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Dimension 5

  • 1966
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
482
YOUR RATING
Harold Sakata in Dimension 5 (1966)
An American intelligence agent, aided by a Chinese-American female agent, uses a time-travel belt to thwart Chinese operatives who are attempting to import to Los Angeles the materials to make an atomic bomb.
Play trailer1:40
1 Video
18 Photos
CrimeSci-FiThriller

An American intelligence agent aided by a Chinese-American female agent uses a time-travel belt to thwart Chinese operatives who are attempting to import to Los Angeles the materials to make... Read allAn American intelligence agent aided by a Chinese-American female agent uses a time-travel belt to thwart Chinese operatives who are attempting to import to Los Angeles the materials to make an atomic bomb.An American intelligence agent aided by a Chinese-American female agent uses a time-travel belt to thwart Chinese operatives who are attempting to import to Los Angeles the materials to make an atomic bomb.

  • Director
    • Franklin Adreon
  • Writer
    • Arthur C. Pierce
  • Stars
    • Jeffrey Hunter
    • France Nuyen
    • Harold Sakata
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    482
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Franklin Adreon
    • Writer
      • Arthur C. Pierce
    • Stars
      • Jeffrey Hunter
      • France Nuyen
      • Harold Sakata
    • 25User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:40
    Trailer

    Photos18

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    + 14
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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Jeffrey Hunter
    Jeffrey Hunter
    • Justin Power
    France Nuyen
    France Nuyen
    • Ki Ti Tsu
    Harold Sakata
    Harold Sakata
    • Big Buddha
    Donald Woods
    Donald Woods
    • Cane
    Linda Ho
    Linda Ho
    • Nancy Ho
    Robert Ito
    Robert Ito
    • Sato
    • (as Roberto Ito)
    David Chow
    • Stoneface
    Jon Lormer
    Jon Lormer
    • Professor
    Bill Walker
    Bill Walker
    • Slim
    Virginia Ann Lee
    Virginia Ann Lee
    • Mute Girl
    • (as Virginia Lee)
    Lee Kolima
    Lee Kolima
    • Genghis
    Tad Horino
    Tad Horino
    • Squeaky
    Kam Tong
    Kam Tong
    • Kim Fong
    Gerald Jann
    • Chang
    Carol Byron
    Carol Byron
    • Big Sister
    Maggie Thrett
    Maggie Thrett
    • 2nd Sister
    Kay Michaels
    • 3rd Sister
    Marianna Case
    • Sunny
    • Director
      • Franklin Adreon
    • Writer
      • Arthur C. Pierce
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    4.6482
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    Featured reviews

    5Hey_Sweden

    Lesson # 9: you don't have to go out of your way to see this one.

    The swinging 60s strike again in this mildly - make that VERY mildly - amusing espionage nonsense about a supposedly top notch intelligence agent, Justin Power (Jeffrey Hunter, "The Searchers") who is partnered with a Chinese-American female agent, "Kitty" (France Nuyen, "South Pacific"). Their mission is to foil a criminal organization dubbed The Dragons, which are headed by wheelchair-bound "Big Buddha" (Harold "Oddjob" Sakata, who is dubbed by Paul Frees). The Dragons plan to detonate a bomb in the City of Angels, but the good guys have a secret weapon: a time travel device that can be worn like a belt!

    "Dimension 5" is low-tech and minor league, and it's also pretty short on action. Therefore, it's never particularly exciting, but it still has its moments. The give and take between our hero and heroine is enjoyable enough; she's Americanized enough to prefer steak and potatoes to more traditional Asian dishes. He's confident and has a fair amount of swagger. That said, neither of them are THAT smart - he needs to be saved more than once, and at the end, when she has the villain dead to rights, she doesn't kill him when she has the chance. Hunter and Nuyen are both very good looking, which should help to make their characters palatable nevertheless.

    They're assisted by a fairly good bunch of supporting actors, including Donald Woods ("The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms"), Robert Ito ('Quincy M.E.'), Jon Lormer ("Creepshow"), Bill Walker ("The Long, Hot Summer"), Tad Horino ("Galaxina"), and Robert Phillips ("The Dirty Dozen"). The filmmaking isn't overly slick but it's passable; this was made by many of the same people behind the previous time travel sci-fi flick, "Cyborg 2087", including director Franklin Adreon.

    A watchable, forgettable diversion for an hour and a half.

    Five out of 10.
    5planktonrules

    Justin Power seems AWFULLY stupid to be a hero!

    Justin Power (Jeffery Hunter) plays a guy who's supposed to be a super-smart secret agent. Then why is it once he's partnered up with Kitty (France Nuyen) he repeatedly blunders and is rescued time and again by this lady? It's especially amazing considering how often he acts like he is the super-spy and she is his acolyte?!

    When the film begins, you learn that the Americans have a cool device that allows agents to jump back in time to the immediate past! They're using this to battle the ever-present Communist Chinese agents who seem bent on destroying America. Eventually he and his fellow agents learn that the Chinese have smuggled in parts to a nuclear bomb. Where in the US it's going to be detonated and by whom is something Power is going to need to discover--paired up with the Hong Kong-based investigator, Kitty. Can they stop the dreaded Big Buddha (Harold Sakata)?

