Popularity: 11 (history)
Director: | Guillermo del Toro |
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Writer: | Travis Beacham, Guillermo del Toro |
Staring: |
Using massive piloted robots to combat the alien threat, earth's survivors take the fight to the invading alien force lurking in the depths of the Pacific Ocean. Nearly defenseless in the face of the relentless enemy, the forces of mankind have no choice but to turn to two unlikely heroes who now stand as earth's final hope against the mounting apocalypse. | |
Release Date: | Jul 11, 2013 |
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Director: | Guillermo del Toro |
Writer: | Travis Beacham, Guillermo del Toro |
Genres: | Adventure, Action, Science Fiction |
Keywords | monster, dystopia, pacific, alaska, giant robot, giant monster, apocalypse, hong kong, robot, alien invasion, kaiju, duringcreditsstinger, monster movie |
Production Companies | Legendary Pictures, Double Dare You |
Box Office |
Revenue: $411,000,000
Budget: $180,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Jun 29, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
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Charlie Hunnam | Raleigh Becket |
Rinko Kikuchi | Mako Mori |
Idris Elba | Stacker Pentecost |
Max Martini | Herc Hansen |
Clifton Collins Jr. | Tendo Choi |
Ron Perlman | Hannibal Chau |
Charlie Day | Dr. Newton Geiszler |
Burn Gorman | Dr. Hermann Gottlieb |
Robert Kazinsky | Chuck Hansen |
Robert Maillet | Lt. Aleksis Kaidanovsky |
Heather Doerksen | Lt. Sasha Kaidanovsky |
Larry Joe Campbell | Tommy T |
Brad William Henke | Miles |
Diego Klattenhoff | Yancy Becket |
Santiago Segura | Wizened Man |
Jane Watson | Raleigh and Yancy's Mom |
Jung-Yul Kim | Hannibal Chau Thug |
Joshua Peace | Officer |
Mana Ashida | Young Mako |
Joe Pingue | Captain Merrit |
Milton Barnes | McTighe |
Brian Frank | 1st Officer |
Ellen McLain | Gipsy Danger AI (voice) |
David Fox | Old Man on Beach |
Jake Goodman | Child |
Robin Thomas | American UN Representative |
Julian Barnes | British UN Representative |
David Richmond-Peck | Canadian UN Representative |
Sebastian Pigott | Engineer |
J.C. Kenny | TV Reporter |
Robert Morse | Raleigh and Yancy's Dad |
Mike Chute | Saltchuck Crew |
Duncan McLeod | Saltchuck Crew |
Louis Paquette | Saltchuck Crew |
Matthew G. Taylor | Saltchuck Crew |
Frank Nakashima | UN Representative |
Terry Belleville | UN Representative |
Farzad Sadrian | UN Representative |
Mishu Vellani | UN Representative |
Clive Walton | UN Representative |
Peter Kosaka | Young Mako's Father |
Yiren Stark | Young Mako's Mother |
Mark Luu | Wei Tang Triplet |
Charles Luu | Wei Tang Triplet |
Lance Luu | Wei Tang Triplet |
William S. Wong | Engineer (uncredited) |
Victoria Sawal | Chinese Girl in Anti-Kaiju Refuge |
Timothy Gibbs | Marine (uncredited) |
Hugh Tran | Asian Boy |
Scott Martin Gershin | Kaiju Sound Effects (voice) (uncredited) |
Drew Adkins | Young Gottlieb |
Barack Obama | Self (archived footage) |
Name | Job |
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Peter Zinda | Sound Effects Editor |
Travis Beacham | Story, Screenplay |
John Gilroy | Editor |
Margery Simkin | Casting |
Andy Jekabsons | First Assistant Camera |
Peter Myles | Music Editor |
Tom Morello | Musician |
Hal Hickel | Animation Supervisor |
Scott Martin Gershin | Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor |
John Knoll | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Lauren Hadaway | ADR Editor |
Gary A. Hecker | Foley Artist |
Alain Moussi | Stunts |
Jeremy Gillespie | Second Assistant Art Director |
Bradley James Allan | Fight Choreographer |
Branko Racki | Stunt Coordinator |
Robert Racki | Stunt Coordinator |
Ramin Djawadi | Original Music Composer |
Guillermo del Toro | Director, Screenplay |
Guillermo Navarro | Director of Photography |
Peter Amundson | Editor |
Andrew Neskoromny | Production Design |
Carol Spier | Production Design |
