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Spacehunter Adventures In The Forbidden Zone Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd 720p

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  4. Spacehunter: Adventures In The Forbidden Zone Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd 720p
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  51. Three women make an emergency landing on a planet plagued with a fatal disease, but are captured by dictator Overdog. Adventurer Wolff goes there to rescue them and meets Niki, the only Earthling left from a medical expedition. Combining their talents, they try to rescue the women.
  52. Spoilers herein.<br/><br/>I am often hard on films that do a poor job of creating a world. That&#39;s an especially obvious flaw in science fiction movies, especially the space travel variant. So I need to celebrate when one comes along that does do well, even if it is a cheesy project.<br/><br/>And this is cheesy. But nearly all of this ilk is, from Star Wars on down, with the only question being a matter of what bothers you and whether there is enough to distract you from the annoyances. <br/><br/>This one has four features that allow me to recommend it to you:<br/><br/>-- The first and most obvious is the squawking Molly. I have a special fondness for her. She had just done her first film, in which she carried a key role as the Miranda in a humanized &quot;Tempest.&quot; I distrust the values of Mazursky, so reject that project -- but its very being involved some considerations of what film is. Molly carried her weight with some pretty intense players.<br/><br/>Then she did this, then some well done exploitative kiddiefare. Then, my friends, she turned her back on the trite world of John Hughes -- though it made her a celebrity -- and joined Goddard in a version of &quot;King Lear&quot; that has to be one of the most interesting film experiments ever. I am currently waiting to see here in &quot;Tulse Luper,&quot; by our greatest living filmmaker.<br/><br/>She is not a great craftswoman, but intelligent actresses are so rare you have to note when they come around, even if as a bratty &#39;Liza Doolittle.<br/><br/>-- The original release of this was in 3-D, and really was worth experiencing. The technology is unsatisfying, even in the hands of Hitchcock, but was great fun.<br/><br/>-- And it was fun, especially given the extraordinary design of this film. Yes, it all looks hokey, but this is pretty wonderful art nouveau inspired hokum. Its pretty atypical for space designs which tend to be techno. And it is different than the &quot;Mad Max&quot; ethic which is punk, boring. This is swoopy, organic and appealing as all getout. Just like Molly, now that you mention it.<br/><br/>-- Finally, there is a piece of film iconography in its embryonic stage here. Film is largely a matter of successful images that enter the world and stay forever. One of those images is Robert Redford washing Meryl Streep&#39;s hair by a pond. That sensual image has since taken on a life as its own meme. You can see here -- so the legend goes -- where Pollack got the idea. A sweet bit of unlikely film ecology.<br/><br/>Those are enough to allow me to pass over all the inadequacies in this. Except one. Science fiction writers have the burden of making things different but similar enough for us to grasp. Here, Niki uses the term &quot;Brainworked.&quot; We are supposed to understand it as a notch down toward the primitive in understanding.<br/><br/>But think about this. Primitives can talk about why something is, or why you believe what you do. But it is a very specific sophisticated notion to impute a brain that reasons so. That&#39;s a notch beyond where we are in everyday life folks, not below.<br/><br/>Ted&#39;s Evaluation -- 3 of 4: Worth w
  53. As cheap STAR WARS rip-offs go, this isn&#39;t bad at all, and at least manages to be consistently entertaining trash. Full of typical &#39;80s special effects (running the gamut from poor rubber suits to poor computer effects), wooden acting, and a light plot which is basically an excuse for a series of action sequences, and you have the making of a good, if cheesy, time. As an added bonus, the film was made at the peak of the 3D craze and was, thus, filmed in 3D, so expect lots of blocky titles flying out of the screen and objects flying at the camera at every moment.<br/><br/>The two stars of the show are a wooden Peter Strauss and an irritating Molly Ringwald, who share lots of light banter. Same old story...the pair initially hate each other but eventually grow to love one another. Like we haven&#39;t heard that one before. Strauss&#39; character is a blatant copy of Han Solo, right down to the same cocky manner and clothing. Ringwald plays some kind of desert urchin who hooks up with Strauss as a guide and manages to put herself in all sorts of danger.<br/><br/>The location shooting is nice, offering up a realistic-looking alien planet, although sadly the inhabitants are less than convincing. Things kick off with Strauss riding around in his dune buggy (did I mentioned MAD MAX as another influence?) then discovering a Viking longship flying down a railway line (?!). A laser fight immediately ensues, the first of a couple in the film, which are really quite impressive. Some poor extra gets it (&quot;we have blood loss here...&quot;) and Strauss loses his female helper, who turns out to be an icky android who melts at the touch of a button.<br/><br/>From then on, it&#39;s one thing after another, with Strauss pairing up with Ringwald and together meeting all kinds of monsters and strange characters. An incredibly young, bald Ernie Hudson wanders around in a space suit and drives a shoddy-looking bulldozer which belches black smoke into the planet&#39;s atmosphere (can&#39;t be doing much for their ozone layer). A group of amphibious Amazons (!) wander around in little clothing and try to capture our heroes in giant nets - and fail. A patently plastic-looking dragon (not so much a dragon as a cardboard head on a wooden pole) puts our befuddled hero into yet another dangerous situation, while some obese rubber-suited people provide lots of mirth. In another unexplained incident, mutant children lob Molotov cocktails at our heroes from the top of a cliff.<br/><br/>After these amusing incidents, our characters eventually arrive at Overdog&#39;s castle. Overdog is a menacing (ridiculous name aside) character, a cyborg with a human face and gigantic pincer arms. He&#39;s played by genre staple Michael Ironside, although you wouldn&#39;t recognise him under all that makeup. He&#39;s devised a tricky maze where unwilling contestants must face dangers like pools of acid, fire, pits of spikes, and giant swinging circular saw blades while being pursued by a giant steamroller. Inevitably, Ringwald finds herself in the maze and is luckily able to conquer it before being captured by Overdog, who has a thing for women you see. At the end, action man Strauss saves the day by electrocuting the baddie and shooting lots of things/people. The entire place explodes in a huge display of pyrotechnics which was also a convenient way to use up any of the budget that may have been left over.<br/><br/>So, as adventure films go, this isn&#39;t bad at all. That is, as long as you know what to expect - fans of decent, high budget fare may think otherwise. For me, a film with plentiful action, a sprinkling of violence, and all manner of weird costumes and effects definitely passes the time in an entertaining way.
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