ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,8/10
19 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn 1860s Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power.In 1860s Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power.In 1860s Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power.
- Prix
- 3 victoires au total
Anna Paquin
- James Ray Steam
- (English version)
- (voice)
Patrick Stewart
- Dr. Lloyd Steam
- (English version)
- (voice)
Alfred Molina
- Dr. Eddie Steam
- (English version)
- (voice)
Anne Suzuki
- James Ray Steam
- (voice)
Ikki Sawamura
- David
- (voice)
Susumu Terajima
- Alfred Smith
- (voice)
Osamu Saka
- Admiral
- (voice)
Satoru Saitô
- Archibald Simon
- (voice)
Tetsu Inada
- Jason
- (voice)
Sanae Kobayashi
- Emma
- (voice)
Keiko Aizawa
- Mrs. Steam
- (voice)
Mark Bramhall
- Alfred Smith
- (English version)
- (voice)
Oliver Cotton
- Robert Stephenson
- (English version)
- (voice)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBegan production in 1995 and, because of financial problems, it was put on hiatus during 1998. Production companies Production I.G. and Sunrise got involved and brought the movie back in production. A total of eight years was spent on making the movie.
- GaffesDuring the opening ceremonies of the Great London Exhibition, the Tower Bridge is featured prominently. The Exhibition took place in 1851, while construction of the Tower Bridge didn't even begin until 1886. The movie is set in 1866: neither of these should exist at this time.
- Citations
Dr. Loyd Steam: An invention with no philosophy behind it is a curse.
- Générique farfeluUnder the end credits, images of future events in the lives of the characters are shown.
- Autres versionsThe 106 minute English dubbed cut replaces the Japanese end credits with English ones that credit the voice cast and production crew for the dub. The US DVD and UMD release, however, utilizes the Japanese end credits, due to it utilizing the original Japanese cut of the film instead. The version with the English end credits was only available on a demo VHS release and, at one point in 2023, for streaming online.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Katsuhiro Otomo Cinema Anthology (2005)
- Bandes originalesCoronation March
Written by Giacomo Meyerbeer (uncredited)
Commentaire en vedette
I was dragged to this movie by my son, knowing of Anime only Totoro, the Cartoon Network Anime shows, and passing things from the web.
I was astounded by the superb quality of the graphics, especial the CGI macro shots, throughout the film. I found myself thinking of people seeing early Disney features in the 1930's. The visuals looking through various magnifying lenses were absolutely incredible!
I was surprised to see how the setting in Victorian England had given me such an easier time visually comprehending familiar scenes, vehicles, etc instead of the usual anime Asian or Space-Age themes I had come to expect. In this way, I feel I was finally able to visually appreciate the quality of the artistry for the first time. Wow! The English dubbing was great, and again helped me appreciate the film. And the storyline was a perfect "Perils of Pauline" tied to a gone-bad "Mad Scientist" tale as seen in Frankenstien, the Invisible Man or any of 1,000 such movies.
I don't understand complaints of the ending "dragging on". *spoiler<?>* If not for the extra-twists in the list 30 min, we would all be complaining that the plot was flat and the ending dragged out of a dustbin. As it was, I burst out laughing at the twist and thought it clever, along with the two more twists including the one just before final credits. If you were taking yourself (as Monday Morning Quarterback) a little less seriously, you would see it was poking fun at the notion of a hero's "heroic moment".
Of course it was a comic book style plot, blowing up the famous historic buildings at the Victorian Exhibition using steam power! I easily accepted and enjoyed the diabolical plot twists for what they were. How can one accept the presence of a 20,000 foot tall steam powered flying rocket (built by a mad scientist and stuffed with secret weapons) and not expect escape bays, rocket packs, secret pods, and trap doors? Lighten up! Doesn't one certainly imply the other?
I was astounded by the superb quality of the graphics, especial the CGI macro shots, throughout the film. I found myself thinking of people seeing early Disney features in the 1930's. The visuals looking through various magnifying lenses were absolutely incredible!
I was surprised to see how the setting in Victorian England had given me such an easier time visually comprehending familiar scenes, vehicles, etc instead of the usual anime Asian or Space-Age themes I had come to expect. In this way, I feel I was finally able to visually appreciate the quality of the artistry for the first time. Wow! The English dubbing was great, and again helped me appreciate the film. And the storyline was a perfect "Perils of Pauline" tied to a gone-bad "Mad Scientist" tale as seen in Frankenstien, the Invisible Man or any of 1,000 such movies.
I don't understand complaints of the ending "dragging on". *spoiler<?>* If not for the extra-twists in the list 30 min, we would all be complaining that the plot was flat and the ending dragged out of a dustbin. As it was, I burst out laughing at the twist and thought it clever, along with the two more twists including the one just before final credits. If you were taking yourself (as Monday Morning Quarterback) a little less seriously, you would see it was poking fun at the notion of a hero's "heroic moment".
Of course it was a comic book style plot, blowing up the famous historic buildings at the Victorian Exhibition using steam power! I easily accepted and enjoyed the diabolical plot twists for what they were. How can one accept the presence of a 20,000 foot tall steam powered flying rocket (built by a mad scientist and stuffed with secret weapons) and not expect escape bays, rocket packs, secret pods, and trap doors? Lighten up! Doesn't one certainly imply the other?
- CineTigers
- 28 juin 2005
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 22 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 468 867 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 136 148 $ US
- 20 mars 2005
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 10 870 198 $ US
- Durée2 heures 6 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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