The Core
Upon the mysterious stop for the earth core's spinning, humanity are in a big danger, as strange incidents begin to take place, as the bloody storms and even animals begin to act strangely, the thing that leads Dr. Josh Keyes, a great scientist who with the help of his team, do their best to save the world.
4 May 1947, DeKalb, Illinois, USA
17 April 1976, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
12 August 1956, Noranda, Québec, Canada
11 November 1960, Peekskill, New York, USA
22 January 1977, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
21 March 1975, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
9 January 1961, Fleetwood, England, UK
18 November 1952, Eltham, London, England, UK
13 May 1965, Murcia, Spain
10 November 1972, Des Plaines, Illinois, USA
23 June 1971, Port Moody, British Columbia, Canada
April 30, 1977 in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
5 March 1975, Los Angeles, California, USA
24 April 1959, Dallas, Texas, USA
8 November 1952, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
21 July 1974, Montréal, Québec, Canada
October 15, 2004
If something isn't done soon, the earth as we know it (love that cliché) will destroy itself. Who do you call? Core busters!
July 06, 2004
Should be a sci-fi screenwriter's dream; but this dream is more like one that Michael Crichton would have than Jules Verne, and there's not a breath of imagination on display
December 28, 2010
This is a big, dumb, explosion movie.
March 28, 2003
Scientists may shudder, but at least some good actors are getting work.
December 23, 2012
A magical film: it never runs out of new and delightful ways to be completely inane.
March 28, 2003
The Core works because the characters are idiosyncratic enough to seem authentic but not so zany that they seem contrived.
March 28, 2003
Jules Verne this isn't, but it makes for fairly diverting escapist fare.
March 31, 2005
'The only truly interesting aspect found in "The Core" is Jon Amiel's thoughts as to what the inner parts of Earth might look like.'
March 28, 2003
There's a marked absence of panic in The Core.
May 05, 2015
...pervasive mediocrity...
March 31, 2003
[I]t's not campy enough to be consistently entertaining, and it's certainly not exciting or smart enough to be a first-rate sci-fi epic like a Deep Impact.

