Journey to the Center of the Earth (1959) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
170 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Grand fantasy film-making, fun for all ages.
haristas27 August 2002
I can attest to the feelings expressed by the last couple commentators about 1959's "Journey To The Center Of The Earth." This is a wonderful family film from the bygone Eisenhower-era of the 1950s. Even though I've been watching it on TV since I was a kid in the sixties, I'd only seen pan&scan versions, and it wasn't until I got it letterboxed on laserdisc that I finally saw what a big-screen entertainment this movie was meant to be. It has wonderful scope and a score by Bernard Herrmann that takes you right down into the bowels of the earth. Listen to it and you'll notice what I mean, as the movie progresses the music keeps going into a lower and lower register. Five organs were used, including one meant for a Cathedral. (The complete original recordings of the score are available on CD from Varese Sarabande.) This movie also has the great James Mason in it, so you know it's got to be good. Sure it's long in the telling and takes a while to get you down that extinct volcano in Iceland, but it's fun all the way with great special effects work by L.B. Abbott and matte paintings by Emil Kosa Jr. The only way to watch this movie is in wide-screen and it's long past due that 20th Century Fox puts this out on DVD in a letterboxed anamorphic transfer. Let's hope that they do it soon.
86 out of 89 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
More entertaining than many contemporary fantasy films
"Journey to the Center of the Earth" was produced at the height of studio dominance in the film business. 20th Century Fox would soon be nearly bankrupt from the red ink of "Cleopatra" (later saved by the success of "The Longest Day" and "The Sound of Music"). Consequently, every department contributed tons of production value and I would say the matching of studio sets with actual locations in Carlsbad Caverns was pretty flawless. Like a lot of fantasy adventure films of the 1950s and 1960s (ie. Jason and the Argonauts, The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad and The Wonders of Aladdin), "Journey to the Center of the Earth" focuses firmly on the characters and the special effects support the performances. Today, sadly, so much effort and time is spent in designing the special effects that the human characters suffer and become clichés (with the exception recently of Tobey Maguire's wonderful "Spiderman" and the recent "Superman"). Those of us who grew up in the 1950s, think of this film fondly as a perfect Saturday matinée entertainment. I can still remember sucking on my giant cherry lollipop, flipping popcorn boxes against the screen and enjoying that very ominous Bernard Herrmann musical score. For a singer, Pat Boone plays drama and adventure quite well and even looks good with his shirt off. Arlene Dahl is sexy in her tight bodice and Peter Ronson also performs well considering he had zero acting experience. James Mason's Professor Lindenbrook ties it all together nicely - it was probably his most physical role ever. And, of course there was Gertrude, who, unfortunately, probably ended up on someone's plate, rather than be retired to the Motion Picture Home for old ducks. Kai aye professor, indeed.
29 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Fun family fifties fantasy flick
johno-2113 March 2006
I first saw this on TV as a kid in the early 60's and it became a TV staple being shown on network prime time before it went to the Saturday afternoon or late night route. Even as a kid I found this highly implausible and accepted it as escapist fantasy. It's a fun movie and is truly a classic. Director Henry Levin's most ambitious assignment as a director to go up against popular Disney fantasy films of the time, capture the imagination of Jules Verne and make it palatable enough for an adult audience. The unlikely cast of dramatic veteran James Mason, singer Pat Boone, beautiful Diane Baker, sexy Arlene Dahl and Iceland born jock Peter Ronson come together surprisingly well. Veteran screenwriter Charles Brackett who wrote for the screen such classics as Sunset Boulevard, Ninotchka, The Lost Weekend, Niagra and The Bishops Wife adapts the Jules Verne novel. Nominated for three Academy Awards for Art Direction, Special Effects and Sound. This movie is probably more fun to people like me who grew up with it from the time when it was made but it's still a good movie and I've seen it many times as an adult. It would be nice to see in it's Technicolor big screen splendor. I would give it an 8.0 out of 10.
44 out of 48 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
I rest my case
Rage-721 April 2000
After reading some of the comments on this film I feel I have to spring to it´s defense. You see I am born and bred in Iceland and as I write this I am in front of my computer in Iceland, so you can believe me when I tell you that ALL THE ICELANDIC IN THIS FILM IS REAL. I understood almost everything that the Icelandic character in the film said and I can assure you that it was particularly articulate and well pronounced. Why someone said that it was fake, I don´t know. I am guessing that he did not hear it well because the sound can be pretty bad in these golden oldies. While we are on the subject let me also add that some of the facts concerning Iceland were wrong. The horse carriage used to transport the group to the volcano is out of place. The interior design of the hotel and the maitre d´hotel´s costume was a bit off. But it´s described like that in Verne´s novel as well so it´s no big deal. And besides every ethnic group is portrayed in a very stereotypical manner; Scots, Italians, everybody. Such nitpicking is therefore dull and unnecessary and people should just enjoy the film for it´s imagination.
88 out of 89 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Best Film Version To Date
Space_Mafune22 March 2003
While this film suffers from some annoying "cuteness" and has lizards parading as dinosaurs, it is nonetheless the best film version of the novel because Verne's themes of exploration and discovery remain. Bernard Herrmann's score is indeed fantastic and this film has a wonderful pace. The cast here is also very talented and the film is so well made one can forgive it its minor flaws.
22 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Spectacular rendition of the Jules Verne adventure yarn with an unforgettable James Mason
ma-cortes22 May 2016
This is the classic adaptation (1959) by Henry Levin with great cast such as James Mason as Lindenbrook , Pat Boone , Diane Baker and Arlene Dahl as a wealthy widow . An Edinburgh (in fact , many of the people in the crowd scenes were students of Edinburgh University) professor (James Mason who replaced an ailing Clifton Webb) and assorted colleagues as his pupil (Pat Boone) , a woman looking for her husband who disappeared various years earlier during a voyage follow an explorer's trail down an extinct Icelandic volcano to the earth's center . Meanwhile , they are chased by a mysterious scout , the Count Saknussemm (Alexander Scourby started shooting at Carlsbad Caverns , but the producers were unhappy with him and he was replaced with Thayer David) who has usurped a map for his own greedy purposes . As the expedition to the center of the earth starts in a volcano located in Iceland . The professor and his compatriots descend into deep caverns filled with stalactites and stalagmites and encounter a tunnel system leading to the center . Along the way they find prehistoric beasts , a magnetic storm and the lost city of Atlantis .

