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War Gods of the Deep/At the Earth's Core More Details...
Price: $14.98

Title: War Gods of the Deep/At the Earth's Core (2005)
Starring: Vincent Price, Tab Hunter, David Tomlinson, Susan Hart, and John Le Mesurier
Director: Array
Rating: Unrated
Runtime: 175 minutes
Avg. Score: 4 rated 4 stars
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Review of War Gods of the Deep/At the Earth's Core

  • War-Gods of the DeepAn unusual science fiction adventure set not in the future but in the past. It is 1903 and just off the Cornish coast lives an undersea kingdom of humanlike creatures who never age. The ruler of this strange society sees a woman on land who looks like the reincarnation of the ruler's deceased wife. This sets off a chain of events that eventually bring the human world into battle against this underwater community of the past. Memorable for its creative sets and creepy gill man warriors this drive-in classic is based on a line from an Edgar Allen Poe work and is sprinkled with references to Poe throughout. Tab Hunter wearing gigantic scuba gear similar to a robot costume and Vincent Price star.At the Earth's CoreA Victorian scientist leads an expedition to the center of the Earth and there they find an incredible world populated by subhuman warriors and prehistoric monsters. Great special effects add to the adventure.System Requirements:Running Time: 175 Min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR Rating: PG UPC: 027616920591 Manufacturer No: 1008025
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Comments for War Gods of the Deep/At the Earth's Core

  • Posted on 2008-07-17
    Vincent Price Saves This Double Feature From Sinking Beneath The Earth

    Based on an Edgar Allan Poe poem, "War Gods of the Deep" is the superior of this double feature. Vincent Price gives a great performance (as always); he is an evil captain who is determined to prevent a volcano from erupting and destroying the ancient, underwater city that he and his crewman have commandeered. He has developed a friendship with gill men who resemble the Creature from the Black Lagoon. Excellent performances are given from all especially Tab Hunter and David Tomlinson who starred in Walt Disney's "Mary Poppins" and "Bedknobs and Broomsticks." Tomlinson and his silly pet hen, Herbert, provide great comic relief and were a delight to watch.

    Unfortunately, the print had some defects; there were a few lines and tears. Overall it was a beautiful film. The underwater fight scenes could have been made to appear more realistic. There was poor continuity between the stuntmen who fought and the actual actors who merely stood and posed when close ups of their faces were needed.

    "At the Earth's Core" was a mediocre adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs' best-selling novel of the same title. This time, horror icon Peter Cushing was one of the star performers, but his scenes were few and he was depicted as an feeble, bumbling scientist. The special effects were atrociously outdated; they were no more advanced than those of "King Kong" of 1933.

    The monsters at the earth's core must be the missing links between dinosaurs and the birds in which they were suppose to have evolved. They appear to be dinosaurs bred with the Muppets such as Big Bird, Ernie, and the Cookie Monster. The inferior special effects overwhelmed the plot. Most memorable scene: the Mahar feeding frenzy on the beautiful captive maidens. Delicious, but not as frightening as when I first saw it as a young adult.

    Overall, this double feature is not on the same level as others where Vincent Price was the headliner. I bought it solely because Price was in it. This double feature is recommended for fans of Vince Price, gothic horror, or underwater Captain Nemo style classics. "Mysterious Island" was so much better than either film. Incidentally, Caroline Munro is gorgeous in "At the Earth's Core" (and every other movie she stars in) but that is not enough to warrant buying this DVD.

    Score: 3 rated 3 stars
  • Posted on 2008-06-07
    Cheap Entertainment, But That's It

    Double ouch!!

    "War Gods of the Deep" is one of Vincent Price's weakest films, and he appears disinterested throughout. Tab Hunter is unbearably stiff, and the "comic relief" provided by David Tomlinson and a chicken isn't funny in the slightest. Shoddy special effects and a shoddier plotline drag this movie way, way down (to the bottom of the sea, shall we say?).

    "At the Earth's Core" manages to sink even lower. Doug McClure plays his role over the top, and the "comic relief" provided by a buffoonish Peter Cushing isn't funny either. The monsters in this film are so phony that they insult the intelligence of the viewer, even for the low standards of the 1970s. An awful plotline with an absurd romance thrown in -- there's nothing of merit to this film except unintended laughs at how bad it is.

    The DVD gets two stars as it was cheap entertainment and allows Vincent Price fans to see one of his more obscure (and deservedly so) films.
    Score: 2 rated 2 stars
  • Posted on 2007-02-11
    Subterranean hokum at it's finest!

