VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,6/10
64.816
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un giovane scopre che deve trovare un'astronave scomparsa prima che lo faccia una specie aliena nemica per garantire la sopravvivenza dell'umanità.Un giovane scopre che deve trovare un'astronave scomparsa prima che lo faccia una specie aliena nemica per garantire la sopravvivenza dell'umanità.Un giovane scopre che deve trovare un'astronave scomparsa prima che lo faccia una specie aliena nemica per garantire la sopravvivenza dell'umanità.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 6 candidature totali
Matt Damon
- Cale
- (voce)
Drew Barrymore
- Akima
- (voce)
Bill Pullman
- Korso
- (voce)
Jim Breuer
- The Cook
- (voce)
Ken Hudson Campbell
- Po
- (voce)
- (as Ken Campbell)
Elaine A. Clark
- Citizen
- (voce)
Roy Conrad
- Second Human
- (voce)
Jim Cummings
- Chowquin
- (voce)
Janeane Garofalo
- Stith
- (voce)
Leslie Hedger
- First Human
- (voce)
Roger Jackson
- First Alien
- (voce)
- (as Roger L. Jackson)
David L. Lander
- The Mayor
- (voce)
Nathan Lane
- Preed
- (voce)
John Leguizamo
- Gune
- (voce)
Alex D. Linz
- Young Cale
- (voce)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFor a preview screening on 6 June 2000 in Atlanta, this movie was transmitted in digital form from the studio, across the Internet, to the digital projector at the theater. It never once touched film, and was the first major Hollywood film to be publicly previewed that way.
- BlooperGune's speech patterns suddenly and inexplicably change for a handful of scenes in the middle of the movie. He goes from being completely articulate to pidgin English ("Why they not say goodbye to Gune?" etc.) By the end of the film he's speaking correctly again, just as suddenly and inexplicably. This shows the character's absent-minded personality.
- Curiosità sui creditiLook for the Titan A.E. video game Available this fall from Fox Interactive. (But plans for the Titan A.E. game were abandoned.)
- Versioni alternativeThe DVD includes deleted scenes, which, while some are still in pencil form, make the film more complete. They are as follows:
- "Green Drink" - This is a longer version of the scene where Cale and Korso discuss the Titan. It includes Cale fixing the broken machine and more dialogue about his father and the Titan.
- "Akima's Rescue" - This is another version of the scene where Korso and friends find Akima in the trade area. In this scene, she blows up an alarm and frees all the slaves.
- "Ice Crystals- Extended Version" - This is basically an extended version of the famous ice crystals scene. It includes more dialogue between Cale and Akima (in pencil form), and scenes in different angles.
- "Alternate Ending" - This is an extended ending where the Drej actually talk (not in subtitles) and more dialogue between Cale and Korso. Most of it is in pencil form, and it ends right after the Drej are destroyed.
- Colonne sonoreOver My Head
Written by Jeremy Popoff
Performed by Lit
Produced by Glen Ballard and Lit
Lit performs courtesy of RCA/Dirty Martini Records Label
Recensione in evidenza
Saw this on DVD, missing it completely at the cinema. Which was probably what happened to the audience for the film, as it was difficult to market for any target group. Having seen it, it's apparent that lot of very hard work went into producing it.
I can compare it to a few other sci-fi animated films of recent years...
As ground-breaking as The Last Starfighter was in its day. Though not pure animation, Starfighter showed off what even early CG could do in terms of gimbal-free animation of spaceships and vehicles.
Much, much better than Final Fantasy, as the action is genuinely epic. The story goes places and uses the chosen technology very nicely. Titan is not a boring film.
Very similar to Disney's later production of the Treasure Island book. Disney appeared to have cribbed one or two scenes from Titan A.E. Not nice.
Graphically, it's up there with Iron Giant, using finely animated CG figures mixed with traditional cell animation. The scene where we first see the older Cale Tucker (in space, cutting up junk) is very impressive.
But something bugs me. There was something missing. Iron Giant gave me a sense of wonder, which was achieved by some great character acting, clever pacing and a wonderful story line. At no point was I "taken" by what I saw on-screen while watching Titan A.E.
I think Titan tripped over itself in the drama department more than a few times. Along with the latest Star Wars films, it tumbles along without stopping up and letting the audience know what the characters are feeling. The actors have to have the skills to enable the audience to feel, to immerse. Without that, the action has a risk of becoming incomprehensible.
Pretty, fast-paced, intriguing. But I wish someone would use these toys to produce something great, something big.
Something wonderful.
I can compare it to a few other sci-fi animated films of recent years...
As ground-breaking as The Last Starfighter was in its day. Though not pure animation, Starfighter showed off what even early CG could do in terms of gimbal-free animation of spaceships and vehicles.
Much, much better than Final Fantasy, as the action is genuinely epic. The story goes places and uses the chosen technology very nicely. Titan is not a boring film.
Very similar to Disney's later production of the Treasure Island book. Disney appeared to have cribbed one or two scenes from Titan A.E. Not nice.
Graphically, it's up there with Iron Giant, using finely animated CG figures mixed with traditional cell animation. The scene where we first see the older Cale Tucker (in space, cutting up junk) is very impressive.
But something bugs me. There was something missing. Iron Giant gave me a sense of wonder, which was achieved by some great character acting, clever pacing and a wonderful story line. At no point was I "taken" by what I saw on-screen while watching Titan A.E.
I think Titan tripped over itself in the drama department more than a few times. Along with the latest Star Wars films, it tumbles along without stopping up and letting the audience know what the characters are feeling. The actors have to have the skills to enable the audience to feel, to immerse. Without that, the action has a risk of becoming incomprehensible.
Pretty, fast-paced, intriguing. But I wish someone would use these toys to produce something great, something big.
Something wonderful.
- CGA_Soupdragon
- 15 giu 2003
- Permalink
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 75.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 22.753.426 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 9.376.845 USD
- 18 giu 2000
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 36.754.634 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 34 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1
- 2.55 : 1
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By what name was Titan A.E. (2000) officially released in India in English?
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