Reviews Name That Flick Movie Quote Challenge Movie Wallpaper Message Forum
Home Top Voted Movies Articles Contests Interviews chat Links
Welcome
Log Out | Control Panel

Search by:


National Treasure: Book of Secrets
Semi-Pro
Be Kind Rewind

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Speed Racer
Visitor, The
Son of Rambow
Iron Man
Forbidden Kingdom, The
I Know Who Killed Me
National Treasure: Book of Secrets
War and Peace (1968)
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Space Movie, The
La Vie en Rose

The Visitor
Street Kings
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Where In the World Is Osama Bin Laden?
Star Trek
The Ruins
The Happening
Indiana Jones
Iron Man
Get Smart
Redbelt
The Dark Knight

Movie Wallpaper

Free Movie Content
Link to Us

Name That Flick
Movie Quote Challenge
Chat Room
Contests

Looking for the ideal casino for games like blackjack, gokkasten, roulette and other known casino games, then try Mijn Online Casino for tips and tricks and everything you need.
Casino Information
A full list of casino and online casino games including the worlds favorit online poker rooms for you to enjoy.
Looking for an casino or bingo ? Read casino and bingo reviews. Get your casino bonus today. Read about jack vegas reviews.
Den besten Casino Bonus finden Sie hier. If you want the best online casinos you are here fine. Das casino 888 ist sehr gut zum online Bingo spielen.
Spelstrategier.com is an online casino guide with unique strategies for Blackjack, Roulette and more. If you prefer Bingo you find it here too.
Play online casino games, online backgammon games and also online pool. Enjoy playing online slots for real money or for fun.
Bingoon

Play bingo online.
Bingo - fun game online.
Read about bingo and play bingo for free.


Casino
Texas Holdem
casino
Casinos accepting us players
Vinn och Tjäna Pengar
vind penge
Casino

Advertise Here

First hand poker and casino resource for all game and card lovers. Beat the odds!



Eight Below
Movie Info:

 (9/10) Runtime: 120
Public Rating: 8.60 (10 votes) Director: Frank Marshall
Your Rating:   MPAA Rating:
Genre: adventure, drama Year: 2006
Writer(s): Written by David DiGilio (screenplay), based on the 1983 Japanese motion picture Nankyoku Monogatari (Antarctica), Toshirô Ishido, Koreyoshi Kurahara, Tatsuo Nogami and Kan Saji (Nankyoku Monogatari screenplay)
Distributor: Walt Disney Pictures, Buena Vista International
Reviewed by: Avril Carruthers
 
Review:

Produced by David Hoberman and Patrick Crowley

Cast: Paul Walker, Jason Biggs, Bruce Greenwood, Moon Bloodgood, Gerard Plunkett.

 

In a wild, wind seared and ice crusted wilderness, an isolated scientific research base in Antarctica is the setting for this deeply affecting story about a team of sled dogs who have to survive the Antarctic winter on their own after their human team members are forced to leave them behind. Based on a true story, it was made into a blockbuster in 1983 in Japan called Nankyoku Monogatari (Antarctica) which to the best of my knowledge is not available with English subtitles and which I have not seen. The hauntingly evocative soundtrack by Vangelis, however, I have loved for years. Executive Producer Masaru Kakutani of that movie also executive produced Eight Below, so one would assume some of the original elements are preserved, especially since he personally interviewed members of the 1957 expedition whose story it is.

 

To make an animal movie, as opposed to a wild life documentary, which evokes genuine feeling but does not overdo sentimentality, as does the recent mawkish Lassie (2005), is difficult. The tendency to anthropomorphise or make cute is as strong as the necessity to avoid scenes of purely instinctual animal savagery. Scenes without any human actors need to be believably natural as well as self-explanatory to avoid the need for narration. Director Frank Marshall, whose Alive, Arachnophobia and Congo showed a penchant for extreme climate conditions as well a flair for dramatic tension, makes this difficult task seem effortlessly natural in Eight Below. The canine actors are so well-trained, and so obviously intelligent, responsive and charismatic, that the filmic recreation of the plight of the original dogs is seamlessly credible. Their hero’s journey is both heart-breaking and inspiring, while presented in a minimally sentimental fashion.

