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Fantastic Voyage
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List Price: $9.98
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Product Details
- Starring: Stephen Boyd, Raquel Welch, Edmond O'Brien, Donald Pleasence, Arthur O'Connell
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- Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- Director: Richard Fleischer
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- EAN: 9786301744164
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- Format: Color, HiFi Sound, NTSC
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- ISBN: 6301744160
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- Label: 20th Century Fox
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- Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: 20th Century Fox
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- Release Date: 1997-02-11
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- Studio: 20th Century Fox
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1966-08-24
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- Title: Fantastic Voyage
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- UPC: 086162100239
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: 2001: A Space Odyssey took the world on a mind-bending trip to outer space, but Fantastic Voyage is the original psychedelic inner-space adventure. When a brilliant scientist falls into a coma with an inoperable blood clot in the brain, a surgical team embarks on a top-secret journey to the center of the mind in a high-tech military submarine shrunk to microbial dimensions. Stephen Boyd stars as a colorless commander sent to keep an eye on things (though his eyes stay mostly on shapely medical assistant Raquel Welch), while Donald Pleasance is suitably twitchy as the claustrophobic medical consultant. The science is shaky at best, but the imaginative spectacle is marvelous: scuba-diving surgeons battle white blood cells, tap the lungs to replenish the oxygen supply, and shoot the aorta like daredevil surfers. The film took home a well-deserved Oscar for Best Visual Effects. Director Richard Fleischer, who turned Disney's 1954 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea into one of the most riveting submarine adventures of all time, creates a picture so taut with cold-war tensions and cloak-and-dagger secrecy that niggling scientific contradictions (such as, how do miniaturized humans breathe full-sized air molecules?) seem moot. --Sean Axmaker
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Customer Reviews
Fantastic Voyage - A fantastic memory of the 60's
Fantastic Voyage was a good (four star) sci-fi film made smack dab in the middle of the 60's. The story line was authored by Isaac Asimov and made a good transfer to film. I couldn't think of a much more representative sci-fi film of the cold war years and this film had all the trappings.
I won't describe the story line except to say that it predicted a very improbable form of what we today call "nano-technology". It was, nevertheless, very entertaining and featured good actors of the day and very decent special effects which just managed to pull off the plot visually.
The plot involved some impossible technology to shrink an entire medical team and submarine designed for a crew compliment of about six, in order to perform brain surgery with a medical laser. This was an inside job and required suspending disbelief to the point of severe strain as the crew and sub were reduced to the size of a blood cell and injected into the patient.
I am out of my depth but this must have violated several of the classical laws of nature like conservation (of matter, energy, reactants and products, direction of entropy change) as well as some of newer ones in particle physics. However, it was all in the name of entertainment.
This film came at a time of relative calm and stability in my life during which I was going through engineering school. One Saturday night, while studying for some tests, my parents asked me if I would like to go out with them for dinner and possibly see a film.
A night out with my parents to see a sci-fi film is something I would remember since my father (who was a diesel engine mechanic and pretty hard headed) had never taken me to the movies except for this particular film! This was about as unexpected a pleasure as I could imagine as going out with my parents did not cause me any problems even when I was a young man.
The movie appeared to be a hit with everyone including my hard headed father. My mom, of course, could always be counted on to appreciate a good flick as we had made a habit of going to the movies together since forever.
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excellent old sci-fi
This is an excellent 60"s sci-fi film. It was done with intelligent thinking and the special effects are great for that time.
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Fantastic Movie!
Fantastic Voyage (Special Edition)
What can I say? One of the true "classics" of science fiction. It is imaginative. It is even "educational" to a point about the human body. It is both science fiction, a medical drama, and a spy story, all wrapped into one story. Of course, Raquel Welch and the antibodies is not to be missed. Plenty of special features that take you back to movies before CGI. Personally, I love it. It has stayed a favorite of mine thru the last three decades.
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A JOURNEY INTO... MICROBIOLOGY? SURREAL MICRO-COSM BROUGHT TO LIFE
I won't say this is a fantastic movie, but it was more interesting than I thought it would be. Its 1966 vintage gives it points, and while it's not full-blown campy, it does take itself somewhat seriously despite the fact its premise is absurd!
But --- when it comes down to it --- it IS fun watching them and their submarine get shrunk! Part of the charge in this movie is the sense of claustraphobia it induces as you watch them go from the size of mice, to the size of ants, until they are finally microscopic and ready to be injected into the man they need to perform laser surgery upon! Brain surgery! As they are put in at one of the lower arteries which will bring them to their destination in the brain, they are suddenly thrown off track and will have to find a new way, via unexpected organs and more dangerous routes! Meanwhile, one of the crew may be trying to sabotage the mission..
Sound a little cheesy? Part of the fun is seeing the different "landscapes" as they cross through different parts of the body (the heart, the lung, the inner ear!). They're always equipped in diving suits whenever they go outside their submarine to battle white blood cells or whatever..
If you go in with low enough expectations, you'll probably enjoy this film.. it's quaint, it's antiquated, a little surreal.. nothing offensive in it. "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" was a better submarine movie (*****), but Raquel Welch and compatriots do something new here in taking their 'micro'-cosmic journey inside the human body.
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Fantastic Voyage
Old movie but neetly done and very explicit in terms of the human body and its functions. A pleasure to view
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