This superior adaptation is a colorful recounting of the Jules Verne adventure yarn . Lighthearted romp for kids and teenagers based upon the famous book . Dealing with the known story about an anthropologist scientific named Linderbrook , James Mason , and his student , Pat Boone , and a woman , Arlene Dahl , undergo a hazardous voyage to find clues of her husband who disappeared some years earlier . As the peculiar trio along with a Island explorer descend into deep caves and discover a way leading to the planet's center . The highlights of the movie are the numerous risks and dangers they have to deal with , such as endure torrential floods , prehistoric animals , terrifying earthquake , and discover the lost city of Atlantis as happens in the classic novel . Fox gave the green light to this big-budget CinemaScope production partially on the basis of the success of the recent Jules Verne adaptations , Walt Disney's 20.000 leagues under the sea (1954) and Michael Todd's Around the World in Eighty Days ; as with those earlier films , turned out to be big hits . There're rip-roaring action , spirit of adventure , derring-do , sense of wonder , thrills , and results to be quite entertaining . It's a big fun with great special effects , adequate set decoration and impressive art direction . Spotlights of the voyage include a roller-coaster trip , a terrifying odyssey in sailing, with appearance of prehistoric reptiles , and many others events . The "Dimetrodons" in the movie were played by a large type of lizard called a rhinoceros iguana , in real life was a type of Synapsid reptile . Acceptable cinematography full of color by Leo Tover , though there is an excessive use of matte-painting . Thrilling and breathtaking musical score by Bernard Herrmann in his peculiar and Hitchcockian style . The motion picture was well directed by Henry Levin , the heavy cost proved to be a good investment, resulting in a big hit at the box office . It was nominated for four Academy Awards including Art Direction , FX , and set decoration.

