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Journey to the Far Side of the Sun
Journey to the Far Side of the Sun

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Actors: Ed Bishop, Franco Derosa, Ian Hendry, Herbert Lom, Lynn Loring
Studio: Universal Studios
Category: DVD

List Price: $19.98
Buy New: $11.96
You Save: $8.02 (40%)



New (41) Used (9) from $11.23

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 13062

Format: Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Dubbed)
Rating: G (General Audience)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 102
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: MCAD61026038D
UPC: 025192603822
EAN: 0025192603822
ASIN: B0016B6ZJW

Theatrical Release Date: 1969
Release Date: June 24, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Sci-fi adventure and suspense has never been more exciting or intense as when you Journey to the Far Side of the Sun! One hundred years in the future two astronauts are sent to uncover the secrets of a "duplicate" Earth on the other side of the Sun. When they crash land three weeks earlier than they had planned they must embark on a life-or-death mission to determine whether they have arrived back home or on the strange mirror world. This imaginative space adventure offers a journey few will ever forget!

Amazon.com
There's a sense of awe to the special effects work of animation specialists Gerry and Sylvia Anderson (Thunderbirds Are Go)--the slow, lovingly detailed introduction of a massive spaceship creeping out of dock and struggling against its bulk while trapped on the ground, and the almost balletic spectacle of the ship elegantly floating against an impressive star field or dramatically flying against the rugged landscape. These moments are the highlights of this sober science fiction thriller about the discovery of a planet on the far side of the sun in Earth's orbit. A mission is hastily put together, with British astrophysicist Ian Hendry teamed with hotshot American astronaut Roy Thinnes for the three-week trip, but when they suddenly crash-land the strange creatures that surround them are revealed to be human. Against all rational explanations they're back on Earth, but Thinnes suddenly discovers that everything is a mirror image of his existence: Through the Looking Glass by way of The Twilight Zone. Though it begins as a paranoid spy thriller set in the near future (the opening details an ingenious espionage caper featuring a very special eyepiece), it quickly turns into a serious and oddly unsettling space-race drama with a heady twist. Robert Parrish's direction is unusually aloof, but the film is always intriguing and well acted with gorgeous special effects that may rank second only to Stanley Kubrick's 2001 as the most elegant vision of outer space flight on film. --Sean Axmaker


Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars A favorite movie. DVD package lacks ....   December 19, 2008
I would recommend this science-fiction film to anyone who is curious. Astronauts are prepared and sent to a planet that is in Earth's orbit, on the opposite side of the sun. It's a wild idea that is well-executed, and a worthy relative in the family of films that include: "2001: A Space Odyssey" and "Countdown" (both released in 1968), that involve travel beyond Earth. See it.

The only downside is that there are no extras on the DVD. This is not the first DVD release, which went out-of-print a few years ago. Imagine my joy when this gem re-appeared. It would have been cool to have something else to view about the film.




3 out of 5 stars Fine late 60's sci-fi   December 17, 2008
Originally titled "Doppellganger" (meaning twin or double) in England,
this has got that special "look" of typical films from the mid-to-late
1960's: namely brilliant lighting and beautiful saturated color.
The miniature special effects were by the puppeteers of the British TV
series "Thunderbirds" who also co-produced. They may seem primitive to
today's CGI-saturated audiences but I personally loved them (I despise
CGI as well as underlit, monotone-colored films that haven't got the
guts to go ahead and commit to filming true black-and-white), but I digress. Back to our film at hand.
The director was Robert Parrish, a fine journeyman director who I had a
brief correspondence with a few years before his death in 1995. As an
editor, he was an Oscar-winner. A protegee' of director John Ford,
Parrish gradually moved into directing in the early 50's thanks to
actor/producer Dick Powell, who gave Parrish his 1st job as director.
Over a 25-year career, he directed nearly all the great actors (Mitchum,
James Mason, Michael Caine, Jack Lemmon, Anthony Quinn, Gregory Peck,
Rita Hayworth, just to name a few) but he never developed a distinctive
style although his work was uniformally good.
What I remember about Robert Parrish was his great humility and generosity
of time to an emerging filmmaker and I gave him a special "thanks" in the
closing titles of my first feature, "Attack From Outer Space".
"Journey to the Far Side of the Sun" is late in Mr. Parrish's portfolio
but is a well-done briskly-paced film, the plot of which may not surprise
anyone but is certainly worth a look for the film-goer desiring nothing
more that 100 minutes of fun escapism.



5 out of 5 stars Very cool considering when it was made   October 14, 2008
The premise of the movie is unique and this film is very well done. Roy Thinnes is great in his role. I expected it to be cheaper, B sci-fi in style,but its a serious, quality movie. I will say that the ending was unexpected and not what I wanted!


5 out of 5 stars EASY ON THE EYE, CLASSIC SCI FI AT IT'S VERY BEST   September 30, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Classic sci fi in the style of 2001, Gerry Anderson ( ex Thunderbirds ) is an absolute legend, this film obviously didn't get the exposure it should have otherwise it too would be amongst the all time classic's. I would say it's kind of a cross between the old style James Bond with that suave story line mixed with the best fashions of the 60s era make very easy on the eye, a gorgeous film to watch.


5 out of 5 stars See you in three weeks   August 27, 2008
 3 out of 5 found this review helpful

"Journey to the far side of the Sun" is almost unique in SciFi films - fondly remembered from the last time I watched it, probably 20yrs ago on British TV - it's almost pure cheese, but sublime, magnificent, exquisitely produced cheese of the finest vintage!!! This is a B film that - no pun intended - reaches for the stars, that aspires to cinematic greatness, and the fact that it fails to reach those heady heights in no way diminishes it. For those who are familiar with the Anderson's live-action work, and who haven't yet seen the film, imagine a cross between UFO, Space 1999, and 2001 - A Space Odyssey. Yup, hard to imagine I know, but that'll give you SOME idea of what you're in for when you pop this "classic" into your shiny-disc player!

For years "Journey..." has been the Holy Grail of Gerry & Sylvia - Da da DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!! - Anderson's oeuvre. Released for the first time on disc back in '98 I believe, it's been, as far as I know, unavailable at least since I got my first DVD player in about 2002; I almost fell out of my chair when I saw that it had been re-issued at LAST!!!

Staring Roy "The Invaders" Thinnes, Ian Hendry, and Patrick Wymark, who comes off as a poor-mans Anthony Hopkins, it also features a good chunk of the "Anderson Repertory Company." Yes, Ed Bishop is there - sans UFO blond wig - along with George Sewell, Vladek Sheybal - he of the cadaverous countenance and Peter Lorre vocal stylings - Philip Madoc, Keith Alexander, and a bunch of others you would see wandering around in the background of just about any UFO, Space 1999 etc. episode. Plus, as an added extra, for Patrick Troughton/Jon Pertwee/Tom Baker era Doctor Who fans, there's a blink and you'll miss 'im appearance by the once and future "Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart," Nicholas Courtney, as a medical technician during a rocket launch. There's also a guest appearance by the wonderful Herbert Lom in a brief but pivotal role.

The basic idea of the film is great; an automated solar probe orbits behind the Sun for the first time, and brings back proof of the existence of an unknown planet, in exactly the same orbit as the Earth, to an astonished EUROSEC, the European space agency. The scientific and military potential of this discovery is incalculable, and the no-nonsense CEO of EUROSEC, "Jason Webb," played by Patrick Wymark, browbeats the board, made up of the other European spacefaring members, into accepting the need for a manned mission. That is until he drops the cost of the project on them, Three Thousand Million Pounds Sterling; after much politicking and arm-twisting he convinces NASA to cough up a measly one billion Dollars, which forces everyone else to fall into line. This allows said "Journey..." to proceed, but the mission then seems to fail in the most spectacular fashion, and it is during the resulting inquiry that the real adventure begins!!!

First, the good stuff; the main actors are more than serviceable. Wymark dominates the early part of the film as the head of EUROSEC, alternating between arrogant British smugness and scenery-chewing tirades, Thinnes and Hendry, as astronaut "Colonel Glenn Ross" and astrophysicist "John Kane" respectively, do all they need to make their characters believable in the context of the film. The fantastically, almost fetishistically, detailed models and miniatures of Derek Meddings and his team are a joy to see; no terabytes of CGI here, these are real, solid, they have a sense of weight, of mass, the way they move, but they are ALWAYS "models!" However in spite of this they do manage to pull off a couple of wonderful scenes; there's a shot of the ship in orbit with the sun rising over the planets rim that, given the technology available at the time, is astonishingly beautiful. Then there's a crash landing on the planet and its immediate aftermath that is incredibly well done, a wonderful mix of Meddings' model work and live action on full-size sets, with some incredibly eerie and atmospheric lighting effects and music! Then there's a scene that many other reviewers disliked, the main journey to the planet itself, where Ross and Kane are put into a kind of suspended animation, and you get a very dreamlike, expressionistic version of the trip and time passing; I thought that was exceptionally well realized!

And now to the bad; the execution just doesn't live up to the premise, from the recycled, and sometimes jarringly inappropriate, musical themes, to dear old Sylvies wince inducing "Century 21" fashions; dear viewer, if you are of delicate disposition try not to gouge your own eyes out after seeing what they forced poor Ian Hendry to wear for the "airport" scene when we're introduced to Thinnes' character for the first time!!! Then there's the aluminum foil spacesuits, the sometimes shaky model work, the F.A.B. groovy, "futuristic" cars and run-a-bouts that were recycled into UFO, and the most ludicrous photo-developing process known to man; this is so bad it's wonderful!!! And as for the ending, oh my GOD, what WHERE they thinking?! But hey, at least there're no Moonbase babes wearing silver micro-mini's, purple wigs, and glitter eye shadow!!!

And bizarrely, in amongst all of the above there's a much darker edge that moves the film away from purely kiddy-fare into much more adult areas. There's the brutal extra-judicial execution of a spy ordered by a snarling Jason Webb, and a scene where Ross' wife viciously taunts him about his "manhood" and their inability to have a child, that made me wince when I watched the film again after all these years.

Well, what can I say, I've watched this twice now since it arrived, it may be cheese, but it's wonderful! Highly recommended for Anderson fans, and lovers of the kitsch and the camp everywhere!!!


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