I say we wait until it comes to the dollar movie and then go see it as a group 
for laughs!
Linda Starr



From: Steve Peerman 
Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2011 6:51 PM
To: Mailing List for SWR 
Subject: [SWR] Fwd: "Sanctum" review






Begin forwarded message:


  From: Lucas Peerman <[email protected]>
  Date: February 1, 2011 3:59:59 PM MST
  To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
  Subject: "Sanctum" review




  Review: Spelunkers dive (and die) in ‘Sanctum’
  Eds: Film opens Friday.
  AP Photo NYET305, NYET304, NYET303
  By JAKE COYLE
  AP Entertainment Writer
  In the low-budget 3-D cave-diving adventure “Sanctum,” a little bit of rain
  causes a lot of death — by accident, murder and a bizarre amount of assisted
  suicide.
  Who needs those chipper Chilean miners, anyway?
  Eschewing such heartwarming tales, “Sanctum,” directed by Australian Alister
  Grierson and produced by 3-D guru James Cameron, is more interested in the
  savage realities of survival.
  A large expedition headed by grizzled Aussie explorer Frank McGuire (Richard
  Roxburgh) is knee-deep in mapping the mile-deep Esa’ala Caves of Papua New
  Guinea. Frank’s less ambitious 17-year-old son, Josh (Rhys Wakefield), along
  with the team’s financier daredevil Carl (Ioan Gruffudd) and his equally
  gung-ho girlfriend, Victoria (Alice Parkinson), have just arrived.
  Set deep in the jungle, the mouth of the expansive cave system (actually
  shot in Australia) is enormous and cylindrical. You half expect the
  Millennium Falcon of “Star Wars” to come shooting out with a giant worm in
  close pursuit.
  In the complex labyrinth of cavernous chambers and underground rivers
  beneath the surface, the danger is less alien. Maneuvering by scuba through
  underwater crevices as tight as those of “127 Hours,” Frank’s mantra is that
  “panic is the enemy.”
  A storm is known to be approaching, but deep underground, they’re somehow
  still caught unprepared when the storm develops into a cyclone, thus
  promising a life-threatening deluge in the caves.
  Taking charge is Frank, a cold fish, indeed. “There’s no God down here,” he
  snaps at one moment with face hardened. Elsewhere, there’s: “There are no
  rescue missions down here, only body recoveries!”
  Everyone questions his harsh leadership (particularly his more kindhearted
  son), but Frank is gradually borne out. He may be gruff, but he knows caves
  and the limitations of what can be accomplished.
  Those locked underground follow him, looking for the exit to the sea. The
  survivors are winnowed until — true to the tradition of so many such films —
  women and nonwhites are gradually dispatched. Some exit like “Willy Wonka”
  characters, neatly ruined by their foolhardiness.
  A claustrophobia takes hold as they make their way from one chamber to the
  next, squeaking through the rock and water. Many of the set pieces in the
  cave system and the underwater shots are beautiful, but the lack of
  variation begins to feel like the recent film “Buried,” which takes place
  entirely in a coffin.
  “Sanctum” is clearly in line with Cameron’s adoration of subsurface
  exploration, a love affair at least since “The Abyss.” “Sanctum” is meant to
  prove that the 3-D technology developed for his “Avatar” can be
  inexpensively adapted to simple genre films.
  As a showcase for 3-D, “Sanctum” is a failure. The depth of the images adds
  little to the experience, and for most of the middle of the film, is
  entirely forgotten. The darkness of the caves, at least, suits the darkened
  image of 3-D.
  Written by John Garvin and caver Andrew Wight, “Sanctum” claims to be
  “inspired by a true story.” The basis, though, is a cave trip by Wight where
  a perilous storm nevertheless ended in all 15 surviving.
  The film at least avoids that romantic lie of so many survivalist movies,
  that you can make it against all odds. “Sanctum” allows that heroism has its
  limits and that death must be accepted.
  Jack Kevorkian would love it.
  “Sanctum,” a Universal Pictures release, is rated R for language, some
  violence and disturbing images. Running time: 109 minutes. One and a half
  stars out of four.
  ———
  Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:
  G — General audiences. All ages admitted.
  PG — Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for
  children.
  PG-13 — Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13.
  Some material may be inappropriate for young children.
  R — Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.
  NC-17 — No one under 17 admitted.




Steve Peerman


"Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't 
do than by the ones you did. So throw off the bowlines, Sail away from the safe 
harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."
    attributed to Mark Twain, but no record exists of his having written this.




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