Other versions about this known story based upon the Jules Verne's 1864 fantasy are the followings : Spanish version (1976) by Juan Piquer with Kenneth Moore , Jack Taylor , Frank Braña , Ivonne Sentis , Pep Munne , José María Caffarel , Emiliano Redondo . 1988 retelling titled Journey to the center by Rutsy Lemorande with Ian Mitchell-Smith , Paul Carafotes . TV version made its way to cable by George Miller with Treat Williams , Jeremy London , Tushka Bergen , and Bryan Brown and another inferior television picture (2008) by David Jones with Greg Evigan and Dedee Pfeiffer . In addition , Journey to the Center of the Earth (2008), (TV) , by T.J. Scott with Ricky Schroder , Peter Fonda , Victoria Pratt , Steven Grayhm . Furthermore , a cartoon movie : Journey to the Center of the Earth (1967) was based on this film version rather than the original novel by Jules Verne and features several characters that were created for the 1959 film . And of course , recent and successful take on filmed in 3D , produced and starred by Brendan Fraser with Anita Briem and Josh Hutcherson being followed by a sequel titled : Mysterious Island , with Josh Hutcherson and Michael Caine . Rating : Above average.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Enjoyable Family Entertainment
claudio_carvalho23 May 2013
In 1880, in Edinburgh, Professor Oliver S. Lindenbrook (James Mason) of the local university has been awarded with the title of "Sir" and his students have chipped in for a gift including a lava stone. Prof. Lindenbrook researches the lava and finds evidences that the scientist Saknussem sent it from the center of the Earth one hundred years ago. He sends his findings to his colleague Prof. Peter Göteborg of Stockholm to endorse his research. But soon he finds that Prof. Göteborg has betrayed him and traveled to Iceland to organize an expedition to the center of the Earth.

Prof. Lindenbrook travels with his protégée Alexander "Alec" McKuen (Pat Boone) to Iceland to organize his own expedition, and he discovers that Prof. Göteborg was murdered by Count Saknussem (Thayer David) that wants to protect the discovery of his ancestor. Prof. Lindenbrook and Alec are forced to team-up with the widow Carla Göteborg (Arlene Dahl) and the strong local Hans Belker (Peter Ronson) that brings his duck Gertrude with him. The group goes to a volcano that is the entrance to the center of the Earth in the beginning of their amazing and dangerous journey.

"Journey to the Center of the Earth" is an enjoyable family entertainment based on the novel by Jules Verne. The effects and scenarios are impressive for a 1959 movie and it is funny to see the behavior of the women in that time, screaming and totally vulnerable. The duck Gertrude is responsible for most of the funniest parts of this movie and her tragic fate was absolutely unnecessary. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Viagem ao Centro da Terra" ("Journey to the Center of the Earth")
15 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Wonderful fantasy adventure.
hitchcockthelegend29 April 2008
Intrepid professor Sir Oliver S. Lindenbrook leads an expedition towards the center of the Earth via an extinct Icelandic volcano. The journey is sure to be fraught with danger and little do they know that their trip will take in many unchartered wonders.......both good and bad!

As adventure films go, Journey To The Center Of The Earth has few peers, it's a wonderful film based around the Jules Verne story of the same name. There are no hidden agendas here, no wry social commentary or satirical edginess, it is pure fantastical entertainment that wants you to enjoy its science heart whilst you have a blast following this group into the wondrous unknown. Lost cities, prehistoric lizards, underground oceans, crystal caves, sand mines, murder, sabotage, and on it goes for just over two hours of delightful movie making, it even has time for a bit of cheeky sexual tom foolery for the knowing adult.

I'm sure the likes of Spielberg & Lucas were nodding in approval back in the day.

The sets, the sound, and the special effects were all nominated for academy awards, and sure enough all may well seem tame by todays bloated standards, but this is 1959 and let your mind be back to that time and you surely will be taken in by this joyous experience. While I must also mention that location footage shot in the beautiful Carlsbad Caverns adds to the dynamic feel of the picture. Lead acting duties fall to the irrepressible James Mason as Lindenbrook, perfectly cast as he nails all the traits of this dyed in the wood professor. Support comes from Pat Boone, Arlene Dahl {the colour photography perfectly showing her piercing eyes}, Peter Ronson and star of the show Gertrude The Duck.

It was magical to me as a child, it's still as magical to me now I'm in my advancing years, wonderful indeed. 9/10
48 out of 50 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
50s family fare that holds up pretty well
MBunge6 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
If you can put up with Pat Boone's pathetic excuse for a Scottish accent and the fact that it takes them nearly an hour to get underground, Journey to the Center of the Earth holds up pretty nicely for a 2+ hour hunk of late 1950s family fare. It's got the great James Mason, the increasingly attractive Arlene Dahl, the appropriately contemptible Thayer David, some interesting sets and the sort of animal special effects the Humane Society no longer lets filmmakers get away with.

