En 1978, un petit garçon voyage dans le futur pendant huit ans et se lance dans une aventure avec un vaisseau extraterrestre intelligent.En 1978, un petit garçon voyage dans le futur pendant huit ans et se lance dans une aventure avec un vaisseau extraterrestre intelligent.En 1978, un petit garçon voyage dans le futur pendant huit ans et se lance dans une aventure avec un vaisseau extraterrestre intelligent.
- Récompenses
- 4 nominations au total
Paul Reubens
- Max
- (voix)
- (as Paul Mall)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe ship used in the movie used to be in a boneyard at the Disney Studios Theme Park at Walt Disney World in Florida, where it was an exhibit on the "Backlot Tour".
- GaffesIn the second half of the film, the length and style of David's hair changes noticeably between shots several times.
- Versions alternativesThe original print of this starts with the titles "Through PSO Producers Sales Organization PSO And Viking Film Present A New Star Entertainment Production A Randall Kleiser Film Flight Of The Navigator". On the BBC2 TV 2015 print the titles have been changed to display "Walt Disney Pictures[castle logo] Walt Disney Pictures Presents Flight Of The Navigator A Producer Sales Organization Picture A Randall Kleiser Film A New Star Entertainment Production". The broadcast was on 21 December 2015.
- ConnexionsEdited into Le monde merveilleux de Disney: Flight of the Navigator: Part 1 (1988)
- Bandes originalesLose Your Love
Written by Neil Arthur and Stephen Luscombe
Published by Complete Music, Inc., ASCAP
Performed by Blancmange, Courtesy Sire Records Company and London Records
Produced by Stewart Levine
Commentaire à la une
You know the drill: 12 year old David falls into a ravine in the woods and discovers when he wakes up that he's been missing for eight years. He also discovers that he's hearing voices that seem to come from a mysterious craft housed in a NASA hangar.
My two cents worth: In a time when all the live action Disney movies seem to be a variant on "I was normal but just discovered I am/have just been mistaken for royalty/merperson/rock star/leprechaun/etc., this movie from the 1980's is a real breath of fresh air.
The scenario, waking up and discovering that everything except you has changed, and knowing you'll be somebody's idea of a guinea pig for the rest of your life, is instantly relatable and creepy, whether you're a kid or an adult. The kid fainting, the change in the two brother's relationship due to the age flop, parents trying to protect their son, government trying to exploit the kid's knowledge, everyone's reactions to the situation are all logical and believable.
And who hasn't wanted a chance to fly a saucer? Having Max, the ship's pilot, be a robot was another stroke of brilliance. So many movies have the aliens flying all the way here to come visit us face to face. But if we send machines to other planets because it's cheaper than going ourselves, why wouldn't they? And having him learn about Earth courtesy of a 12-year-old's TV polluted brain was hysterical.
The movie seems a little dated today; but it's forgivable because, like Back to the Future, it's set so specifically in a certain frame of time (you expect it to look and sound like 1986 because, hey, they keep telling you that's when it is.)
Recommendations: Back to the Future and Big are the two I can think of that are most along these lines.
My two cents worth: In a time when all the live action Disney movies seem to be a variant on "I was normal but just discovered I am/have just been mistaken for royalty/merperson/rock star/leprechaun/etc., this movie from the 1980's is a real breath of fresh air.
The scenario, waking up and discovering that everything except you has changed, and knowing you'll be somebody's idea of a guinea pig for the rest of your life, is instantly relatable and creepy, whether you're a kid or an adult. The kid fainting, the change in the two brother's relationship due to the age flop, parents trying to protect their son, government trying to exploit the kid's knowledge, everyone's reactions to the situation are all logical and believable.
And who hasn't wanted a chance to fly a saucer? Having Max, the ship's pilot, be a robot was another stroke of brilliance. So many movies have the aliens flying all the way here to come visit us face to face. But if we send machines to other planets because it's cheaper than going ourselves, why wouldn't they? And having him learn about Earth courtesy of a 12-year-old's TV polluted brain was hysterical.
The movie seems a little dated today; but it's forgivable because, like Back to the Future, it's set so specifically in a certain frame of time (you expect it to look and sound like 1986 because, hey, they keep telling you that's when it is.)
Recommendations: Back to the Future and Big are the two I can think of that are most along these lines.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- El vuelo del navegante
- Lieux de tournage
- Sætre Biscuit Factory - Kornmoveien 1, Tårnåsen, Norvège(spaceship interior, now demolished and replaced by apartments)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 9 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 18 564 613 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 3 115 097 $US
- 3 août 1986
- Montant brut mondial
- 18 566 010 $US
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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What is the Japanese language plot outline for Le vol du navigateur (1986)?
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