the sphere surface for half of this 50 minute "film" and then 25 minutes of lecturing us on how we should just leave the Earth.
Reminded me a lot of the climate change activists that fly private jets across the world to tell me why I shouldn't drive a gas car.
However the Sphere itself was incredible, inside and out, and the nature scenes were absolutely incredible.
Reminded me a lot of the climate change activists that fly private jets across the world to tell me why I shouldn't drive a gas car.
However the Sphere itself was incredible, inside and out, and the nature scenes were absolutely incredible.
The nature and bustling city visuals were captivating when presented on a screen like that of the Las Vegas Sphere, but there was no need for the science fiction meets global warming Adam and Eve Genesis plot.
I would have been completely happy just watching scenes of the world and its people without the hypocritical climate change narrative and biblical undertone.
The music was well curated for each scene, and it was truly an experience seeing a film in the Sphere; however, combining a politically charged message with a biblical allegory just doesn't sit right with an audience of people in Sin City.
I would have been completely happy just watching scenes of the world and its people without the hypocritical climate change narrative and biblical undertone.
The music was well curated for each scene, and it was truly an experience seeing a film in the Sphere; however, combining a politically charged message with a biblical allegory just doesn't sit right with an audience of people in Sin City.
Very Creative, Visually Outstanding. Awesome Experience. Narration was not needed. Another Ideology driven Docudrama meant to make you feel guilty. The Sphere is the most state of the art, advanced theater on the planet and this is what is chosen? For $200 and a seat in the Sphere, I better be Entertained and not to be made guilty about our human existence on how our planet turned out. The first few minutes were worth it definitely. Then the guilt trip narrative started to play on your emotional heart strings. Enough is Enough. The Sphere needs to Entertain, not guilt trip its audience. Wake up MGM!
You get more flies with honey than vinegar, but this film is determined to ruin your day... but don't worry the rich will be able to leave to a new world to wreck so that Earth can be returned to an untouched vista in which (you guessed it) the rich can vacation without all those pesky poor people crowding it. I certainly think it was unintentional to show the problem of the world only being 3rd world decay, but rarely are people in business suits seen as the problem (when the rich elite almost certainly consume much more). I'm used to heavy handed messages in nature docs, basically "look how beautiful, don't you want to save it", but Postcards from Earth's solution is leave the wrecked Earth and let it recover without us, rather than learning to live with it. On a giant Sphere screen, nobody really wants to view a full 1/3rd of a film where we get to see poor people picking oranges, poor people living in urban hellscape (with planes flying loudly overhead and nobody looks too happy to be involved with this expensive vision). The audience OOOOOs and AHHHHHs at previous few moments of nature shown, but the depressing message is hammered home over and over. There truly isn't such a thing as subtlety in film anymore. I think the film needed to go one way or the other: either a feel good Disney Nature film with a "save this place" message -or- a downer film where science talks about the harsh reality... but this film is neither. It's bleak, but the solutions of dropping a seed and instantly terraforming a planet is sublimely stupid. And if this solution is possible, why would anyone need to preserve the Earth and leave at all? Just drop a seed every few years and start again when the planet dies? The film ignores responsibility for an easy answer. Is it really ECO for a single couple to travel space? Shouldn't there be a lot more people? Where are all the poor people? Did you leave them on Earth? And in what universe would everybody "leave voluntarily"? Have you met any confederate people from the south? Or a New Yorker. No way they're leaving their hellhole. The film should have been brighter and with more fun, a message is fine, but how about a realistic one?
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe film was shot with an 18K resolution camera, and plays back at 60 frames per second. In terms of data, the film is about half a petabyte in size, which is roughly 500 terabytes. That means viewers are able to observe 32 gigabytes of data per second, or nearly 2,000 gigabytes per minute.
- Créditos curiososSince this movie is shown at 18k in the Las Vegas Sphere, it is able to show all the approximately 2000 crew members credits all at once, legible to the audience, taking up a large portion of the dome screen.
- ConexionesFeatured in Minute for A Year (2024)
- Bandas sonorasBourbon Street Jam
Written and Performed by Andrew Silver
Arranged by Andrew Silver
Courtesy of Spheresongs
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- How long is Postcard from Earth?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución55 minutos
- Color
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What is the Canadian French language plot outline for Postcard from Earth (2023)?
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