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The Core
Reviewed by Rich Drees
Journeys
to the center of the Earth have been a staple of fantasy literature since
Dante visited the Inferno and Alice tumbled down the rabbit hole.
Unfortunately modern science has replaced the imaginative worlds of Tarzan’s
Pellucidar and the caverns of lost races and dinosaurs of H. G. Wells.
Superheated magma just didn’t seem to hold the promise of much adventure and
that’s why its surprising that The Core is as entertaining as it is.
When pacemakers stop working and birds loose their ability to navigate
college professor Josh Keyes (Aaron Eckhart in his very best Scott Bakula
mode) is the only one who figures out that the Earth’s core has stopped
spinning. Since the Earth’s core is what powers the planet’s
electro-magnetic shield, which protects us from being fried by radiation,
this is not a good thing.
After taking his findings to a smug and media savvy scientist (Stanley Tucci)
with government connections, Keyes soon finds himself leading up a group of
scientists and two NASA shuttle pilots (including Delroy Lindo and Hilary
Swank) on in trip into the Earth’s interior in an experimental vehicle to
try and restart the Earth’s core rotation. Along the way the craft is
menaced by superheated magma and diamonds the size of Long Island while one
of the crew carries the secret as to why the core stopped rotating in the
first place.
To be sure, this is the standard attempt-to-advert-the-natural-disaster
movie formula and The Core makes no apologies for it. You know that
not all in the group of scientists and soldiers that set out to save the
world are going to return and you can make a pretty good guess as to who’s
going to survive to the final reel. Still, director Jon (Entrapment)
Amiel manages to wring some tension, thrills and a twist or two out of what
could have come across as very cookie-cutter situations.
One of the
most satisfying elements of the movie is also its most annoying and that’s
the science involved. For the most part, it seems spot on, recalling high
school earth science classes from the dim past. However, when the film tries
to amp up the peril that Earth by showing super-electrical storms with
lightening strike that explode the Coliseum or vaguely explain how the
Earth’s core stopped spinning in the first place, the movie loses any
credibility it had. |