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11 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Very nice, but can't they do a proper re-make?,
By A Customer
This review is from: Lost World [VHS] (VHS Tape)
It's unbelievable that, in this age of CGI and other such special effects and technology, th 1925 silent black-and-white version of Conan Doyle's masterpiece is still the best version. That said, this version starts off very promisingly and there is some excellent acting, though Challenger comes across as far too soft and nothing like the fearsome figure he was in the book. And whre is Roxton? Presumably a big-game hunter wouldn't be very nice. Everything in this film is 'nice'. What realy lets the film down, however, are the cheap, unconvincing dinosaurs. There's on good sequence near a lake but otherwise it's all pretty pathetic. There are hardly any dinosaurs actualy in it, the tyrannosaur only ever visible from the waist upwards and seemingly frozen on the spot. This film has its good moments, but it's really just another might-have-been. It only gets three stars because it's better than that dire 1960 version.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
I enjoyed this ! It Was Fun!,
By Lorenzo M. in the Hollywood CA Area "Movie Wa... (North Hollywood, CA USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE)
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
Made over 20 years ago, this is the retelling of a classic and has a bonus - the sequel that came after it is included.
Starring some acting legends - John-Ryse Davies (Indiana Jones 1 & 3, Sliders), David Warner (Star Trek V & VI, Time After Time, Time Bandits) and the then unknown but always working Eric McCormack (Will and Grace) the adventure takes them on a journey to prove the lost world exists. Eric is quite good and funny in the role as the reporter looking for the scoop! Harmony Gold is the production company and the special effects are a little trite, but the chemistry of the characters is fun and the story is basically true to the original. There are a few additions that they need to give license to so the story could be more timely. Filled with action, suspense, drama and humor - it is a 90 minute romp through Africa to find the most artificial looking Dinosaurs I have ever seen. But ignoreing the technology of the late 80's..it is is fun. The three disc set includes the sequal which furthers the adventure sof the six travelers complete with their idiosyncracies and issues and an even more glorious threat - man will destroy the Dinosaurs in the lost world! The third disc is an only early 80's movie "The Mummy's Revenge" - A very bad B type film with gory effects and artificial mummy's . I laughed a lot but it was fun to see the 80's wardrobe and haircuts. This is a great price for an okay movie. And another telling of a classic story. 3-27-09
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Special Effects ? Hardly special...,
By Richard Brookes "Rumpled Writer" (San Francisco Bay area) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
The only reason I could give this film as many as 2 stars is due to the (over?)acting of John Rhys-Davies. I just like the guy. The story was growing whiskers when your grandfather read the book. You know the drill - professor discovers an isolated plateau in deepest, darkest Africa and sees (gasp) dinosaurs therein. His expedition is diverted from going further by an attack perpetrated by his guide. He returns to London having lost his pictures, notes and everything and when he tells his colleagues about his discovery, they laugh him out of the Royal Zoological Society or whatever. (Dinosaurs? You've been hitting the sherry again, old chap) But by a clever ruse, he gets his most vocal opponent to agree to mount an expedition to go back to the "lost world" thus proving the prof's wild story.
So far, so good. This is where things begin to go downhill. The expedition is joined by a London journalist and a wealthy American photographer who for some reason agrees to fund the entire trip. She sort of adds the love interest, if there actually is any. When the expedition does reach the "lost world," the flick hits rock bottom. There are "man eating" dinosaurs, a local tribe that worships them, characters falling into pterodactyl caves, attacks by hostile tribes, friendly tribes that must be saved and even more hackneyed devices that have cluttered up genre movies since before King Kong and right up to the present. The special effects are 1)pterodactyls soaring seen from a great distance (probably stock footage), 2)tyrannosaur heads popping up out of the foliage, 3) dinosaur eggs, 4)cute muppet-type hatchling dinosaurs 5)and so forth. "Jurassic Park" it is NOT! At the final scene in the Royal Zoological Society meeting to honor the prof, there were still naysayers that said pictures and eyewinesses meant nothing, the "lost world" was still a hoax. The group then produced a basket out of which the ever-so-cute baby dino pokes its lovable head. Everyone present in the hall gasped with surprise and seemed satisfied with this living proof of the prof's "lost world." I wanted to shout out "It's a puppet, you fools."