Sir Oliver Lindenbrook (James Mason) is a geology professor in Edinburgh, Scotland. When a gift from one of his students, Alec McKuen (Pat Boone), turns out to be a clue to the fabulous mysteries under the surface, he sets off to Iceland to find a passageway to the planet's core. He's joined on this adventure by Alec and Carla Goteborg (Arlene Dahl), the wife of a murdered rival, with a gigantic Icelander (Peter Ronson) and his pet duck tagging along. But this race to discovery also has the villainous Count Saknussem (Thayer David) doing anything he can to foil Lindenbrook's expedition and claim the scientific glory for himself.

Fortunately for Lindenbrook and company, the Earth in this movie is not comprised of miles and miles of impenetrable rock surrounding a cauldron of molten lava. No, this underworld is an unending series of cave and passageways that get more strange and wonderful as they go along. There's luminous algae, giant mushrooms, dinosaurs, a subterranean ocean and even the lost city of Atlantis. Very little of it makes a lick of scientific sense but it all looks appealing. With the strong personalities of Mason and Dahl, the beefcake of Boone and Ronson and occasional heart-tugging glances back at Jenny (Diane Baker), the girl Alec left behind to go on this journey, this film maintains a pretty good level of energy and while it may be corny and cheesy by modern standards, it never comes close to boring.

This is the sort of Hollywood blockbuster that was designed and meant to appeal to everyone in the audience from 8 to 80, not 18 to 30. So you've got the pet duck along for comic relief and it even figures into a couple of important plot points. The good guys are so unrelentingly noble and wholesome that even Count Saknussem, who kills Carla's husband, works his own servant to death and shoots Alec, is quickly forgiven his transgressions. The special effects top off at iguanas with big fins glued to their backs and a salamander that appears to have been painted red to pass for a giant chameleon. No one in the story is a wise-cracking smartass and the whole thing ends with the triumphant heroes being serenaded by an adoring crowd. If any of that stuff puts your teeth on edge, Journey to the Center of the Earth is not for you.

If you'd like a pleasant, inoffensive and never insultingly stupid movie to take up a couple hours of your day, something you can simultaneously watch with the youngest of kids and the oldest of grandparents, this will be just what the doctor ordered.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Science fiction epic, quite ambitious for its day, and terrifically entertaining.
barnabyrudge3 May 2004
Based fairly faithfully on a classic sci-fi novel by Jules Verne, Journey To The Center Of The Earth is an inventive, splendidly-realised, smartly acted film. It must have been quite an ambitious undertaking in 1959 to try to make a film set predominantly in a mysterious, unexplored underground realm populated by fantastic creatures and filled with a host of weird 'n' wonderful sights. However, the makers have done a great job in tackling this enormously challenging source material.

A Scottish scientist, Prof Oliver Lindenbrook (James Mason) discovers that a fellow scientist recently tried to find a route to the centre of the earth. Determined to venture down the same route, Lindenbrook puts together an ambitious expedition consisting of his nephew Alec (Pat Boone), widow Carla Goetaborg (Arlene Dahl), silent but loyal guide Hans (Peter Ronson), and a duck named Gertrude. The foolhardy team begin their descent among the craggy crevices of an Icelandic glacier, and as they make their way into the bowels of the earth they make many a wondrous discovery, from mammoth-sized mushrooms to fearsome prehistoric monsters.

The film is well-paced and thoroughly entertaining. On the whole, the performances are good (Boone is a little too clean-cut, as usual, but he does all right) and the special effects are excellent for their time. Bernard Herrmann provides a crashing music score, and the set design is absolutely tremendous. This is a classic sci-fi film, and any serious fan of sci-fi movies would be a fool to miss it.
94 out of 106 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Handsomely mounted fantasy adventure.
poolandrews29 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Journey to the Center of the Earth starts in Edinburgh in 1860 where geology Professor Oliver Lindenbrook (James Mason) is given an unusual piece of volcanic rock by one of his students Alec McKuen (Pat Boone), the rock doesn't feel right & after close examination a small plumb-bob is found inside with some writing on it by missing famed explorer & scientist Arne Saknussemn that talks about an underground world at the center of the Earth somewhere in Iceland. Professor Lindenbrock decides to set-up an expedition of his own including McKuen & Icelandic servant Hans (Peter Ronson) & lady Carla Göteborg (Arlene Dahl) the wife of a dead fellow scientist & rival. Using the directions given they start their long journey to the center of the Earth but face many dangers along the way like rival expeditions, lava eruptions, tremors, falling rocks & even flesh-eating Dinosaurs...

