Jon Behrens

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Movie of the Week : Crack in the World (1965)

Posted on June 25, 2016 by Jon Behrens

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The first time I saw this film was in the early seventies during a summer matinée film series at Crossroads Cinema in Bellevue Washington. This film was made long before CGI, all the effects were done using matte boxes, rear projection , optical printers, models and miniature sets. Every was done on film and what you see is what you get. I really love the production style of a lot of the early to mid sixties Paramount Pictures releases. The colors, the sets and over all look is great. I recently rediscovered this classic while re organizing my blu-ray and dvd collection. So I thought I might make it this weeks Movie of the Week. I hope you enjoy it

Crack in the World is a 1965 American science-fiction doomsday disaster movie filmed in Spain. It is about scientists who launch a rocket in the Earth’s core to research its geothermal energy but accidentally unleash a cataclysmic destruction that threatens to sever the earth in two. It was released by Paramount Pictures on February 24, 1965.

Plot
An international consortium of scientists, operating as Project Inner Space in Tanganyika, Africa, is trying to tap into the Earth’s geothermal energy by drilling a very deep hole down to the Earth’s core. The scientists are foiled by an extremely dense layer of material at the boundary between the two. To penetrate the barrier and reach the magma below, they intend to detonate an atomic device at the bottom of the hole.

The leader of the project, Dr. Stephen Sorenson (Dana Andrews), who is secretly dying of cancer, believes that the atomic device will burn its way through the barrier, but the project’s chief geologist, Dr. Ted Rampion (Kieron Moore), is convinced that the lower layers of the crust have been weakened by decades of underground nuclear tests, and that the detonation could produce a massive crack that would threaten the very existence of Earth.

The atomic device is used and Rampion’s fears prove justified, as the crust of the Earth develops an enormous crack that progresses rapidly. Sorenson discovers that there was a huge reservoir of hydrogen underground, which turned the small conventional atomic explosion into a huge thermonuclear one that was millions of times more powerful. Another atomic device is used in the hope of stopping the crack, but it only reverses the crack’s direction. Eventually the crack returns to its starting point at the test site, and a huge chunk of the planet outlined by the crack is expected to be thrown out into space. Sorenson remains at the underground control center to record the event despite pleas by his wife Maggie to evacuate with the rest of the project staff. She and Rampion barely escape in time to observe the fiery birth of a second moon. Its release stops the crack from further splitting the Earth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

 

Filed Under: Films Tagged With: movie of the week

About Jon Behrens

Jon Behrens is a Seattle based filmmaker, film programmer, photographer, sound manipulator and teacher. His films have been screened throughout the world and has been active in the Experimental - Avant-garde film movement since the early 1980′s.



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