dariuslanghoff
Joined Aug 2017
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Reviews19
dariuslanghoff's rating
Basically everything what might be is wrong with this picture. Any in-depth analysis would be an undeserved flatter.
1. The premise is hard to define if there is any.
2. The plot stumbles, stutters and staggers with no rhyme nor reason.
3. The acting is horrendously incompetent.
4. Music there is none - just noises.
5. The resolution does not resolve anything and tends to the incomprehensible.
One may get to like however, the scene where a gangrenous leg is impromptu amputated by means of an electric non-surgical knife. But this belongs rather to WRONG TURN series than to sci-fi genre.
1. The premise is hard to define if there is any.
2. The plot stumbles, stutters and staggers with no rhyme nor reason.
3. The acting is horrendously incompetent.
4. Music there is none - just noises.
5. The resolution does not resolve anything and tends to the incomprehensible.
One may get to like however, the scene where a gangrenous leg is impromptu amputated by means of an electric non-surgical knife. But this belongs rather to WRONG TURN series than to sci-fi genre.
THE SCENT OF MYSTERY was brought in 1960 by Mike Todd. It was a 70 mm Technicolor thriller made in the new process of "Smell-O-Vision". The scents used - which ranged from ozone, pipe tobacco, garlic and oil, to paint, pine, wood shavings and boot polish - were piped to each individual cinema seat on cue from the "smell-track" of the film.
However, the first film officially made as "smelly" was a wide-screen travelogue about India called BEHIND THE GREAT WALL (1929). It premiered at the DeMille Theater in New York and was accompanied by 72 smells that included incense, smoke, burning pitch, oranges, spices and a barnyard of geese. The scents were circulated thought the ventilating system.
However, the first film officially made as "smelly" was a wide-screen travelogue about India called BEHIND THE GREAT WALL (1929). It premiered at the DeMille Theater in New York and was accompanied by 72 smells that included incense, smoke, burning pitch, oranges, spices and a barnyard of geese. The scents were circulated thought the ventilating system.