Directed by Hironobu Sakaguchi (who also created the best-selling series of video games that inspired the film), the groundbreaking FINAL FANTASY, which stars a startlingly lifelike cast of animated characters, is the first photo-realistic computer-generated feature film ever made. In the year 2065, Earth has been taken over by .. Read more
| Starring | Alec Baldwin, Ving Rhames, Ming-Na Wen, Peri Gilpin |
|---|---|
| Director | Hironobu Sakaguchi |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Animated, Sci-Fi/Fantasy |
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Directed by Hironobu Sakaguchi (who also created the best-selling series of video games that inspired the film), the groundbreaking FINAL FANTASY, which stars a startlingly lifelike cast of animated characters, is the first photo-realistic computer-generated feature film ever made. In the year 2065, Earth has been taken over by a race of alien phantoms and transformed into a barren wasteland sprinkled with dome-enclosed barrier cities--the last remaining bastions of human civilization. Dr. Aki Ross (voiced by actress Ming-Na) has teamed up with Captain Gray Edwards (Alec Baldwin) to search for the "eighth spirit," a powerful entity dwelling in an unknown life form somewhere on the planet. It holds the key to perfecting a system of energy waves that will neutralize the phantoms. Ross's opponent is the reckless General Hein (James Woods), who is determined to put a stop to the alien invasion by firing a satellite cannon directly into a nest of phantoms located deep within the Earth, even though this could mean obliterating the planet itself and all life upon it.
| Starring | Alec Baldwin, Ving Rhames, Ming-Na Wen, Peri Gilpin, Donald Sutherland |
|---|---|
| Director | Hironobu Sakaguchi |
| Studio | COLUMBIA TRI-STAR HOME VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 41 mins Blu-ray: 1 hr 42 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Animated, Sci-Fi/Fantasy |
| Language | English |
| Dubbed | French |
| Subtitles | Arabic, English, French |
| Released | DVD: 21 Jan 2002 Blu-ray: 05 Nov 2007 Production year: 2001 |
| Format | DVD |
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Japan's long-running computer-game franchise provides the bare, thematic bones for this 100-per-cent computer-animated movie, which was released hot on the heels of Lara Croft: Tomb Raider. Directed and co-written by the game's creator, Hironobu Sakaguchi, with new characters and story, the film follows the quest of brilliant young scientist Dr Aki Ross (voiced by ER's Ming-Na) to find a peaceful end to the ongoing war between mankind and invading phantoms in 2065. The goodies are Dr Sid (Donald Sutherland) and a military squad straight out of Aliens (including light relief Steve Buscemi); the baddie is hawkish General Hein (James Woods). The story is simple sci-fi stuff, even a little off-puttingly touchy-feely at times, but it's strong and intelligent enough to prevent the film from being merely an expensive ($140 million) exhibition match for the US-Japanese animators. That said, it's a truly state-of-the-art display — so realistic at times, you wonder why they animated it at all — although there's a rubbery quality to the human characters, who still can't mouth dialogue convincingly.
"...Sci-fi fans and programmers will find it hard to contain their glee as battleships explode in vibrant shades of orange and red....The alien phantoms, luminous and ethereal, are both beautiful and terrifying..."
I don't think you can say this is a bad film. It has an interesting premise, the outline of interesting characters, a superb voice cast and visual effects which are astounding. However, for me it suffers from two key flaws. One, a weak script that progresses the plot but doesn't round out its characters enough - a key issue in a film where all the characters are animated, and thus lacking the subtlety of expression which real actors can use to convey so much. The other problem, at least for me, was the irritating 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' hippy rubbish they kept spouting. All this stuff about the spirits of the Earth, returning to Gaia and enriching life experiences. Yeach - it certainly makes my stomach want to return my lunch, enriched or otherwise. It also drags for short periods (normally while nattering away about the above rubbish) and has a few loopy plot holes, but I quite enjoyed it really.
Yeah it was certainly pretty but seemed to lose its way towards the end, play the games instead.