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Cl.One

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
3.3/10
186
YOUR RATING
Cl.One (2005)
Sci-FiThriller

Humanity is on the verge of extinction after nuclear fallout from the war renders every living thing on Earth infertile. Chancellor Derek Strombourg, mourning the death of his daughter, must... Read allHumanity is on the verge of extinction after nuclear fallout from the war renders every living thing on Earth infertile. Chancellor Derek Strombourg, mourning the death of his daughter, must find the one person whose genetic structure can bring life to thousands of dormant human ... Read allHumanity is on the verge of extinction after nuclear fallout from the war renders every living thing on Earth infertile. Chancellor Derek Strombourg, mourning the death of his daughter, must find the one person whose genetic structure can bring life to thousands of dormant human clones. Fighting him is an underground rebellion struggling to prevent this awesome power ... Read all

  • Director
    • Jason J. Tomaric
  • Writer
    • Jason J. Tomaric
  • Stars
    • Jeff St. Clair
    • Gary Skiba
    • James Kisicki
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.3/10
    186
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jason J. Tomaric
    • Writer
      • Jason J. Tomaric
    • Stars
      • Jeff St. Clair
      • Gary Skiba
      • James Kisicki
    • 16User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Jeff St. Clair
    • Derek Strombourg
    Gary Skiba
    • Joshua Adams…
    James Kisicki
    • Elias Oligaric
    Bill Caco
    Bill Caco
    • Orin Stalward
    Valerie Renee Law
    • Mira DelForna
    Nick Zelletz
    • Kyle Albright
    Charles Eduardos
    • Harris
    Steve Snyder
    • Galen
    Jennifer Sumerak
    • Laura Bristol
    Ron Riegler
    • Senator Mathias
    Michael K. Brown
    • Jurgen
    Scott Davis
    Scott Davis
    • Medical Technician
    Almino J. Taddeo
    • Slater
    Jacqui Decker
    • Professor Cooper
    Dick Goddard
    • Overseer
    Christine Lundblad
    • Melissa
    Sherrie McClain
    • Theresa Collins
    Daria Anton
    • Newscaster
    • Director
      • Jason J. Tomaric
    • Writer
      • Jason J. Tomaric
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    3.3186
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    Featured reviews

    1kinsell-rogers

    Hideous

    I have seen some bad movies in my day, but this is the worst by far. I could find nothing in it to keep me watching it. No suspense, likable characters, engaging plot, nothing. The music is annoying and too loud. I understand this was a low-budget film (less than $20,000), but why bother? I tried to watch this movie with my wife and we had to keep pausing the thing in an attempt to figure out whether a particular scene was a flashback, a dream, or what. Even the premise of the film was confusing. Why worry about serotonin levels when you are making a clone? Transplant a soul?, consciousness? Is all that necessary when making clone?
    3vita-3

    An interesting first effort

    One is a good first effort by a novice director. Good acting, excellent special effects and cameos by Cleveland news celebrities make this a relatively painless way to spend a couple hours. The weak points were the script and editing which made the story confusing in some parts and overly simplistic in others. Tomeric shows that he has the technical skill to make a reasonable science fiction movie- it will be interesting to see what he can do with a decent script in a more challenging genre like comedy or drama.
    6pv71989-2

    Better than you'd think

    For a first-time effort from just about everybody involved in this movie, "Cl.One" is a pretty good film (and, no, I'm not a cast member or family member of director Jason J. Tomaric). I like science fiction and I've seen my share of good and bad low-budget films. This one was made for under $25000, an achievement that puts it right into the sphere of such other gems as "El Mariachi," "Halloween" and "I Was A Teenage Werewolf."

    The plot deals with a post-Apocalyptic society that seems to have recovered somewhat from a massive nuclear war. Unfortunately, every attempt at procreation ends in failure because fallout has caused infertility. So, the post-war government (an infamous "one world order") has created clones that are free of mutations and defects. Unfortunately, the clones need a consciousness and a soul, preferably from someone with good genes.

