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Innerspace (1987)

I think the hardest genre in films to make, a form that hasn't been mastered, is the "bubble-gum" movie, and not bubblegum as in a negative thing. Films that might not really be based on comic books but are nonetheless comic-booky, aware of their own distance from reality, and while they have lots of action, they are also funny with out being full spoofs.


I can relate to that.

It's a solid story. We know where the story is heading. The progress to the conclusion is consistent and steady. There's no dead areas in the film, and it isn't one of those annoying films where everything happens in the last 5 minutes.

Innerspace has comedy, but it isn't forced down your throat. It's all passive and indirect, which is how comedy should be. There's no direct jokes, so there's no time that it prompts us to "laugh now", which is also good. Forced humour isn't humour.

But it's a difficult comedy balance: taking itself serious enough to not be spoofy, but not taking itself so seriously that the it stops being light hearted and fun.

In the centre of the film we've got:

A hypochondriac -- okay :)

...with a miniaturised human pod inside him -- it's okay. it' sci-fi :)

...being kidnapped by a cigar smoking camp guy with a pure white suit and a fur coat. -- that's okay, it's just his way. :)

...in a meat truck -- it's okay, it happened to be there at the right time to be stolen. :)

...driven by a mute hit man -- he's cool :cool:

...with a fake hand that has gun and blow torch attachments -- :lol:

...who listens to angel of death -- doesn't really fit, but never mind


But all in all, in retrospect, that's just absurd.

You see a recipe here for how to make similar films?
I've often thought of Innerspace as a modern-day Hollywood pantomime. Good guy gets the girl (eventually). Lots of fantastical sciecne-fiction bits in between to make the fairytale come alive. There's the comedy Everyman in the centre of it all. Bad guys are very often one- or two-note, and almost all of them get their come-uppance, often with hilarious results. Heck, all the main characters even meet up in the film's final scene for one last send-off! :bolian:
 
this is the one where a vessel of people are shrunk down and then injected into a random guy right? rather than a rabbit which was the plan?

if so, whilst ive not seen it in a while, it is a good movie.

Then again I am a fan of the "shrinking people" genre
 
I've just realised that the legendary Kevin McCarthy (who played Victor Scrimshaw in this film) turned 95 earlier this year! :wtf:
 
Just got the DVD. Great commentary track. Glad Dennis Muren got to be a part of this track. That's before ILM went all CGI on us and he had to be innovative with how the effects were done. Love how they made fun of him repeatedly whenever "fat cells" were mentioned.

Note the Chuck Jones cameo
 
Have not seen it in years, but it is in my netflix queue. I remember being slightly let down by the ending though.
 
It's on ITV1 today! :D (It'll probably be edited to heck though...)

"Excuse me... Are you talking to me?" :lol:

And I wonder if this time, the doctor will again misdiagnose theistic hysteria. :rolleyes:


But never mind Innerspace, I'm waiting patiently for Labyrinth. I haven't seen that for years and years. :)
 
I rarely buy dvds now. Those few which I have bought, and those what people have given me, I hardly ever watch.

It's like, when a film I enjoy comes on tv, then I watch it, because it's a rare opportunity that I don't want to miss. But if I buy the dvd, then I know I can watch it anytime, so there's never an immediate need, and it never gets watched. :)

I haven't invested in a dvd player either, as I've always been happy to play them on my computer.

You may also be surprised to hear that I've never had a music system capable of playing CDs, because I can play the discs in my computer's CD drive, and I've always found that adequate. And I do buy CDs, and I never download music. :)
 
I've often thought of Innerspace as a modern-day Hollywood pantomime. Good guy gets the girl (eventually). Lots of fantastical sciecne-fiction bits in between to make the fairytale come alive. There's the comedy Everyman in the centre of it all. Bad guys are very often one- or two-note, and almost all of them get their come-uppance, often with hilarious results. Heck, all the main characters even meet up in the film's final scene for one last send-off! :bolian:

Not sci-fi, but with enough magical-thinking & implausibly artificial situations to fit the fairy-tale/pantomime theme, you could also add Michael J. Fox's Secret of My Success to this genre of feelgood farce.

It's on ITV1 today! :D (It'll probably be edited to heck though...)

I happened to stumble on it this afternoon. I watched the heck out of this movie when I was younger, and haven't seen it in YEARS since, and I still couldn't quite watch the whole thing through because of that earlier viewing overkill. But yes, still lots of fun!
 
I rarely buy dvds now. Those few which I have bought, and those what people have given me, I hardly ever watch.

It's like, when a film I enjoy comes on tv, then I watch it, because it's a rare opportunity that I don't want to miss. But if I buy the dvd, then I know I can watch it anytime, so there's never an immediate need, and it never gets watched. :)
Interesting. A return to "event television" and the joys it brings, as a better alternative to buying/renting and viewing when you have the time? I guess nothing beats seeing things "live, as it's performed" compard to the convenience of TV you can simply pause, rewind and skip (as is the case with PVRs).
I haven't invested in a dvd player either, as I've always been happy to play them on my computer.

You may also be surprised to hear that I've never had a music system capable of playing CDs, because I can play the discs in my computer's CD drive, and I've always found that adequate. And I do buy CDs, and I never download music. :)
I know the feeling. I've survived for years with the DVD player and CD player on my computer, and despite starting to settle down, I still can't really see that changing.

I've often thought of Innerspace as a modern-day Hollywood pantomime. Good guy gets the girl (eventually). Lots of fantastical sciecne-fiction bits in between to make the fairytale come alive. There's the comedy Everyman in the centre of it all. Bad guys are very often one- or two-note, and almost all of them get their come-uppance, often with hilarious results. Heck, all the main characters even meet up in the film's final scene for one last send-off! :bolian:

Not sci-fi, but with enough magical-thinking & implausibly artificial situations to fit the fairy-tale/pantomime theme, you could also add Michael J. Fox's Secret of My Success to this genre of feelgood farce.
I'd also add "Mannequin" to that list. :D

It's on ITV1 today! :D (It'll probably be edited to heck though...)

I happened to stumble on it this afternoon. I watched the heck out of this movie when I was younger, and haven't seen it in YEARS since, and I still couldn't quite watch the whole thing through because of that earlier viewing overkill. But yes, still lots of fun!
I had a fixed grin on my face from start to end - I realised I had the whole script in my head burned into my memory, and was just reeling off the dialogue as if it were yesteryear. :D

"Play with it, pal. Don't talk to it." :guffaw:
 
this is the one where a vessel of people are shrunk down and then injected into a random guy right? rather than a rabbit which was the plan?

if so, whilst ive not seen it in a while, it is a good movie.

Then again I am a fan of the "shrinking people" genre
As am I :)
Last year I started a personal database of movies and TV episodes that involve shrinking/enlarging/tiny people/giants/etc. (ignoring giant monsters for the most part). I'm up to 1,449 entries and have managed to collect 847 of them, but haven't watched them all yet.

Here it is in crude form:

http://outofscale.org/sizechange.shtml

I plan to add synopses and screencaps to every entry eventually.
 
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