Directed by Henry Levin this lavish big screen adaptation of the classic 1864 Jules Verne novel is handsomely mounted & as long as you don't expect an accurate adaptation then I think there's plenty of entertainment & fun to be had here. The script takes Verne's basic premise & turns it into an amusing adventure romp complete with a pet Duck along for the ride, the story is a good one although there are lapses in logic like how lady Göteborg can travel hundreds of miles into the Earth wearing a dress & keep her hair & make-up perfect or why none of the men grow beard's or their hair even grow for that matter & what does that Duck eat exactly? They claim they have eaten nothing but salted beef for months yet I didn't know Duck's were carnivorous. Then there's the amount of light down there, I'm sorry but there wouldn't be any even if a few crystals did give off some light & when they finally do reach the center of the Earth it's just a whirlpool in the middle of a sea. But then again I did enjoy this, it has a good sense of humour, it never takes itself too seriously, the character's are good & it's well put together despite a few logic problems. The makers also decided to throw in the Lost City of Atlantis at the end too for some reason.

The film is quite long at over two hours & it does take a while for the action & adventure to kick in as the majority of the first hour is spent above ground with rival expeditions & the like. The film does look very good with it's cavernous sets, glowing water pools, luminescent crystal formations, giant Mushrooms, the Lost City of Atlantis & even giant Dinosaurs that although are just photographically enlarged lizards look pretty good for the time actually. There's a scenes of a huge boulder chasing the expedition down a tunnel which reminded me of Indiana Jones. Although there is comedy here it's never that heavy handed or intrusive & does sit quite well with the adventure story going on.

Apparently made because of the huge success of two other Jules Verne's adaptations of 20000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954) & Around the World in Eighty days (1956) this was a pretty big budget film & it holds up well even today. James Mason gives a great performance here & he actually replaced Clifton Webb just before filming started while Alexander Scourby apparently started shooting the Count Saknussem role but was fired & replaced by Thayer David.

Journey to the Center of the Earth is a light hearted fantasy adventure that I really liked actually, it may not be an exact word for word adaptation of the novel but who cares? One of several Journey to the Center of the Earth films with the most popular & well-known one being the recent box-office hit Journey to the center of the Earth (2008) in 3D & starring Brendan Fraser.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A fantastic romp
sharkey1978 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I really don't care if this film is scientific nonsense. I really don't care if Pat Boone bursts into song to give the teens of the time a thrill. I don't even care that as they are being born upwards on that altar disk during a volcano eruption, Arlene Dahl's hair remains perfectly in place! This film is just so much fun none of the rest matters. I loved it as a kid and as an adult, I still love it. Now that I am older, I can truly appreciate the fact that the two romantic leads are middle aged, something that was rarely done back then and how wonderful to see a "mature" woman like Dahl being sexy as all getout. I loved it when she and James Mason get together in the end. As for the special effects, so what if the dinosaurs are hokey? All dinosaurs were hokey in the fifties. The filming in the caverns was great and who downs't love Gertrude and her owner? It was terrible when Gertrude got eaten. It justified the bad guy's death. I mean, he could kill a man, but a duck is an entirely different matter!
20 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Great classic
jespinos2 May 2005
I enjoy classic sci fi and I am happy to have recently seen this on DVD by renting it through Netflix. A musical at times, the actors and their songs were delightful. I enjoyed the colors and scenery both above-ground in the Iceland scenes, and underground as the travelers journey to the center of the Earth. If you are the kind of sci fi fan who likes model sets, then this movie will provide visual aesthetic pleasure. The story was compelling and action-packed. I have not read Verne's classic, but this is a good movie in its own right. Modern audiences may be disturbed by the professor's sexist remarks, but since they are purposely meant as character-revealing, one can easily get past them to enjoy the other more admirable characters. I was happy to see a female as part of the expedition to the center of the Earth, and despite the problematics with her role, she had agency. The DVD even has surround sound so the songs and auditory effects were easily heard and projected throughout my living room. Overall entertaining and fun.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Not quite a centre of excellence...
Lejink25 July 2010
Must admit to seeing this film for the first time in the early 70's in a flea-pit cinema in Glasgow's East end on a double bill with of all things the camp classic that was Adam West's "Batman" movie from 1966 (an interesting coincidence is the presence of Alan "Alfred The Butler" Napier in a supporting role here). I really enjoyed it then and somewhat guiltily returned to it on a rare TV screening recently.

Hmmm...I wish I could be more charitable about it today however, but at times I have to say it's almost as camp as old Bats in his 60's pomp! Things I'd forgotten - good - the Edinburgh location settings in the prologue before the journey (actual settings, I briefly lived there and the New Town streets are almost identical today), and bad - Pat Boone in a prominent role (this I attribute to selective amnesia).

