A
Sound of Thunder (2005)
Rated PG13
Starring: Edward Burns, Catherine McCormack,
and Ben Kingsley
Rating:

out
of

|
In
the year 2055, Charles Hatton (Ben Kingsley) has created Time Safari,
a company that
books expensive time travel hunting trips for rich people enabling them to
hunt dinosaurs. Participants in the safari are given explict instructions
not to touch anything or leave any trace of their presence. In doing
so, they could
disrupt evolution and sabotage the present without even realizing it. If
you're wondering how they can kill a dinosaur without leaving any traces
on the future, the answer is that each "time safari" is actually
a scripted event. The same dinosaur is killed each time. The hunters
are taken back in time just minutes before the dinosaur in question was
about
to step into a tar
pit, get stuck, and then be destroyed by an erupting volcano. With or
without the hunters, the same dinosaur would die and be eradicated without
any trace. Hence, no
trace of the hunters' interference will be left on
the future as long as nothing else is left behind or changed.
Sounds
like a decent enough plan but, of course, when a glaring weakness like
destroying the future is as simple as leaving the most insignificant
mark on the past, do you really think humans won't make that mistake?
Well, if so, A Sound of Thunder wouldn't
have much of a plot.
Based
on a Ray Bradbury short story, A Sound of Thunder takes this
interesting concept and makes a moderately entertaining, if heavily
flawed, film out
of it. Bradbury's original story was more philosophical
and open-ended. The movie tries to graft an action-oriented, monster-evading
romp into
it. The
middle part of the film, which was completely written for the screen
and not part of Bradbury's original plot, is a by-the-numbers, kill-or-be-killed
action quest that doesn't mesh with the rest of the story. It might have
been more successful if the dime-store computer effects didn't take the
whole production down a few notches.
Although
it's definitely flawed, A Sound of Thunder was nowhere near
as awful as I'd been led to believe by other reviews. Sure, Ben Kingsley
looks like
Exeter from This Island Earth and Edward Burns' scientist character
occasionally lapses into an accent more suited to a dockworker, but the
premise is just captivating enough to keep your interest to see what
will happen next. Just barely.
Trivia: When
Hatton (Ben Kingsley) receives his clients after their time safari,
he likes to compare them with great explorers: Marco Polo, Columbus,
Armstrong... and he also says "like Brubaker on Mars", remembering
a future (past for him) conquest of the Red Planet. Brubaker was the
name of the commander of the Mars expedition in the film Capricorn
One. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |