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Fantastic Voyage
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Directed by Richard Fleischer.
Stephen Boyd heads a team of scientists sent on a bizarre experimental mission. Through a revolutionary and as-yet untested process, the scientists and their special motorized vehicle are miniaturized, then injected into the blood stream of a near-death scientist (Jean del Val). Their mission is to relieve a blood clot caused by an assassination attempt. One member of the expedition is bent on sabotage so that the scientist's secrets will die with him. Another member is Raquel Welch, seemingly along for the ride solely because of how she looks in a skintight diving suit. The film's Oscar-winning visual effects (by Art Cruikschank) chart the progress of the voyagers through the scientist's body, burrowing past deadly antibodies, chunks of tobacco residue in the lungs, and other such obstacles. Oscars also went to Jack Martin Smith and Dale Hennesy's art direction and Walter M. Scott and Stuart A. Reiss' set decoration. Fantastic Voyage was later spun off into a Saturday morning cartoon series. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Fantastic Voyage (1966, USA, Ri ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"A famous scientist got shot by Commies just before he was about to relay an important discovery and is lying in a coma, with an inoperable blood clot in his brain. That is, inoperable by standard means. Putting a bunch of doctors in a submarine, shrinking really small and injecting them into the scientists body might work. The movie's premise is ridiculous, but it's not as bad as it sounds, which means of course it's not as good. It's like a sub-par Star Trek episode inside the human body, without any of the fun dialogue. There is cliché after cliché, but I did like the part where the crew discovers that one of them is actually a Commie double agent. But who is it? It couldn't be the most obvious person, could it? Aside from Pleasence, all of the actors, who include Rachel Welch and Stephen Boyd (Messallah from Ben-Hur) are wooden. The movie is fun in a stupid kind of way for awhile and then gets boring. The special effects are bad, but that's OK. Fantastic Voyage (1966) " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Sporting cutting-edge visuals, and not as much leftover camp from the 1950s as you'd think, Fantastic Voyage was one of the more graphically innovative films of the 1960s, heightened by a tense cloud of Cold War paranoia. In the same year that Star Trek hit television, this film truly went where no man had gone before -- into the human blood stream -- with the help of a submarine shrunk to the size of a gnat. This tingling adventure into the unknown is certainly one of the factors that attracted genre director Richard Fleischer, who helmed 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea 12 years earlier, and he brings a real seriousness of purpose to a project that could have been laughably mounted with cardboard special effects. Instead, the film earned nominations in all Oscar categories pertaining to visuals, winning for both effects and art direction. Starting with the slick opening credits and continuing through an every-moment-counts narrative, which includes a thorough scene devoted to the machinery and process of shrinking the craft, Fleischer imbues the proceedings with a sense of immediacy. Yes, the ship and its miniature crew have to deal with a week's worth of insurmountable problems in a scant 60 minutes, but viewers willingly gave themselves over to it. The scene in which laboratory technicians must remain absolutely silent, in order not to reverberate the comatose patient's eardrum in a way that would be fatal to the crew, is especially taut. A slippery Donald Pleasance, and Raquel Welch in one of her earliest roles are the most noteworthy acting performances. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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