There are some really hokey bits - like the papier-mache "rock" careering down the cave to crush our heroes early on, Pat Boone's, I'll be kind, singular take on Burns' "My Love is Like A Red Red Rose" and of course the lizard monsters appearance near the end. The unintentionally funniest line goes to James Mason's comment about a piece of rock having the consistency of cardboard in front of the most obvious background painting of the Scottish Highlands.

But Mason, who has the most professorial voice you could ever hear, enters into the spirit of the whole fantasy piece and carries you along for the ride and some of the shots in the phosphorescent caves are quite pretty. I'm sure they could have beefed up the supposed blackguard of a villain who dogs our intrepid group's trail, but I know I'm being too harsh on this.

I'll stop my journey here and close by saying I was pleased to see it again after all these years and the confession that the faults I see in it today are more likely down to my mature cynicism than the enthusiastic action I witnessed on the screen.
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A guilty pleasure
lgrace17 June 2006
I have always loved this movie. I have it on tape and have almost worn it out. Time to look for a DVD. THe performances are top notch. Even though Pat Boone falls in and out of his accent he does a creditable job as a Scot. Looks very dashing in the Glendarroch tartan! Jenny sounds like she's from America. They needed a scene where someone explains that Jenny is Uncle Oliver's niece from Kansas.

Arlene Dahl was always a favorite in the 50s and 60s as a strong woman. James Mason is excellent as always. Loved the duck, Gertrude! When I saw this movie as a child, I wanted a duck for a pet. My mother was smart enough to refuse.
46 out of 48 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
My 10 year old and I liked it.
dpriven27 October 2003
I read the book when I was a kid and enjoyed it quite a bit. When I saw the DVD at the library, I picked it up. I hadn't planned on making my daughter watch an old movie with me, but when she wandered through the living room, she plopped right down and we had a fun time.

The pacing was fine, the actors read their lines well, the music was exciting, and the DVD is very clear - it could have been made last year, as far as the print is concerned. I saw two bits used in Raiders of the Lost Ark - the giant boulder rolling toward our heroes, and a ray of light leading the way at a certain time and place. I'm sure there are other scenes from this movie that were aped in more recent adventure films.

One commenter really went off regarding the Freudian aspects of the film - I noticed too, but it didn't bother me - EVERY film is about sex if you let it be.

The only special features were the original trailer - which actually expected audiences to read! and a comparison of the old unrestored prints to the new one. If you only saw the old fuzzy print, you haven't seen the movie.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Enjoy the wonders of the center of the Earth
peapulation13 April 2005
I read the novel by Verne and no offense but, it bored the hell out of me. But the movie was very enjoyable not only because of the ability of the cast but also because of the great scenery meant to be the center of the Earth.

Now, I even enjoyed the little tune they start singing all of a sudden, I thought it was quite catchy.

A certain scene I found especially interesting is when the Professor wants to take a sample of a mineral. Although it's very small and didn't look too important it was very well needed to hold the water back.

