चालक दल के दो सदस्य खराब पड़े एक स्पेसक्राफ्ट पर नींद से जागते हैं, वे यह नहीं जानते कि वे कौन हैं, कितने समय से सो रहे हैं या उनका मिशन क्या है. इसके तुरंत बाद, वे पाते हैं कि वे अकेले नहीं... सभी पढ़ेंचालक दल के दो सदस्य खराब पड़े एक स्पेसक्राफ्ट पर नींद से जागते हैं, वे यह नहीं जानते कि वे कौन हैं, कितने समय से सो रहे हैं या उनका मिशन क्या है. इसके तुरंत बाद, वे पाते हैं कि वे अकेले नहीं हैं और स्थिति इतनी ज्यादा डरावनी हो जाती है जिसकी उन्होंने कभी कल्पना भी नहीं की थी.चालक दल के दो सदस्य खराब पड़े एक स्पेसक्राफ्ट पर नींद से जागते हैं, वे यह नहीं जानते कि वे कौन हैं, कितने समय से सो रहे हैं या उनका मिशन क्या है. इसके तुरंत बाद, वे पाते हैं कि वे अकेले नहीं हैं और स्थिति इतनी ज्यादा डरावनी हो जाती है जिसकी उन्होंने कभी कल्पना भी नहीं की थी.
- Hunter Leader
- (as André M. Hennicke)
- Insane Officer 'Eden'
- (as Niels Bruno Schmidt)
- Childhunter
- (as Luna Mohmand)
- Female Crew Officer
- (as Neelesha Bavora)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
It had some nice "seat jump" scenes, and had moments where it was surprising funny.
And lots of nice twists too - don't see that enough in movies in general any more!
I can't comment too much on the "technical" aspects of the film, sorry, I'm just more of "was it a good, believable story" person. This was.
the first half is extremely creepy and i would compare it to Alien. yea yea, fan boys will ofc hate me, but i have seen no other movie that i would compare to Alien except this one. i have never seen a movie that kept me so focused. i was trying to eat my dinner as i started this movie and i think it took me 1h+ to get the dinner down cause i didn't wanna look away. the story isn't even that original (are there original movies left to be made?) but the pieces picked from stories already told are put together in a really awesome way which makes it feel new and fresh. i think you could make 5-6 movies by picking out parts of Pandorum and developing them. I'm glad they kept it as one compact, awesome flick!
As with the best deep-space movies, the context is mental illness, what the Professor on Gilligan's Island called, oddly enough, "island madness." Only in space. In the distant, distant future, a ship has been sent from the Earth carrying a lot of people, headed to the only Earth-like planet ever found. Sometime during the journey, things go awry. We pick up the story as an astronaut named Bower (Ben Foster) awakens from hypersleep, abruptly; he's soon followed by his commanding officer, Payton (Dennis Quaid). The rest of the crew is gone, and the only door is locked from the outside. What's happened here? Making matters more difficult is the amnesia that each man suffers from, owing to their having been in hypersleep way longer than intended. Somehow, they must piece together what has happened and find out what lies behind that door - and throughout the rest of the gigantic ship.
Not only does the movie recall Aliens and 2001, you can also see similarities to The Descent and The Abyss; really, any movie in which people are trapped in claustrophobic environs. And although the pacing is frenetic at times, the movie is really chillingly shot (by Wedigo von Schultzendorff). On the one hand, the plot flows linearly - Bower needs to get to the ship's reactor so he can reboot it and save everyone - meaning that the actors race from scene to scene, running out of time. On the other hand, they don't piece together what's happened as quickly as they might in other, lesser films; they seem to figure things out gradually, as if assembling a puzzle in their heads. Bowers and others - and there are others - discover right away, though, that they're not really alone on the ship and that their enemies are extremely strong and fast and vicious.
Injected into this oh-my-goodness-what's-out-there madness is, well, madness. The movie's title is explained as being a sort of mental illness that affects astronauts from time to time, when they just plain go bonkers for seemingly no reason and kill everyone on board. Is that's what's happening here? Is Bower the crazy one? Or is it Payton? Are they, in fact, alone on the ship? Foster is excellent as the hero who remembers a little bit more of their mission as time elapses; Quaid, in turn, shows a few more layers than we're accustomed to seeing from him (he's usually more of a poor man's Harrison Ford). Both actors turn in convincing, full-throated performances that complement, rather than succumb to, the special effects and cinematic wizardry. Often, the effects are the entire show. Now, it's true that you won't see a lot of character development here, as you might in the most cerebral of sci-fi, but what works best here is the paucity of knowledge about the situation and the characters. By spinning the tale gradually, feeding the audience only a snippet at a time, director Christian Alvart dangles the mystery in front of his viewers without allowing them to settle back and solve the mystery on their own. When you're constantly kept on your toes with sudden lurches of unseen shapes and reverberating noises, you - like the befuddled characters - are concurrently kept off balance. The result is an unsettling, entertaining delight.
I loved the way this movie started; guy wakes up from hyper-sleep his memory is not fully functional, he knows things are not right and has to save the day.
I thought the story was great in that they did not over-explain everything like they have in so many sci-fi movies. The mid plot line was very good never found myself asking "what the hell are you doing", and the ending was very good without being so trivially expected.
Of course Dennis Quaid is a great actor but I really liked watching Ben Foster. He was one of the best actors in 3:10 to Yuma.
Special effects were good but did not need to be over the top because the story was solid. Worth the price of admission.
The film centers around two characters who awaken on what at first seems to be a ghost ship, and quickly discover the extent to which "they are not alone." The remainder of the film parallels the experiences of the two men as they separate and seek to establish control over the ship.
The film has a well-defined plot (not a given in modern sci-fi films) and sticks to it. No wacky subplots that peter out irresolutely; no absurd romancing. Also, mercifully absent were explanations of the current state of affairs that dragged the whole movie sideways.
The finale is corny but satisfying. The movie does such a good job of taking the viewer on the journey with the protagonists, that the denouement is refreshing.
Not great film-making, but good sci-fi.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिविया'Pandorum' is the first film in a proposed trilogy, but it is doubtful the sequels will ever see the light of day due to the first film's low box-office performance.
- गूफ़When Bower is attempting to awaken Payton by banging on his tube, it reads Payton from the outside. In a reverse angle from inside the tube, it clearly reads Bower, indicating the tube was reused from the earlier sequence when Bower awakened.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटThe initial end credits intersperse with interiors of the Elysium. As well as some slight video static with the scrolling credits.
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- $3,30,00,000(अनुमानित)
- US और कनाडा में सकल
- $1,03,30,853
- US और कनाडा में पहले सप्ताह में कुल कमाई
- $44,24,126
- 27 सित॰ 2009
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $2,06,48,328
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 48 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.35 : 1