Watch The Lost World Online
September 5th, 2011![]() |
Watch The Lost World Online.
Movie Title: The Lost World The Lost World is available for streaming or downloading. |
Irwin Allen’s 1960 version of The Lost World may be shot in CinemaScope, but stylistically it fits proper in with his 60s sci-fi TV shows (indeed, stock footage from the film found its method into his Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea series, as did co-star David Hedison) . Originally intended to feature state-of-the-art stop-motion animation from Willis O. Brien, the special effects genius slow the groundbreaking 1925 version as well as King Kong, the ever-economical producer opted instead for the tried and trusted and, most necessary of all, mighty cheaper technique of supergluing fins and horns on valid lizards and having them double for dinosaurs despite looking like nothing so distinguished as lizards with fins and horns superglued on them. However, even had he spent the extra time and money, this modernised version was never going to be the definitive one: ‘dinosaur’ action is fairly thin on the ground and the novel’s finale that sees a pterodactyl on the loose in London is unceremoniously dropped. Instead there’s a lot of wandering around the Fox ranch and backlot, cameo appearances from the peculiar poisonous giant plant left over from Prance to the Center of the Earth, a tribe of natives with a yen for human sacrifice, a fortune in diamonds and the obligatory erupting volcano finale, though it retains a definite nostalgic Saturday kids matinée appeal even if most of today’s kids wouldn’t sit unexcited for it. Claude Rains gets to grandstand as Professor Challenger while Michael Rennie’s aristocratic gigantic game hunter seems almost like a plan for George Lazenby’s hold on James Bond, with Jill St. John tagging along for no superior reason other than Arthur Conan Doyle’s thoughtless failure to provide any female roles in the novel original.
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Fox’s unusual Space 1 NTSC DVD boasts a glowing 2.35:1 widescreen transfer, but the stereo tracks are reversed so that the left comes from the factual speaker and vice versa. Along with unique trailer, brief featurette, Movietone newsreel footage of a kids charity screening and a unexcited gallery that’s irritatingly locked so you can’t fast-forward or reverse but have to play at normal hurry for nine minutes (!), it also comes with the unique 1925 still version (which was, coincidentally, the first ever in-flight movie) . Unfortunately it’s not the relatively recently restored 93-minute version that’s available separately but the 75-minute version preserved by George Eastman House. For many years the longest version available after multiple cuts for reissues as the film’s ownership changed hands several times over the decades, for the more casual viewer it’s aloof a welcome addition and offers a decent tinted print.
Willis O. Brien’s special effects are tranquil surprisingly advantageous and procedure ahead of the 1960 version even if he was to perfect them further in King Kong (for which this film feels almost like a dress rehearsal at times), giving the film an account scale in the volcanic eruption and stampede sequences, while Wallace Beery is a perfect choice for Professor Challenger, embodying the gruff, belligerent nature of the character to a tee. There are changes to the fresh - not only is Bessie Fancy brought along on the expedition to search for her lost father (with none of the droll relief chauvinism from Challenger found in the 1960 version) but the pterodactyl that terrifies the streets of London has been changed to a lumbering Brontosaurus, which is certainly a change for the better - but then Doyle’s book is rather light on station to originate with. The dinosaurs aren’t as well integrated into the fable as you might hope - usually it’s cutaways to herds of dinosaurs in their natural habitat - and the racial stereotyping from Jules Cowles’ blackface routine as `Zambo’ is painfully embarrassing and horribly unfunny (sample dialogue on seeing campfire smoke from the plateau: “That means our folks is serene alive.” “It MAY mean dat some of those cannibules dat topple dat rock down on us yistiddy am cookin’ `em in dar stew-pot!”) . But it’s hard not to like a film with dialogue like “What are you thinking of, Paula - in this lost world of ours? ” or Challenger’s immortal “My brontosaurus has escaped! Sustain off the streets - until I recapture it!” and where our hero’s rival for his girl befriend home’s affections is called Percy Bumberry!
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Although not advertised on the packaging, it also includes a surviving one-minute piece of the recent trailer and seven-and-a-half minutes of stop-motion outtakes, one including an unplanned one-frame cameo by Willis O. Brien himself!
Although Lost World includes one of my common long, lost actors, Michael Rennie, it’s no comparison to it’s contemporary, Wander to the Center of the Earth. In fact, it’s extraordinary they were released in the same year. Scurry is so considerable more a classic, yet it seems more dated. Lost World is unfavorable, but it has a more new touch since Irwin Allen would dominate the special effects field for the next fifteen years. George Pal, on the other hand, though he had a few well-behaved productions in the Sixties, seems more at home in the Fifties. Lost World does have its moments, even working with a lower budget, but at least they wisely spent some of their dough on getting a grand cast. Claude Rains is a luscious curmudgeon, and as well-known, Michael Rennie is a guy I’d remove on any expedition. The lizards as dinosaurs always had a split do on me: They Peek immense and actual, but they don’t perceive like dinosaurs. However, the fight between the monitor lizard and the caiman (or whatever) made an tantalizing match-up! Fair don’t state PETA. But overall, I would say the best special do was Jill St. John’s bra.
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