As I said, the cast was very good, even the duck found itself a very useful role in this film, even though I did think the relationship between the duck and the man was quite strange, perhaps even a bit disturbing. Nevertheless, thumbs up for this movie.
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I liked it.
reiss-ferlance9 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I saw Journey to the Center (or centre as I write it) of the Earth in the T.V. Guide, I'd heard of it, and I thought to myself that I might watch it. I watched it and I liked it. It's based on the novel by Jules Verne. Journey to the Center of the Earth was a great film with humour and even a bit of drama. It's about a Professor who organises an expedition to the center of the earth and discovers an entrance to the underworld. The funniest parts in the movie are scenes that involve a duck. The film did take a while to get going, but it delivered enough adventure and towards the end the people on the expedition discovered giant lizards, it reminded me of "The Lost World" 1960, because in that movie, the dinosaurs are just enlarged lizards with thins and horns. The characters in this movie are likable. Oliver, Carla, Alec, Hans, and even the duck, that duck is good. Good acting and a good plot is what Journey to the centre of the earth has. Leslie Halliwell gave this movie 2 stars out of 4. He thought this movie was entertaining. I give this movie 4 stars out of 5 stars.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Enchanting, exciting, magical adventure
fertilecelluloid17 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I was barely old enough to speak when I first saw this film. It enchanted me completely with its jaw-dropping visualization of a trip to the center of the Earth. Never mind that the Earth's center is far from hollow. I wanted to believe Verne's version of events, just as I was only too eager to buy into Burroughs' account of life in Pellucidar, another land located within the Earth's core. The film is directed with great affection and respect for the source material by Henry Levin and solidly anchored by James Mason. The special effects by L.B. Abbott, the genius behind "Planet of the Apes" and "Lost in Space" (the TV series), were state of the art for the time and are even impressive today. The raft sequence in the inland sea is a fine piece of suspense and, like the rest of the film, possesses a magical sense of wonder and excitement. Bernard Herrmann's score is marvelous and perfectly captures the breathtaking spirit of the adventure. Superb!
14 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
For a movie made in 1959 it does rather well in its presentation.
Aaron137528 December 2009
Yes, they did a rather good job of making a movie that did make you feel like the characters were underground and on a grand journey to the center of the Earth. There would be another one that was made in the 1970's that was foreign that I enjoyed a tad better, but this one was good too. That one was just a bit more strange and the dinosaur effects while not grand were a bit better. This one essentially uses lizards with fins tied to their backs as the monsters. Still this one is about a crew going on a strange journey into the earth and overall it is a fun adventure. Its pacing was a bit slow and at times it was kind of dull, but overall it is a nice adventure movie. The group consists of an odd assortment of characters and a goose and one guy who is not on the up and up trying to tag along. You get to watch them have some misadventures and you get to see the strange cavern filled with salt and another one that contains giant mushroom. The movie ends quite nicely too with a rather well done volcanic eruption. Add to that the incredible super lizard and you have your movie. Which is not that greatest adventure of all time, but for a movie made in 1959 it does quite well, better than some movies made today.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Adventure and danger at the centre of the Earth
chris_gaskin12320 January 2005
This is the first and best version of this story. Journey To the Center of the Earth has been made several times since this 1959 release.

A group of four explorers consisting of Professor Lindenbrook, his nephew, a woman and an Iclantic, Hans plus his pet duck Gertrude go on an expedition to the centre of the Earth via an extinct volcano in Iceland.They encounter all sorts of dangers and sights on the way including a large boulder that nearly crushes them, a forest of giant mushrooms, the lost city of Atlantis, an underground ocean and some prehistoric monsters including Dimetrodons and a giant red lizard, which attacks the party as they are making their escape. They get back to the surface in an ancient large dish like object via a volcano! Pat Boone is thrown off course when they reach the surface and ends up in the grounds of a monastery naked and uses a sheep to cover up his private parts! This shocked the nuns of course.

The Dimetrodons are enlarged lizards with fins attached but look good. The music score by Bernard Herrmann is excellent as it is in all his movies i've seen.

The cast is excellent too and includes James Mason (20,000 Leagues Under the Sea), Pat Boone (who also sings), Arlene Dahl, Peter Ronson as Hans and Diane Baker.

I have seen this movie several times and is an excellent way to spend a couple of hours one afternoon or evening.

Rating: 5 stars out of 5.
40 out of 51 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Really nice adventure
Philipp_Flersheim13 July 2022
I was pleasantly surprised by 'Journey to the Center of the Earth'. The plot moves fast, especially once the descent into the vulcano has been dealt with. There is a proper villain, and the the characters are drawn nicely and convincingly. Moreover, the acting is good, with James Mason and Arlene Dahl standing out. The bickering of these two is fun, though you begin to suspect pretty soon that they will end as a couple. The sets are really well-done, and I liked the iguanas acting as dinosaurs: They look much better than stop-motion models. All in all a satisfying fantasy adventure!
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The favorite movie of my childhood in the early 80s
johnreveals16 August 2021
This movie has it all - for me at least.

Great characters, story, environment, effects and plot.

I have always had a soft spot for 50s movies, both science fiction, westerns, drama and thrillers.

I would guess that I have watched this movie on VHS about 20 times as a child and now I still like to watch it a few years apart.

I find all of the films founded on Jules Vernes amazing books to be exceptionally well made and should be shown to children instead of the modern Hollywood (propaganda filled) garbage, in my humble opinion.

This is not a film that is 1:1 made from the story of the book, but it is in some ways better, as I see it at least.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
The first 15 minutes or so are a bit cheesy & sickly sweet, but other than that it's a fine adventure film
jimbo-53-1865119 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Oliver Lindenbrook (James Mason) is an Edinburgh based scientist who has recently been knighted after becoming Edinburgh's greatest scientist. One of his students Alec McKuen (Pat Boone)purchases a piece of lava for Mr Lindenbrook. Lindenbrook is intrigued by this piece of lava and accidentally discovers that the piece of lava that he's acquired may have originated from a volcano in Iceland which may be directly linked to the 'centre of the earth'. Determined to find out if this piece of lava did originate at the centre of the earth, Lindenbrook and McKuen head off to Iceland, but they encounter many problems along the way.

