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Updated Friday, October 2, 2009 9:27 am TWN, By Glenn Whipp, Los Angeles Times Pandorum 顫慄異次元Alvart and screenwriter Travis Milloy aim to disorient from the get-go and, to their credit, establish a pretty decent puzzler of a premise. Two spaceship crew members, Bower (Ben Foster) and Payton (Dennis Quaid), wake up from a long cryogenic snooze completely disoriented. They don't know their mission or their location and have only vague memories of life back on Earth. Bower decides to investigate, beginning one of many, many long journeys into the proverbial night, drifting down the dark corridors of the eerily quiet spacecraft. He soon discovers that the ship hasn't been abandoned. That's not necessarily a good thing, though, since everyone he meets is either a fear-crazed survivalist or a flesh-hungry mutant. The film's gruesome creatures are incredibly fast, ridiculously strong and look like the beasties from “The Descent,” except that here they sport a post-apocalyptic fashion sense straight out of “Mad Max.” One gathers these impressions over time because the quick-cut-crazy Alvart has an aversion to any shot lasting more than three seconds. That's curious, because “Pandorum” sure takes its sweet time revealing the details of its story. This would be OK if Alvart used these moments to build tension and develop a few of the characters. Instead, he devotes most of his energies to indistinct fight scenes, leaving us with more questions than answers. Like: How does that sexy French scientist (Antje Traue) keep her muscle tone eating nothing but crickets? Dr. Oz wants to know. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here |
![]() The gruesome creatures in “Pandorum” are incredibly fast, ridiculously strong and look like the beasties from "The Descent," except that here they sport a post-apocalyptic fashion ... Enlarge Photo ![]() Horror Reviews
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