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Invasion des mondes

Original title: The War of the Worlds
  • Video
  • 2005
  • Unrated
  • 2h 59m
IMDb RATING
2.7/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Invasion des mondes (2005)
ActionAdventureSci-Fi

In one of the most faithful adaptations of HG Wells' science fiction masterpiece, Martians launch a ruthless assault on an unsuspecting Victorian England, in an attempt to escape their dying... Read allIn one of the most faithful adaptations of HG Wells' science fiction masterpiece, Martians launch a ruthless assault on an unsuspecting Victorian England, in an attempt to escape their dying planet.In one of the most faithful adaptations of HG Wells' science fiction masterpiece, Martians launch a ruthless assault on an unsuspecting Victorian England, in an attempt to escape their dying planet.

  • Director
    • Timothy Hines
  • Writers
    • H.G. Wells
    • Timothy Hines
    • Susan Goforth
  • Stars
    • Anthony Piana
    • Jack Clay
    • James Lathrop
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    2.7/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Timothy Hines
    • Writers
      • H.G. Wells
      • Timothy Hines
      • Susan Goforth
    • Stars
      • Anthony Piana
      • Jack Clay
      • James Lathrop
    • 127User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast56

    Edit
    Anthony Piana
    • The Writer…
    Jack Clay
    • Ogilvy
    James Lathrop
    James Lathrop
    • The Artilleryman
    Darlene Sellers
    Darlene Sellers
    • Mrs. Elphinstone
    • (as Darlene Renee Sellers)
    John Kaufmann
    • The Curate
    Susan Goforth
    Susan Goforth
    • The Wife
    Jamie Lynn Sease
    • Miss Elphinstone
    W. Bernard Bauman
    • Henderson
    Edwin Stone
    • The Potman
    Tom Fouche
    • Newspaper Boy
    Mark Wilt
    • Gregg the Butcher
    Erik Barzdukas
    • Butcher's Son
    E. Leonard Helland
    • Lord Hilton's Butler…
    Barbara Bauman
    • Mary - Writer's Servant
    Daniel Somerfield
    • Stent
    Donovan Le
    • Shop Clerk…
    Andy Clawson
    • Nextdoor Neighbor
    • (as Andrew Clawson)
    • …
    Eric Rands
    • Sapper #1
    • Director
      • Timothy Hines
    • Writers
      • H.G. Wells
      • Timothy Hines
      • Susan Goforth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews127

    2.72.2K
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    Featured reviews

    1reverend_darkshadow

    Stick to the 1953 version, or wait for Spielbergs rendition

    I am currently sitting here, forcing myself to finish this. I figure I blew 6 bux on the VHS, might as well suffer for it. I remember about 4 or 5 years ago doing a search on the internet for "War of the Worlds" cause of the rumors of the Spielberg movie at the time, and I missed the old TV series from the early 90's. The website make it out that this was a multi-million dollar budget rendition of the classic book. It was going to be a "perfect translation". Perfect CRAP is more in tune with this film.

    First off, the video on this movie was glitched! It looked as if I was watching the Full Motion Video from an old mid-90's PC or Playstation CD-Rom video game. Sadly enough, the color quality was similar. The acting made Shatners classic "dramatic pause" look damn near Shakespearean in quality. The CG rendering of various scenes was horrendous, and green screen sequences were worse than those seen in old Dukes of Hazardd scenes.

    Secondly, it is slow and terribly drawn out. I sat thru 45 minutes of the video (no promo's at the beginning) before the cylinder actually Opened to reveal the first alien. After that, the alien was a terribly constructed CG squid. I am now an hour into it and the most of the alien weaponry I have seen is a spinning silver disk (crappy down even) attached to a mechanical arm. The dramatic scenes are murdered with overly done instrumental's. The last thing on that, for an alien invasion in the turn of the century 1900's NO ONE is concerned for their life. It's like they have no concept. Even though media was slow, word of mouth spreads fast and people would have known. The "illusion" of day and night was shoddy at best. Simply changing the color around the people to purple, blue or green does not signify NIGHT TIME. Perhaps some lighting and actual night time shoots would have given a MUCH better illusion. THere is a lot of wasted sequences throughout the film of just watching the "hero" gallop around or walk down silly roads. Get on with the film. I know how people get around, you do NOT need to be so in-depth.

    Now, finally an hour and 5 minutes into the film and they show the alien machines. Mighty Morphin Power Rangers had better looking effects. Even the skeletons of vaporized humans looked as if animated by a freshman high school computer app class student. The animations do NOT match up to the scenery at all.

    In closing folks, if you want "The War of the Worlds", do one of four things. 1) Watch the 1953 original, 2) watch the early 90's TV series, 3) wait for Spielberg's rendition to be released shortly, OR 4) Read the frikkin book (something we all probably did in elementary English class). AVOID THIS MOVIE. IT IS A WASTE OF YOUR MONEY.
    erikruud

    I only watched the first hour!

    I guess I am better off than most of the people who commented on this film. I checked mine out from the local library, so I haven't lost $8.00.