Whilst I did enjoy this film on the whole I must admit the start of the film was a little bit cheesy, twee & sickly-sweet; the weird bit at the start where all Lindenbrook's students are singing to him, the early scene involving McKuen and Lindenbrook's daughter Jenny (Diane Baker). This scene contained some really cheesy and mushy dialogue (it actually made me cringe). Then just after that he started singing to her - ughh!!. Was all this really necessary? Thankfully, after these few cringeworthy early scenes the film does settle down and the adventure soon begins...

One thing I liked about this film is that it was a lot of fun - the interaction between the characters was great, the chemistry was good between the principal cast and they all shared good camaraderie. Mason & Dahl were particularly good and you could see that there was a definite power struggle for leadership between the two of them. The film is also slightly sexist in that Lindenbrook initially won't allow Goetabaug to accompany them merely because she's a woman - I think that people need to remember that this film was made in 1959 where sexism and equal rights weren't as prevalent as they are now. I'm not condoning the sexism, but merely stating that it wasn't an uncommon thing in this era. There is a positive spin on this though because Gotabaug for the most part was portrayed as being bright and fairly resourceful rather than a clichéd bimbo or damsel in distress.

The only other minor issue relates to food; about 2/3 of the way into the film it's mentioned that they've been travelling for 256 days (which is roughly 9 months), yet they only have a handful of provisions at the start of the journey which begs the question; did they really have enough supplies for 9 months? Even by rationing your intake, I think you'd need more supplies than you'd be able to carry. These issues didn't affect my overall enjoyment of the film, but I couldn't help but think about them during the running time.

This is an excellent adventure film and despite the glaring lack of logic within one aspect of the narrative it was still a lot of fun and it also contained some great dialogue and a few memorable characters. It's only really spoilt slightly by its cheesy/sickly-sweet start, but if you can get past the first 15 minutes it's absolutely first-rate.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Pat Boone In Wonderland.
rmax30482315 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A small expedition led by Professor James Mason works its way down to the center of the earth, encountering many amazing wonders and noisome tribulations along the way. Members of the expedition include the red-haired Arlene Dahl who never loses her make up kit; Hans, a monolingual Icelander; Pat Boone, Mason's geology student from Edinburgh; and Gertrude the duck. The usual template is shattered and the story turns tragic when Gertrude is abducted by a mean-tempered, vilipendible interloper and eaten. There's no excuse for that.

Pat Boone is as clean cut as his singing voice, a great palladium of red-white-and-blue American virtue. He and Hans must strip down to cut offs as they near the center and both sport symmetrical frames with Malibu tans. Arlene Dahl never has to strip down to anything, although we're told she takes off her stays. I didn't believe it because I didn't see it. James Mason is -- well, one wonders what he's doing here at the center of the earth. He's an extremely talented actor but restrained and subtle. He was a marvelous Brutus in MGM's "Julius Caesar." This part calls for a taller, more commanding expedition leader.

A lot depends on the production design and special visual effects and they're of the period. See the forest of giant mushrooms! See the "monsters" -- amplified iguanas with fans glued where their dorsal spines used to be. They're more than one hundred kilometers below the surface, so do they ever get out? Not to worry. They're all sitting in a sacred marble bowl they found in the ruins of Atlantis and a volcanic explosion provides them with a speedy elevator that blows them up a shaft to the surface and out into the air over the Bay of Naples. They all survive except the evil miscreant who ate Gertrude the duck. That miscreant, by the way, is Thayer David, who is good at villainy. He was the "bloodless freak" who blackmails Clint Eastwood in "The Eiger Sanction." The notion of a hollow earth is common enough in mythology that it must have universal appeal. There are myths about subterranean kingdoms found in places as culturally independent as Tibet, Ireland, and South America. And the Greeks located Hades underground, while the rest of us put hell or sheol in the underground. But for all that appeal, I found the movie kind of boring in a routine 1950s way. Maybe kids or science-fiction devotees would find it more exciting. Anyway, it suffers from two principal weaknesses. Dahl changes behind a rock and Gertrude becomes Peking duck.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed