NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
16 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe young attendees of a space camp find themselves in space for real when their shuttle is accidentally launched into orbit.The young attendees of a space camp find themselves in space for real when their shuttle is accidentally launched into orbit.The young attendees of a space camp find themselves in space for real when their shuttle is accidentally launched into orbit.
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
Joaquin Phoenix
- Max
- (as Leaf Phoenix)
Scott Coffey
- Gardener
- (as T. Scott Coffey)
Daryl Keith Roach
- NASA #1
- (as Daryl Roach)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhat was supposed to be a somewhat light-hearted action/adventure movie turned into a marketing nightmare. SpaceCamp was originally scheduled to be released in early 1986 but on January 28 of that year the real-life space shuttle Challenger exploded 74 seconds after liftoff, claiming the lives of seven American astronauts. After the Challenger disaster the release was pushed back months. When it was finally sent to theaters, it grossed less than $10 million in the U.S. Like the Challenger accident, the malfunction in the film involved a solid rocket booster.
- GaffesThe shuttle program had several abort options prior to achieving orbit. There was a return to launch site abort, meaning after dropping the solid rocket boosters they would turn about and go right back. There was also a transatlantic abort (land in a friendly foreign country in Europe) or abort once around (one orbit and back in). In all cases, the shuttle could've returned pretty quickly. Of course, then there would've been no movie. However, it should be noted that NASA never actually tested any of these space shuttle launch abort functions which was noted in the Challenger accident report. So there's no way to know if they would have actually worked.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Les Goldberg: Smother's Day (2016)
- Bandes originalesWalk of Life
by Mark Knopfler
Chariscourt Ltd. adm. by Almo Music Corp. in USA and Canada
Performed by Dire Straits
Courtesy of Phonogram Ltd./Warner Bros.
Records by arrangement with Warner Special Products
Commentaire à la une
At a space camp for teenagers looking to play as astronauts for a summer, a group comes together. The team includes a boy who sees it all as silly, a girl who wants to make it to space for real, a ditsy blonde who remembers everything and a kid (Max) who believes he is Luke Skywalker. They fall out and fight and love as all teenagers do until the day when they are allowed to sit in a shuttle during an engine test. A lonely robot wants to help Max get into space and launches the kids for real.
This is very much a film of two halves. The first half is the usual teenage issue stuff mixed with some fantasy. The characters fight, moan, make out, hate authority etc. This is all quite dull but it livens up in the second half. When they get launched into space we actually get some real dram even if it is a bit silly and very unrealistic. The story is OK and has some nice lines `I'm waiting for ET's can you imagine waiting for signs of intelligence?' one teen says `I know the feeling' comes the reply! However the worst bits revolve about robot Jinx the jar-jar Binks of his time (he even sounds a bit like him!). Jinx is just for the kids and his scenes with Max are horribly cute and sugary.
The rest of the cast are so-so. Skerrit and Chapsaw are good as the adults and they don't give the impression that this is below them. The teens however could easily have doen without names and just be called the stereotype they represent. A very young Joaquin Phoenix (then called Leaf) is the cute kid Max and made me want to slap him every time he came on screen. Thompson is the eager beaver who learns to relax. Tate Donovan is poor as the `too cool for school' rich kid in the group. Kelly Preston is actually good as the ditzy one who is really smart and Scott covers all bases by being `the black one' but he isn't given anything to do other than that.
Overall both halves of the film have good things and bad things but overall it is quite enjoyable and kids will love it without noticing the poor back projection and the rubbish Jinx.
This is very much a film of two halves. The first half is the usual teenage issue stuff mixed with some fantasy. The characters fight, moan, make out, hate authority etc. This is all quite dull but it livens up in the second half. When they get launched into space we actually get some real dram even if it is a bit silly and very unrealistic. The story is OK and has some nice lines `I'm waiting for ET's can you imagine waiting for signs of intelligence?' one teen says `I know the feeling' comes the reply! However the worst bits revolve about robot Jinx the jar-jar Binks of his time (he even sounds a bit like him!). Jinx is just for the kids and his scenes with Max are horribly cute and sugary.
The rest of the cast are so-so. Skerrit and Chapsaw are good as the adults and they don't give the impression that this is below them. The teens however could easily have doen without names and just be called the stereotype they represent. A very young Joaquin Phoenix (then called Leaf) is the cute kid Max and made me want to slap him every time he came on screen. Thompson is the eager beaver who learns to relax. Tate Donovan is poor as the `too cool for school' rich kid in the group. Kelly Preston is actually good as the ditzy one who is really smart and Scott covers all bases by being `the black one' but he isn't given anything to do other than that.
Overall both halves of the film have good things and bad things but overall it is quite enjoyable and kids will love it without noticing the poor back projection and the rubbish Jinx.
- bob the moo
- 5 mai 2002
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- How long is SpaceCamp?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 18 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 9 697 739 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 918 072 $US
- 8 juin 1986
- Montant brut mondial
- 9 697 739 $US
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