    I really wanted to see a version of the movie that was faithful to the book. While this version is faithful, it is so badly made that I could not continue watching it.

    What is with the frame rate? At points it looks like they shot it at 24fps and then deleted every third or forth frame! There are a few shots were the characters skitter about so fast that I expected to here the music from the Benny Hill chase scenes.

    The worst Dr. Who episode looks better than this. My friend in high school made better films with just a Super8 camera.

    Very Disappointing.
    2ColinPotterHatesWalking

    Like Lord of the Rings - only with more walking. A LOT more walking. And then some.

    I must admit I burst out laughing when I saw one reviewer compare this to LOTR. Well yes, if you exclude the dwarfs, the cast of thousands, the great special effects, the big battles, the strong characterization, the decent plot, the good acting, the classy direction and everything else. Which leaves you with the walking. And boy, does this film do walking! If Mr Piano had his way, this would probably be an uninterrupted three hours of hardcore walking through the Wisconsin countryside, but every 40 minutes or so these pesky Martians pop up for a few seconds to interrupt him before he goes for another bit of a ramble. You've never seen so much walking in a movie. If this really had a $20m budget, most of it must have gone on Mr Piano's shoes, because he had to get through plenty of pairs with all the walking he does. Which explains why there's no money left for decent effects, a decent video camera or proper actors. Honestly, it's like watching some bizarre fetish video for people with a thing about going for long walks in period costumes. Even on fast-forward, this is a looonnnggg walk.

    As for the sci-fi stuff, I think it was a mistake to put Martians in the film: they only get in the way of the walking, which is clearly much more interesting to the director than the story.

    I wonder how much Mr Piano charges to walk dogs?
    1brianlindstrand

    Wow...

    Wow...

    I picked this up at the local Wal-Mart after reading online that it had been released early. I've been following this online for some time, and just had to buy the film.

    Wow...

    I guess the thing that really struck me was the editing, or lack thereof. Time and again, characters (usually The Narrator and whoever he is with) are shown walking...and walking...and walking. I am not an editor, but I do know that you can cut between someone leaving point A to show them arriving at point B. There is no need to show almost the entire journey! Wow...

    I actually ended up feeling somewhat sorry for the actors involved in this. They seem to have been given no direction as to what to do during scenes other than to look scared or look happy, depending on what action was to be added at a later date.

    Wow...

    Why it was decided to do almost all the effects using CG is beyond me. Even ILM still employs miniatures sometimes. One of the most distracting uses of green screen in this film is the constant rushing about of (according to the end credits) the same group of people representing the citizenry of different towns and cities, including London. At times these folk are coming and going with no regard as to the angle of the shot or the distance they are from the camera. In one shot in London, there appear to be at least two men over six feet tall walking just behind the narrator's brother (played by star Anthony Piana without his distracting mustache). Not since GETTYSBURG have I seen such a fake piece of facial hair.

    Wow...

    Why Timothy Hines talked up this film the way he did is beyond me. It is a turkey, plain and simple. On the plus side (at least for me) it has provided some of the most genuine laugh-out-loud bits of hilarity I have seen in quite a while.
    1SciFiSly

    A $20 million budget? Hmmm....

    Nu Image, UFO and others produce films for the SCI FI channel that come in with budgets of roughly $2 million. Some feature extensive effects work, others feature recognizable casts and still others feature both -- for $2 million.

    Mr. Hines initially claimed that this film was budgeted at $20 million dollars but it's painfully obvious that this was probably produced for $750,000 if not considerably less than that. Few sets are utilized, a number of scenes are shot against green screen and most effects seem incomplete and amateurish.

    It's painful to watch. Not so much because it is poorly directed, poorly executed and misguided but because many of us have been following the progress of this production for quite some time and had high hopes for this film despite its relatively modest budget.

    Those of us who believed in this movie when it was originally announced have joined the legions of those spoken of by P.T. Barnum.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
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    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to the website owned by one of the the providers of the horses used in the film, the portion of the production involving their horses was shot on a horse ranch outside of Seattle. Other horses and carriages were shot at other ranches with large green-screen setups over eight weeks.
    • Goofs
      After the narrator flees the pit after the Martians' first attack, the train that passes in the background is a late 20th century Americal diesel model rather than a British steam locomotive.
    • Crazy credits
      The Copyright date is given as "MMDCCLVIII", which is the year 2758.
    • Alternate versions
      In response to the criticisms over the 3-hour running time, a Director's Cut released that excises approximately 45 minutes of the original version.
    • Connections
      Referenced in DVD/Lazerdisc/VHS collection 2016 (2016)

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    FAQ4

    • I thought this was supposed to star Michael Caine, Eric Stoltz and Charlize Theron?
    • Where can I see clips?
    • Where can I buy or rent The Classic War Of The Worlds?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 19, 2007 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Pendragon Pictures
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The War of the Worlds
    • Filming locations
      • Seattle, Washington, USA
    • Production company
      • Pendragon Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 59m(179 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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