    War-Gods of the Deep aka The City Under the Sea scared the heck out of me me as a very small kid, but then I did live in a coastal town that was rumored to have it's own sunken town... Vincent Price and his immortal band of smugglers living in a somewhat mislocated Babylonian city under the Cornish stretch of the English Channel didn't have the same effect this time, but Jacques Tourneur's vaguely Poe-inspired subterranean/underwater adventure is still a fun romp thanks to superb production design which makes the film look ten times more expensive than it probably was and great Scope photography with a good use of color from Zulu's Stephen Dade. It's not a masterpiece, but it's a brisk and enjoyable period adventure with more than a passing nod to both Journey to the Center of the Earth and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Plus it has David Tomlinson sharing a diving suit with a chicken while pursued by gill men, and not many films can say that.

    Aside from a couple of moments of negative damage the 2.35:1 widescreen transfer is surprisingly good. The only extra is the US theatrical trailer.

    At the Earth's Core is an inspired companion piece, catching just the right tone for the appropriately named Burroughs' pulp adventure about Victorian inventor Peter Cushing and the inevitable Doug McClure ending up in the underground world of Pelucidar and battling its evil telepathic fighting dinosaurs. It's men in monster suits time, which is a lot more fun than stop-motion or CGI if you're willing to suspend your disbelief, and if you're not there's always Caroline Munro's cleavage to look at. Aside from what may well be Peter Cushing's worst performance, an irritating but dottier rehash of his movie Dr Who ("You can't mesmerize me, I'm British!"), it's easily the best of the John Dark-Kevin Connor-Doug McClure fantasy adventures, surprisingly well directed and boasting an atmospheric use of color. Never especially good at exterior scenes, Alan Hume's photography gains immensely from the control a studio set gives him (the film was shot entirely on soundstages) to paint a luridly vivid world worthy of a pulp novel cover. Not high art but definitely great Saturday matinee fun.

    The only extra is the US trailer - which sells it as a horror film! - but the film has a very good widescreen transfer, although there is briefly a slight tramline in one scene at the end.
    Score: 4 rated 4 stars
  • Posted on 2005-11-12
    Price, Cushing and McClure!

    This Beneath-The-Surface themed double feature from MGM is pretty mediocre. Neither film is really bad, but neither are anything to write home about either. War Gods Of The Deep starts things off. Basically Tab Hunter(who looks like an early prototype for Casper Van Dien) and David Tomlinson(with a pet chicken in a picnic basket) go searching for Susan Hart, who has vanished from her bedroom. Finding that old reliable secret passage behind the bookshelf they find themselves going deeper and deeper into a cave til they end up in a city beneath the sea ruled by Vincent Price. Price kidnapped the girl coz she looks like his late wife(how's that for original?) and I'm assuming he wants to get jiggy with her. He's also stressed coz an underwater volcano is a ticking timebomb that will destroy his beloved city. Price sees our heroes as meddling pains in the ass, so he decides to execute them though he doesn't keep them very well guarded coz they seem to just venture out whenever they want to. The first hour's a bunch of scenes of Price talking about his civilization and such. Finally are heroes are let out into the ocean with scuba gear and are hunted by Price's soldiers as well as the gill men that lurk around the city. These horrifying gill men are nothing more than guys in torn clothes and obvious rubber masks. The Creature From The Black Lagoon is much more believable. Price does alright with what he's given. He's always a decent villian even if the movie isn't all that decent. Hunter is typical tough guy and Tomlinson and his rooster are the comic relief characters. Not bad but far from good. Actually, kinda boring. The second feature, At The Earth's Core, is the better of the two, but that's not saying much. It's another collaboration between director Kevin Connor and star Doug McClure(The first being The Land That Time Forgot). McClure and Peter Cushing have one of those neato machines with the giant drill on the front that allows you to burrow through the earth. Well, somewhere in the middle, they get stuck and find themselves in a prehistoric kind of world very similar to the "Before Time" films. The center of the earth is pretty much a jungle with a red/pink sky and a cave. Lots of red lighting and lots of lava in this film. The primitive humans(that speak english) are slaves to evil pterodactyl men who control an army of neanderthal type goons(who have a bizarre way of speaking. You know the sound it makes when you are listening to a cd and you hit the FF button?). The visuals and monsters in this movie are at about Godzilla level. The arrival of the badazz McClure sparks a slave revolt and soon everyone's had it up to here with these pterodactyl schmucks. It may sound like cheesy B movie fun, and it is, but it's also a bit more boring than it should be. Cushing is the comic relief this time as an absent minded english scientist. He's got that "Oh, My!", "Oh, Dear!" reaction to everything. A very far cry from his Frankenstein portrayal for sure. Caroline Munro is there just to look hot like she always does. Not bad if you're a fan of rubber monsters and lava. Though I'm sure Edgar Rice Burroughs would want the negatives burned if he saw it. Both films are 2 and a half stars at the very best, but they both beat watching infomercials at 4am.
    Score: 3 rated 3 stars

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