    I didn't mind seeing Hunter's character being out-thought by the female agent, but too many times he just seemed arrogant and really dumb...too dumb to live dumb! This is a weakness of the film. While she's obviously smarter than she is, at the end, Kitty is also a complete moron. And, so was Big Buddha for that matter!! However I did like how realistic and pragmatic the Power was, as he was not above slugging a woman or nearly twisting her arm off to get the truth--which makes since considering the Dragon organization is contemplating mass murder! And, I did like Big Buddha's style-- especially when one of his subordinates has the nerve to TELL him what he should do next! Overall, it's a film that had great promise but it really needed some editing to make the characters less like caricatures. I see this as a time- passer and not much more due to the inconsistent writing. In many ways, this plays like an old movie serial than a film that expected the viewer to take it seriously.

    By the way, I saw this on YouTube and the print is badly faded--with the print looking sepia hued instead of in vivid color.
    3LeonLouisRicci

    Talky Stiff & Lackluster...Below Average Bond Spin-Off

    Dumped Along-Side Piles of Low-Budget James Bond Trash.

    This Embarrassing Miss-Fire with Jeffrey Hunter as a Blue-Eyed Lady's Man is Juvenile Junk that Meanders Along with Hardly a Scene that isn't Worth-Less.

    Hunter as Justin Powers Super-Spy, Complete with a Time-Travel Belt that Looks like it Came From the Toy-Section at K-Mart.

    The Snazzy Adornment with its Multi-Colored Dials is a Cumbersome Gadget that also Comes with a "Ring" Accessory.

    None of this Means Much Because it is Underused and Unimpressive when it is Used.

    There are a Myriad of Jet Airliners Taking Off and Landing and Helicopters Hovering Here and There.

    A Couple of Fight Scenes are as Boring and Dull as Possible in a Film that Struggles Consistently to be Anything More than an Episode of a Mediocre TV Show.

    There are Bond,eh, Powers-Babes Sprinkled Around Winking, Fawning, and Pitching-Woo, because that's a Trope of the Genre.

    Beefcake and Oiled-Up Harold "Odd-Job" Sakata Shows Up as, get this, "Big Buddha", but for Some Reason is Confined to a Wheel-Chair.

    Abysmal, Atrocious, and Skippable this is 1 Bond Knock-Off that is a Complete and Utter Fizzle.
    Judexdot1

    forgotten, even by "Star Trek" fans!

    KTLA, in Los Angeles, used to excavate this moldy bit of time-travel weirdness, fairly often. I got interested from the cast, uniting Jeffrey Hunter, (at about the same time he would have been filming the original "Star Trek" pilot, "The Cage"), with future "Star Trek" guest, France Nuyen, ("Elaan Of Troyas"). The SF is very low-budget, very typical of its time, but still manages some interesting comments on time-travel, and its ramifications. (similar in some ways to a classic bit of SF, also pretty forgotten nowadays, "Cyborg 2087"). The time-travel belt is astoundingly cheap, yet every kid I knew wanted one! (ah, the old days before marketing took over!) Hunter gives this more than it probably deserved, and his performance brings most of the worth to the proceedings, while Nuyen tries to look Chinese, (and Communist!). The production was obviously quite cheap, and I have my doubts this ever played theatres. Saw it for years on Independent TV stations around the country, but it's pretty rare anymore. Skiffy ran it once or twice (I think), back when they survived on old movies, and never since they got "respectable", yet it's really no worse than much of their low-budget offerings. It's good cheese, and I wish it would poke its head out now and then.
    lor_

    Dated cheapie

    One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Franklin Adreon; Produced by Earle Lyon for United Pictures and Harold Goldman Associates, released by Feature Film Corporation of America. Screenplay by Arthur C. PIerce; Photography by Alan Stensvold; Edited by Robert Eisen; Music by Paul Dunlap. Starring: Jeffrey Hunter, France Nuyen, Harold Sakata, Donald Woods, Linda Ho, Robert Ito, David Chow and Deanna Lund.

    Foolish and cheap but slick sci-fi/spy film with the gimmick of Jeff wearing a belt which allow him to decompose and transport himself invisibly at will, in time as well as space. This allows him to change history at will. Hilariously dated: Chinese society called Dragon threatens to blow up Los Angeles unless all American forces are withdrawn from Southern Asia. One guy makes a flippant joke that is oddly prophetic: "You're as well protected as our president would be on the way to Peking".

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sixteen months before the movie's release, on June 28, 1965, the Pan Am Boeing 707 (registration: N761PA) that Jeffrey Hunter is seen leaving from during the opening credits had an engine explode just after taking off from San Francisco. The uncontained engine explosion caused a fire, a fuel tank explosion and one wing partially separated. The plane made an emergency landing at Travis Air Force Base and there were no injuries.
    • Goofs
      Justin Power lands by helicopter on top of a Los Angeles skyscraper and proceeds to go to various offices and corridors in that building. When he finally exits, it is from what appears to be a two-story building, apparently an art gallery.
    • Quotes

      Justin Power: And what else?

      Sunny: [Goes all coy, puts hands behind back] Well, Sir - I wanted you to know that, - urm, I mean that, Mr. Cane called just before you came in; he said to check in with you as soon as possible.

      Justin Power: Now, Sunny, how many times have I told you that when Mr. Cane calls, you must tell me immediately

      Sunny: Oh, yes Sir, I forgot .. I won't forget again ..

      Justin Power: .. And Sunny ..

      Sunny: [Looking hopeful, rising tone] Yes, Mr. Powers?

      Justin Power: Please close the door

      Sunny: [Forlorn looking, disappointed down tone] Yes, Sir.

    • Connections
      Edited into Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 9 (2002)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dimension Five
    • Filming locations
      • Bronson Caves, Bronson Canyon, Griffith Park - 4730 Crystal Springs Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Harold Goldman Associates
      • United Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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