Journey to the Center of the Earth | |
Director: | Rusty Lemorande Albert Pyun (uncredited) |
Producer: | Yoram Globus Menahem Golan |
Starring: | Nicola Cowper Paul Carafotes Jaclyn Bernstein Janet Du Plessis Emo Philips Kathy Ireland |
Music: | Stephane Lee Tim Stonewall |
Cinematography: | Tom Fraser David Watkin |
Editing: | Victor Livingston Rozanne Zingale |
Distributor: | The Cannon Group |
Released: | [1] |
Runtime: | 79 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Journey to the Center of the Earth is an American 1989 fantasy film directed by Rusty Lemorande and starring Nicola Cowper and Paul Carafotes. It was a nominal sequel to the 1988 film Alien from L.A., both of which are very loosely based on the 1864 novel Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne.
Newly hired nanny Crystina arrives in Hawaii to discover that her charge is the dog of Nimrod, a rock star. Two brothers accidentally take the dog's basket to a local cave with their sister. The group of young people get lost in a cavern while exploring a volcano. The volcano explodes and while fleeing they discover the lost city of Atlantis, at the center of the Earth. Atlantis is inhabited, and view the arrival of the group along with a separate visitor from the surface, Wanda Saknussemm, as an invasion. This leads the Atlanteans to prepare to invade the surface.[2] The children, nanny and Saknussemm must stop the invasion and escape to the surface.
The film marked the directorial debut of Rusty Lemorande and began shooting in June 1986 over the course of 40 days in Newport Beach, California with various underground scenes constructed within a vacant hangar at Long Beach Naval Shipyard.[3]
After screening Lemorande's rough cut, producers Yoram Globus and Menahem Golan were dissatisfied with the results particularly with the lack of a beginning which had been shot with Christmas decorations but had to be scrapped when the film abandoned its intended Holiday 1986 release date.[4] Lemorande had hoped the screening would convince Globus and Golan to allocate additional resources to finish the film, but instead they hired Albert Pyun to complete the film.[4] Pyun accepted the job saying he would finish the film for free if they allowed him to film Alien from L.A. for under $1 million which was a repurposed version of Pyun's own take on Journey to the Center of the Earth, which they agreed.[4]
Moria called the film "an entirely incoherent hodgepodge".[5]
Creature Feature gave the movie 1 out of 5 stars, calling the film a mess and something that only vaguely resembles a feature film.[6]
Common Sense Media stated that the film's "plot is absurd and at times hard to follow, the acting is bad, and the film overall looks very low-budget" but that it was appropriate for most children.[7]