 

Equally compelling is the interaction, full of lively affection, between the dogs and their sled driver Jerry Shepard (a contained Paul Walker). We are introduced to Jerry’s ‘kids’ and their names and personalities are as individually apparent as children’s. The contrast between Jerry’s obvious love and respect for his team and the oblivious single-focus of scientist Dr Davis McLaren (Bruce Greenwood) introduces dramatic tension immediately. On an ill-advised, because very late in the season, trip to find a piece of a meteorite from Mercury, McLaren’s obsession endangers himself, the dogs and Jerry, yet he takes for granted the intelligence and courage of the dogs who save his life more than once. An emergency flight in the teeth of an unseasonably ferocious snow storm necessitates the scientific team leave the base and the eight dogs, chained and without food or water, behind. The sudden emptiness of the base without the humans is all the more devastating when the plane meant to return for the dogs within three hours is grounded in the emergency and it becomes apparent that they will be stranded for at least six months of Antarctic winter.

 

Turning speculation into a convincing dramatic story, how they cope on their own, their desperation and resourcefulness and the dangers they face, which some do not survive, is shown in a series of episodes punctuated with captions harrowingly numbering the days they have been on their own. These alternate with scenes of Jerry, now Stateside, equally desperately trying to find a way to rescue his dogs. A couple of subplots involve the adventurous Kate (Moon Bloodgood), pilot of the plane and romantic interest for the recalcitrant Jerry, and Doc McLaren’s growing realisation of what he owes both Jerry and the abandoned dogs. Jason Biggs plays Cooper, Jerry’s best friend and colleague at the research station, functioning well as light comic relief with phobias including those of flying and being given a facial wash via dog tongue.

 

Eight Below is full of the stark and stunning beauty of Antarctica, even though it was filmed in Smithers and Stewart, British Columbia, Canada and Norway and Greenland. Antarctica was considered too cold to film in with a large crew, and the Northern hemisphere with the Aurora Borealis instead of the equally mesmerising Aurora Australis, is an obvious substitute. The ethereal beauty of the most isolated ends of the planet is breath-taking.

 

Naturally the most endearing and heart-wrenching scenes involve the dogs on their own. This is particularly in interactions between the beautiful and smart husky Maya, the team leader, and Max, the youngest of the dogs whose character arc takes him through hard necessity from underdog to leader. Through Jerry’s attachment to his ‘best girl’ as well as through her clever strategies in finding food in the desolate waste of the Antarctic winter, Maya is the focal point of some of the most triumphant and the most poignant scenes. But it’s perhaps the dogs’ collective behaviour which impacts the deepest. There is a clear hierarchy of leadership – some of which is extraordinary if it reflects how dogs reverting to a pack mentality in the wild would really act – and an obvious deep attachment to each other, quite apart from a need to work together to survive.

 

If you saw the recent remarkable Antarctic documentary March of the Penguins, which featured a predatory leopard seal, you will recognise this beast in one heart-stopping segment. As Jerry comments, “It’s more leopard than seal!”  Underwater-and-ice footage, shot in an ‘ice-pool set’ featuring this convincingly fierce animatronic creation, is nail-bitingly tense.

 

The canine actors in the film deserve more than a mention, as do Head Animal Trainer Mike Alexander and his team. It’s satisfyingly appropriate that of the dog cast, many were rescued themselves from the street and now find themselves in demand as canine film stars.

 

Eight Below is a superb film and fitting tribute to the amazing courage and tenacity of the dogs of the original expedition, some of whom survived alone even longer than their fictional counterparts. Even if you are not a dog-lover, I challenge you to be unaffected.

 

© Avril Carruthers     20th April 2006

 

 

Printable Version


Your Thoughts:

Do you agree/disagree with this review of Eight Below? Let your opinions be heard in our forum.

Related Merchandise:


Buy the Poster of Eight Below (Click Here)




About Us   Legal   Advertise   Privacy Policy   Jobs   Contact Us

Copyright © 2000-2006 Movie-Vault.com. Part of Merendi Networks.