    But, the down side is that a formed mind can't be put into a clone because you can't download a conscious mind into a clone (it took, say, 18 years to form the mind and downloading it in a matter of minutes would destroy the clone mind). Trying to erase memories with drugs or electronically would cause brain damage, thus candidates to activate the clones must be manipulated mentally to the verge of wanting to die.

    The gist of the story centers around Derek Strombourg, the heavy-handed chancellor of New Athens, who desperately wants to find "the one" -- the person whose genes will finally activate the clones. He's not your usual bad guy in that he does have a soul and a conscience; he's just one of those guys who believes so much in his goal that he convinces himself that the end justifies the means. The target of his means is a young student named Orin Stalward who fits the profile to a tee and who Strombourg must destroy mentally (and subtly) while keeping his Utopian society in one piece.

    Mayhaps that's the biggest flaw in "Cl.One." Science fiction tends to need a heavy, a bad guy who is recognizable, someone the audience can hate -- a Darth Vader, a Sauron. In the absence of that, the audience needs well thought out characters to believe, but Tomaric can't deliver that. In order to make his film, he had to use many first-time actors. The biggest name on the marquee is Charles Eduardos ("American Splendor"). The actors, including Jeff St. Clair as Strombourg, Bill Caco as Stalward, Gary Skiba as Joshua Adams and Valerie Renee Law as Mira, hold their own admirably, but can't flesh out their characters enough.

    Despite what the other reviewers have said, this film is a visual splendor, a stunning achievement with a low budget. The CGI is admirable, save maybe for a train crash near the end. The sets are remarkable, considering they consist of places found in and around Cleveland, Ohio, including a city hall, a NASA facility, a museum and a brewery (sort of reminds me of "Quatermass 2" where a Shell Oil refinery substituted nicely for an alien base). The sound was nice and I had no problem hearing the dialog. And the ending was a trip; it definitely caught me off-guard, but in a good way, not a sappy, contrived "Matrix Revolutions" kind of way.

    The only sfx thing I had a hard time buying was the built-up status of New Athens. The film is set four years after a nuclear war, yet New Athens looks like a futuristic city built up over decades. And I can't imagine enough technology existing to come up with flying cars and futuristic trains.

    Admittedly, the film's low budget and Tomaric's novice status hurt the film's potential. A "making of..." vignette on the DVD explains that Tomaric was forced to rewrite, re-film and re-edit the movie many times over the course of seven (!) years. A catalog of deleted scenes reveals that some of them should have been used in the movie. Still, the film won many independent film awards and deservedly so.

    For viewers expecting a Hollywood-style film, don't look for it here. But, don't trash it for what it isn't. Watch it for what it is -- a good film with excellent special effects that looks like it was made for a huge budget. And then wonder what Tomaric and his crew could do with a real budget.
    1thebigrodney

    I always fall for the same thing

    I keep falling for the same crap.... Renting a movie that looks well-done on a tight budget by a first time director or someone new to the scene. When I saw Primer a couple of years ago, I said, "Now that's how to get attention. Awesome flick!" I keep looking for the next sleeper hit and I keep reading the reviews given by extras on the set or others involved with the movie saying it was the greatest movie ever made, blah, blah, blah. I am an idiot! I am going to wait longer to for the REAL reviews to come out (much like this one). The only small, tiny, bit of goodness to this film...you can hit the stop button on your remote any time you want; the one with the filled in square on it.
    RobertKS

    An inspiration to independent digital filmmakers

    OK, so I haven't seen the full film--has it even been exhibited yet?--but Jason Tomaric showed me his trailer at the Digital Cinema Expo in January 2000. Fantastic, highly creative. Despite its low budget, what I saw of this film looked like a million bucks--or at least like a well-produced episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. It used the standard desktop effects packages and prosumer gear to achieve an epic post-apocalyptic fantasy backdrop for a personal story. Send me some e-mail, Jason, when it hits screens, big or small.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Entire movie was shot digitally for only $20,000.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 14, 2005 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Jason J. Tomaric
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Clone
    • Production companies
      • Belltower Productions
      • Quantus Pictures Inc.
      • Tierney Scott Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $21,496
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,585
      • Oct 13, 2000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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