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STARS...
Stephen Boyd, Raquel Welch, Donald
Pleasence, Arthur O'Connell, Edmond O'Brien, William Redfield,
and Arthur Kennedy.
PLOT SUMMARY...
A group of experts is shrunk down to microscopic size, then injected
into a scientist's bloodstream, their mission being to eliminate an
inoperable clot in the brain.
QUICK SCAN...
Richard Fleischer, who also directed "20,000 Leagues Under
the Sea", keeps the action moving right along. Scientist, Raquel
Welch, seems to have been born to wear a wet suit. The FX, particularly
those inside the human body, are terrific! Donald Pleasence, as a
traitor aboard the mini-sub, gives an overly obvious performance.

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Review:
With FANTASTIC VOYAGE, Director, Richard Fleischer, working from a
Screenplay by Harry Kleiner ,(Adaptation by David Duncan, based on
a Story by Otto Klement and Jay Lewis Bixby), created a gripping,
Sci-Fi tale that has held up surprisingly well over the years.
Enroute to a secret U.S. location, a scientist, under the watchful
eye of government security man, Stephen Boyd ("The Caper of the
Golden Bulls") is shot. Soon, inside the secret facility, a military
guy, Edmond O'Brien ("The Wild Bunch") explains to G-Man
Boyd what the C. M. D. F., printed on the wall, stands for: "Combined
Miniature Deterrent Forces." "We can reduce anything down
to any size we want: people, ships, tanks, planes. We can shrink an
army, with all its equipment, put it into a bottle cap."
The scientist, who was shot, is in a coma, with a blood clot in his
brain, which can not be operated on by conventional means. Therefore,
O'Brien intends to shrink down a surgical team, and a special submarine,
and inject them into the ill scientist's bloodstream. O'Brien asks
for Boyd's help. Boyd doesn't understand how he can help. As he puts
it, "Me, I can't even put a bandaid on my finger." Boy,
this guy is useless.
Boyd's job is to provide security during the upcoming mission, since
a traitor may be aboard the shrunk sub. It's unfortunate that Donald
Pleasence ("Escape From New York") as the head of the medical
mission, is so twitchy and panicky in his performance. It's too easy
to figure out who the traitor is on the mission, thereby undercutting
some of the film's suspense.
The submarine is a gleaming white affair, with a small plexiglass
dome on top. The white sub has an impressive, futuristic design.
Raquel Welch, ("The Three Musketeers"), as an assistant
to a laser scientist, looks great in a wet suit. Her performance here
added considerably to her "body" of work.
The scene, involving the submarine, with our heroes inside, being
shrunk down to super-miniature size, is very effective. Special Photographic
Effects guys, L.B. Abbott, Art Cruickshank, and Emil Kosa, Jr., are
the responsible parties. This is my favorite scene in the film.
Director of Photography, Ernest Laszlo, aided by the imaginative Art
Direction, of Jack Martin Smith and Dale Hennesy, and creative Set
Decorations, of Walter M. Scott and Stuart A. Reise, delivers consistently
eye pleasing imagery, both in the miniaturization lab as well as in
the human body itself. The Music, by Leonard Rosenman, is appropriately
dramatic.
FANTASTIC VOYAGE should be highly watchable for most Sci-Fi fans.
All these years later, a journey into inner space is still an interesting
trip to take. Bring your wet suit!
MovieMonday.com
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