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the lost world,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
well worth the money.
good clean action adventure movie amazon and thegoodcompany are both great to order from
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good, not great.,
By J. D. (Central Texas) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
This 1992 adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fantastic book, "The Lost World," is good but falls shy of being great. John Rhys-Davies is perfect for the role of Professor Challenger and David Warner is equally matched to the role of Professor Summerlee, but this story really calls for a much larger budget and a director that can handle the humor, and more importantly, the intense dramatic elements of Doyle's work with an eye for realism and believability.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GREAT MOVIE !,
This review is from: Lost World [VHS] (VHS Tape)
this is a great movie!loved it.i like the t.rex just like in the sequel.(see my review)there were no negative reviewers but there was a 3-star reviewer. i dont know what his problem was with the ''proper remake'' because it was,is a proper remake. somepeople go to a some place,meet dinos, and aren't proud of it.just like the sequel. well thats my review,like it or not.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World,
By
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
I have found this version of the basic story, light-hearted and a pleasure to watch for a second and third time. The special features have a good explanation of the changes in what I use to call Dinosaurs. It goes through the step by step mutations of what the animals looked like and how they may have behaved.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Ok Remake,
By willie (Scottsville,Ky) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
This remake of the 1925 classic is not as bad as some made it to be,its well worth the money if your a fan of dinosaurs
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good and Enjoyable as Old-School Adventure Film (But Don't Expect Great Special Effects),
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Lost World (DVD)
Conan Doyle's famous adventure story has been filmed many times before. The most notable version is, of course, the silent version made in 1925 and its stop-motion animation of dinosaurs (by Willis H. O'Brien). Now if you're looking for something like a huge dinosaur walking in the jungle, you should avoid this one. Though this was released only one year before "Jurassic Park," the best special effects of this low-budget film is rubber puppets someone holding from under.
That does not mean `The Lost World" (1992) is a joyless ride. Actually this is a pretty good, old-fashioned adventure film that you might have seen in the 1960s and thanks to the capable cast who knows what they are doing and the beautiful scenery, this film is a pretty enjoyable one. Prolific Welsh actor John Rhys-Davies is cast as Professor Challenger, and his credible portrait of the delightfully boisterous and pompous professor virtually carries the film. David Warner is proud Professor Summerlee who is equally believable and amusing, and so is Eric McCormack (later known as Will of the popular TV series "Will and Grace") as Edward Malone. The original book's Lord John Roxton is replaced by American millionaire Jenny Nielson (Tamara Gorski), but sadly she has little to do in this tightly-written story which is fairly faithful to Doyle's book except they changed the location to Africa (the film is shot on location in Zimbabwe). Again I say you should not expect the eye-popping special effects of Spielberg (or Stuart Orme-directed `The Lost World' made in 2001 f or that matter). This is an old-fashioned adventure film, and it works as such.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty Close to the Book,
By
This review is from: Lost World [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Several attempts have been made to adapt Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's novel, THE LOST WORLD, to the silver screen. The first was back in the days of silent film. A later rendition was so short of funding that iguanas were used for all the dinosaurs (I hadn't known that tyrannosaurs walked on all fours or that a brontosaurus had a short neck). The latest rendition stars John Rhys-Davies, as Professor Challenger, and David Warner, as Professor Summerlee. I found this particular adaptation to be amusing and well done. The script was close to the novel but had a number of interesting changes.A young reporter is out to make a name for himself and his publisher points him in the direction of Professor Challenger. After some fighting the two become friends. Challenger then challenges the Royal Zoological Society to mount an expedition to verify or disprove his claims regarding the Lost World. A team is put together and the expedition sets out. After experiencing the treachery of a guide, the group find themselves atop a plateau inhabited by prehistoric animals and two tribes of natives. One tribe worships the plant-eating dinosaurs and the other the carnivorous ones. Unfortunately the plant-eaters are all getting sick while the carnivores are healthy. Professor Summerlee deduces that a certain plant has medicinal qualities and is necessary for the dinosaurs' health. This would explain why they still exist on the plateau. Then the tribes are united and the intrepid explorers are guided through some caves that lead off of the plateau. Just before leaving the adventurers vow to return to the Lost World. John Rhys-Davies does an excellent job as the gruff and pompous Challenger. The rest of the cast has been changed a little from the book to appeal to a greater audience. The tribesmen on the plateau have also been changed. No longer are they the equivalent of Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon but more resemble contemporary African tribes. The dinosaur illness that was added as a thin explanation for the dinosaurs' survival was a little more in keeping with current thought than the original idea in the novel. But other than these changes the movie really does capture the spirit of Doyle's novel if not the actual plot. Dinosaur fans may find this movie a little lacking in that little was spent on the special effects. The few dinosaurs seen are limited to feet and heads. This does not detract from the movie but it is a major change from movies such as Jurassic Park. So, all in all, this is a very enjoyable movie and one of the best movie adaptations of Professor Challenger that I have seen. There is, of course, the excellent audio portrayal from Alien Voices. So if you are looking for a bit of fun then The Lost World just might be your cup of tea. |
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Lost World [VHS] by Timothy Bond (VHS Tape - 1997)
$9.98 $1.39
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