Fun, gory and thrilling with strong acting and direction, it's one of the few
giant animal films airing on the Sci Fi Channel that actually delivers non-ironic thrills.
Not exact matches
I realize there is a need for a suspension of disbelief when it comes to watching a movie about
giant mutated
animals having a go at civilization, but it's hard to emotionally invest in a
film when its leading man is this impervious to death.
Christmas,
giant monsters, rock and roll, talking
animals, toys coming to life, magic; it's pretty much everything I would want in a
film if my head was cracked open and pure into a cinematic jar for preservation.
This unique adventure
film depicts a young girl named Mija willing to do anything to save her best friend — a
giant animal named Okja — from being kidnapped by an influential, multinational corporation (led by a transcendent Tilda Swinton).
Loosely based on the classic arcade game of the late 1980s where players control
giant animal monsters levelling a city for the sheer joy of it, the
film lacks the immersive thrill as it is no fun being a mere spectator.
There's been a spate of amazing
animal discoveries recently — the
giant rat - eating plants found in the Philippines, a huge woolly rat discovered in a volcanic crater — and now, yet another
animal has emerged that could be right out of a sci - fi
film.
The
film explores the daily lives of small and
giant animals of the deep, as they interact, play and communicate.