Peter Nicolakakos | Set Decoration |
Andrew Li | Art Direction |
Sandi Tanaka | Art Direction |
Brian N. Bentley | Compositors |
Scott F. Johnston | Visual Effects |
Weicheng Jiang | Visual Effects |
Yuhon Ng | Digital Effects Supervisor |
Erik Classen | Compositors |
Richard L. Johnson | Supervising Art Director |
Elinor Rose Galbraith | Supervising Art Director |
Kate Hawley | Costume Design |
Gregg Rudloff | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Paul R.J. Elliot | Hair Department Head |
Sondra Treilhard | Key Hair Stylist |
Teresa Buccione | Key Hair Stylist |
Patricia Keighran | Key Makeup Artist |
Pipsan Ayotte | Key Makeup Artist |
Peter Gmehling | 24 Frame Playback |
Phil Whitfield | Assistant Chief Lighting Technician |
Gary Deneault | Assistant Chief Lighting Technician |
Jim Holmes | Best Boy Grip |
Anton Van Rooyen | Camera Operator |
John Colavecchia | Camera Operator |
Johnny Askwith | Camera Operator |
Angelo Colavecchia | Camera Operator |
Perry Hoffman | Camera Operator |
David Lee | Chief Lighting Technician |
Tom Starnes | Chief Lighting Technician |
Michael L. Hall | Chief Lighting Technician |
Sandra Lombardi | Digital Imaging Technician |
C.J. Roy | Digital Imaging Technician |
Mark Cyre | First Assistant Camera |
Christopher Raucamp | First Assistant Camera |
Colin Penman | Key Makeup Artist |
John Saysana | First Assistant Camera |
Benjamin Smith | First Assistant Camera |
Joseph Micomonaco | First Assistant Camera |
Robert DaPrato | Key Grip |
Rick Stribling | Key Grip |
Christopher Dean | Key Grip |
Wing Ma | Key Grip |
Bernie Lalonde | Key Rigging Grip |
James Banfield | Lighting Technician |
Pierre Berube | Rigging Gaffer |
Tara Dixit | Second Assistant Camera |
Amanda Wojtaszek | Second Assistant Camera |
Jeff DaSilva | Second Assistant Camera |
Alan G. Kelly | Second Assistant Camera |
Stephan Maia | Second Assistant Camera |
Julia Seidman | Second Assistant Camera |
Kerry Hayes | Still Photographer |
Roslyn Hanchard | Assistant Costume Designer |
Michele Harney | Costume Set Supervisor |
Ciara Brennan | Costume Set Supervisor |
Renee Fontana | Costume Supervisor |
Wendy Wong | Aerial Coordinator |
Lara Alexander | Assistant Accountant |
Gerry Alfonso | Assistant Accountant |
Katharine Boyce | Assistant Accountant |
Lincoln D'Souza | Assistant Accountant |
Stephanie Massarella | Assistant Accountant |
Kyla McFeat | Assistant Accountant |
Shamu Naidu | Assistant Accountant |
Valerie Phillips | Assistant Accountant |
Erin Renton | Assistant Accountant |
Debbie Van Dusen | Assistant Accountant |
Candace Tempelmeyer | Assistant Accountant |
Kevin Michael Schembri | Assistant Accountant |
Courtenay Bainbridge | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Jonathan Pencharz | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Troy P. Liddell | Choreographer |
Nadia Venesse | Dialect Coach |
Scott Perry | Dialogue Coach |
Man Fong | Production Accountant |
Christian Dendias | Production Assistant |
Vicki Henton | Production Assistant |
Adam Meaden | Production Assistant |
Sam Rosati | Production Assistant |
Emma Tamblyn | Production Assistant |
Fermin Balado | Production Assistant |
Brandon Balon | Production Assistant |
Jonah Greisman | Production Assistant |
Christopher Lori | Production Assistant |
Elaine Thurston | Production Controller |
Elspeth Cassar | Production Coordinator |
Marie-Claude Harnois | Production Coordinator |
Feyon Li | Production Coordinator |
Lucia Haliburton | Production Secretary |
Dug Rotstein | Script Supervisor |
Shane B. Scott | Script Supervisor |
Joe Everett | Unit Publicist |
Tony Blondal | Orchestrator |
Stephen Coleman | Orchestrator |
Andrew Kinney | Orchestrator |
Robin D. Cook | Casting |
Zameret Kleiman | Extras Casting |
Jane Spencer | Extras Casting Assistant |
Lara Khachooni | Assistant Editor |
Cam McLauchlin | Assistant Editor |
Brigitte Rabazo | Assistant Editor |
Jade E. Chatham | Assistant Editor |
George Chavez | Color Timer |
Matt McFarland | Digital Intermediate |
Maxine Gervais | Digital Intermediate Colorist |
Erik Kaufmann | Digital Intermediate Editor |
Adam Ohl | Digital Intermediate Producer |
Steve Bobertz | First Assistant Editor |
James W. Harrison III | First Assistant Editor |
Mo Henry | Negative Cutter |
Lauren Brandon | Post Production Assistant |
Bobbie Shay | Post Production Assistant |
Fred Kamping | Location Manager |
Johnny Wang Yin-Ming | Location Manager |
Mark McFadden | Assistant Location Manager |
George Wong | Assistant Location Manager |
Derrick Carlin | Animation Supervisor |
Chris Lentz | Animation Supervisor |
Tim Belsher | CG Supervisor |
Ryan Hopkins | CG Supervisor |
David Meny | CG Supervisor |
John H. Han | CG Supervisor |
Pat Conran | CG Supervisor |
Victor Schutz | CG Supervisor |
Jeff Sutherland | Compositing Supervisor |
Jon Bowen | Compositing Supervisor |
Fangfei Li | Digital Compositor |
Luke Vallee | Digital Compositor |
Alex Nice | Matte Painter |
Wendy Chesebrough Lowe | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Ryan Cunningham | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Greg Hyman | Visual Effects Editor |
Erin D. O'Connor | Visual Effects Producer |
Javier Jimenez | Visual Effects Producer |
Alison O'Brien | Visual Effects Producer |
Jason Heapy | Visual Effects Producer |
Daniel Cavey | Visual Effects Production Manager |
Hui Ling Chang | Visual Effects Production Manager |
Russell Lum | Visual Effects Production Manager |
Danielle Rubin | Visual Effects Production Manager |
James E. Price | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Zachary Tucker | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Brian Claus | Animatronics Designer |
Laird McMurray | Special Effects Coordinator |
Rocco Larizza | Special Effects Supervisor |
Clay Pinney | Special Effects Supervisor |
Thomas J. O'Connell | ADR Mixer |
Steve Switzer | Boom Operator |
Alan Zielonko | Boom Operator |
Jason McFarling | Cableman |
Craig Baker | Cableman |
Margit Pfeiffer | Dialogue Editor |
Becky Sullivan | ADR Supervisor |
David Stanke | First Assistant Sound Editor |
Catherine Harper | Foley Artist |
Gary Marullo | Foley Artist |
Christopher Moriana | Foley Artist |
James Moriana | Foley Artist |
Jeffrey Wilhoit | Foley Artist |
Masanobu 'Tomi' Tomita | Foley Editor |
Nerses Gezalyan | Foley Mixer |
Darrin Mann | Foley Mixer |
Brett Voss | Foley Mixer |
Ryan Murphy | Mix Technician |
Charlie Campagna | Sound Effects Editor |
Dan Hegeman | Sound Effects Editor |
Stephen P. Robinson | Sound Effects Editor |
Csaba Wagner | Sound Effects Editor |
Tim Walston | Sound Effects Editor |
Scott Wolf | Sound Effects Editor |
Glen Gauthier | Sound Mixer |
Thomas Hayek | Sound Mixer |
John T. Reitz | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Tim LeBlanc | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Joanne Jackson | Production Manager |
Dustin Bernard | Unit Production Manager |
D.J. Carson | Unit Production Manager |
Callum Greene | Unit Production Manager |
Michelle Russell | Unit Production Manager |
David Best | Assistant Art Director |
Joelle Craven | Assistant Art Director |
Harold Gay | Assistant Art Director |
Jon Hunter | Assistant Art Director |
Itsuko Kurono | Assistant Art Director |
John Moran | Assistant Art Director |
Timothy Peel | Assistant Art Director |
Andrew Redekop | Assistant Art Director |
Oscar Chichoni | Concept Artist |
Simon Lee | Concept Artist |
Hugo Martin | Concept Artist |
David Meng | Concept Artist |
Carlos Salgado | Concept Artist |
Stephen Schirle | Concept Artist |
Keith Thompson | Concept Artist |
Simon Webber | Concept Artist |
Allen Williams | Concept Artist |
Doug Williams | Concept Artist |
Francisco Ruiz Velasco | Concept Artist |
Raúl Monge | Concept Artist |
TyRuben Ellingson | Concept Artist |
Wayne D. Barlowe | Concept Artist |
Guy Davis | Concept Artist |
Joe Curtin | Construction Coordinator |
Carlos Caneca | Leadman |
Kevin Haeberlin | Leadman |
Patricia Larman | Leadman |
Christopher Geggie | Property Master |
Ron Hewitt | Property Master |
Sang Maier | Props |
Kevin Lise | On Set Props |
Stefany Koutroumpis | Second Assistant Art Director |
Yasmyn Lee | Second Assistant Art Director |
Corinna Schmitt-Porsia | Second Assistant Art Director |
Barbara Agbaje | Second Assistant Art Director |
J. Ryan Halpenny | Second Assistant Art Director |
Peter Bodnarus | Set Designer |
Rudy Braun | Set Designer |
William Cheng | Set Designer |
Vladislav Fedorov | Set Designer |
David G. Fremlin | Set Designer |
Humberto Garcia | Set Designer |
Matt Middleton | Set Designer |
Brad Milburn | Set Designer |
Sorin Popescu | Set Designer |
Andra Totirescu | Set Designer |
Russell Moore | Set Designer |
Colin Adams | Set Dresser |
Karl Denniston Brown | Set Dresser |
George Cribb | Set Dresser |
Sarah Gardner | Set Dresser |
David Lylloff | Set Dresser |
John Mainwaring | Set Dresser |
Gareth Wilson | Set Dresser |
Toni Wong | Set Dresser |
Rob McCallum | Storyboard Artist |
Paul Jefferson | Supervising Carpenter |
Phillip Tellez | Supervising Carpenter |
Lindy DeQuattro | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Daniel Perez Ferreira | VFX Artist |
Shawn Kelly | Animation |
Alexander H. Gayner | First Assistant Director |
David Cronenberg | Thanks |
Jordan Samuel | Makeup Department Head |
Gilles Corbeil | Steadicam Operator |
Jeff Smith | Second Assistant Art Director |
Cliona Furey | Assistant Hairstylist |
Ryan Reed | Hairstylist |
Nigel Sumner | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Chu Chen-On | Line Producer |
Name | Title |
---|---|
Thomas Tull | Producer |
Guillermo del Toro | Producer |
Callum Greene | Executive Producer |
Jon Jashni | Producer |
Mary Parent | Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 4 | 91 | 124 | 65 |
2024 | 5 | 89 | 108 | 65 |
2024 | 6 | 90 | 138 | 64 |
2024 | 7 | 88 | 119 | 66 |
2024 | 8 | 77 | 92 | 59 |
2024 | 9 | 72 | 114 | 58 |
2024 | 10 | 67 | 106 | 52 |
2024 | 11 | 90 | 171 | 55 |
2024 | 12 | 78 | 131 | 58 |
2025 | 1 | 83 | 116 | 63 |
2025 | 2 | 68 | 93 | 12 |
2025 | 3 | 27 | 91 | 3 |
2025 | 4 | 15 | 19 | 11 |
2025 | 5 | 14 | 22 | 11 |
2025 | 6 | 13 | 17 | 11 |
2025 | 7 | 11 | 13 | 10 |
2025 | 8 | 11 | 13 | 10 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 8 | 93 | 485 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 7 | 106 | 522 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 6 | 90 | 440 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 5 | 108 | 441 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 4 | 146 | 442 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 3 | 146 | 514 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 2 | 87 | 532 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 1 | 86 | 412 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 12 | 238 | 593 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 11 | 115 | 469 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 10 | 261 | 461 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 9 | 239 | 418 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 8 | 109 | 464 |
First I want to say I liked this movie. I was surprised, I've been hearing bad reviews but I can't see big problem. The only issues was with the story. Apart from that the graphics where very good. The actors where okay (no major actors) and the baddies (no spoilers) where well thought out and graph ... ically impressive (same for the robots). All in all a good movie.
When monstrous, building-sized creatures (dubbed "kaiju") hell-bent on destruction begin pouring out of an extra-dimensional fissure at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, humanity bands together to build titanic mechas called jaegers, each controlled simultaneously by two pilots whose minds are linked ... through a neural bond called "The Drift." As the kaiju get stronger and the signs point to an all-out flood of the beasts, the fate of humanity looks bleak, and the surviving jaegers are brought together for one last-ditch attempt at saving the world. After an agonizingly long five-year wait, filled with some heartbreaking starts and stops (like the almost-weres of The Hobbit and At the Mountains of Madness), Guillermo del Toro has finally returned with his biggest budget and story yet. The Mexican master of fantasy returns to the toybox of his youth, drawing from the kaiju films of old (Godzilla, Gamera, Mothra, and the like) and anime to create the modern-day monster movie we didn't even know we wanted. I am a genre man through and through, and del Toro's films are filled with both the intelligence of the best of science fiction, fantasy, and horror and a flawlessly-rendered vision unique to him. His innate knowledge of what makes those outlandish stories truly matter to us is the backbone of his work as a writer and director, and his visual style is one that invokes true wonder. It's that wonder, that childlike glee that makes Pacific Rim work so well, and well it does work. This is a brawny, massive film made by a true artist and auteur at the top of his game, but while the technicals of this film could have been mounted by any number of working directors, the magic of Guillermo del Toro is that he infuses every film with himself. His love of the material, whatever it may be, shines brightly through every frame. It is this complete sincerity that makes his films such a joy to experience, and even when there are 250-foot behemoths slugging it out on the screen, there's not a trace of the disastrous irony or cynicism so readily supplied by other blockbusters anywhere to be found. The cast gamely comes to play, with Idris Elba (TV’s Luther) as Stacker Pentecost (one of my favorite character names of all time) as the stoic leader of the jaeger program, Charlie Hunnam (TV’s Sons of Anarchy) as former pilot Raleigh Becket, who suffered a tragic loss and has to be convinced to return to jaeger service, and Oscar-nominated Rinko Kinkuchi (Babel) as Mako Mori, another life touched by the kaiju and ready to serve up some righteous fury. If these sound like tried-and-true archetypes, it’s because they are. This is a grand, epic war film on a bigger scale than anything ever attempted before in that genre, and one of the strokes of genius from del Toro and original writer Travis Beacham is that we instantly establish and identify with the characters onscreen. There are so many ideas flying around (monsters, mechas, neural bonding, kaiju culture, and many, many more) that the broadly-drawn characters serve as a perfect anchor for the audience, immediately relatable in their inherent humanity. It seems that the mission statment of this movie was, in a word, “texture.” Del Toro delivered a visual feast unlike any other big spectacle films, with his insistence on it not looking like a “glossy car commercial.” Instead, every frame is filled with rain, snow, scuffs, smoke, debris, and other visual elements that reflect the weight and dimension of these cyclopean combatants. Unlike the ultra-glossy (and emotionally irrelevant) Transformers films, or virtually any other modern big-budget actioner, this universe feels dirty, grungy, and lived-in, like the original Star Wars trilogy. In fact, dubbing a film “this generation’s Star Wars” has been overused to the point of robbing the phrase of all meaning. But Pacific Rim feels just like that. It invokes those most elusive of emotions in the modern studio film: wonder, awe, and sheer enjoyment. Do you remember the awe you felt upon seeing a Star Destroyer creep onto the screen? Discovering a brachiosaurus on Isla Nublar? Laying eyes on the verdant fields of Middle Earth? This film has that. No one builds worlds like del Toro, and here he is, the master, inviting you to play in his sandbox with him. Grab your favorite action figure and hop in.
My favorite movie for years!!!I absolutely love this movie!No big story.A lot of action.The only bad thing is all the fights are at night & in the rain.A bright daylight fight would have really made it great!!! ...
This movie has almost everything that is expected from it so just relax lay back with the pop corn and your soft drink and enjoy. Just to make noticeable the remarkable few amount of females featuring in the movie and how bad is that Travis Beacham and Guillermo del Toro just copy Evangelion's id ... ea without giving anything back.
I have to say that I enjoyed this pure special effects movie quite a lot even though the plot is totally ridiculous. Clumsy giant robots beating at alien beasts with their fists should be better than modern tanks and airplanes with modern explosive and armor penetrating weapons? As I said, a ridicul ... ous story. Well it does not really matter does it because the story gives an excuse for some real cool special effects loaded action. Giant robots and alien Godzillas in the same movie. Cool, simply cool. Once you have gotten past the silliness of the story it is a very entertaining rollercoaster ride of action. The scenes where the robots and aliens go head to head is visually very enjoyable. Sometimes they make you laugh as well. For instance the scene where Gipsy Danger (one of the robots) drags a cargo ship after it to use as a club. Unfortunately a somewhat somber mood is set right from the start by the fact that the Jaeger program is discontinued. Not because they are really defenseless as the movie blurb states but because dumbass politicians wants to save money as usual. Instead they build giant walls that are subsequently breached in hours. As I said, dumbass politicians. I guess they wanted to put some realism into the movie! As much as the robot and alien action is tremendously enjoyable I think some of my favorite scenes are the ones with Ron Perlman as Hannibal Chau. I have always liked Ron Perlman and he is simply outrageously (as in funny) wacky as Hannibal Chau. The one thing I did not like with the movie is the ludicrous nonsense statements about the dinosaurs being the first attempt at an invasion. Whoever wrote that must be an idiot. Worse, the fact that it made it into the movie means that someone believes that the audience are idiots. When it then was followed by some green-religious crap that the atmosphere was not right for them then but that we have now “terraformed” earth for them by our pollution it was at least a star off just for that. I hate it when they put crap like that in the movies. It is an insult to the audience. Anyway, despite the dinosaur nonsense I found it a very enjoyable movie. Without that it would have received a near top rating but as I said, it is at least a star off due to that crap.
Watching a CGI heavy movie 5 years following its release doesn't sound like such a hot idea, but in the case of Pacific Rim nothing really drew me out of the experience in terms of aging animation. However, the film itself was an 'okay' at best. Aside from the spectacle CGI fights of giants robot ... s versus giant alien monsters it doesn't offer anything of value. This is one of those movies you can safely keep on your second monitor and zone out in between the set piece fight scenes.
**Pacific Rim is outrageous and cliche but loads of fun if you embrace it for what it is: insane robot/monster action.** Pacific Rim is a ridiculous action monster movie that is a lot of fun if you have the right expectations. It’s a film about giant rock em sock em robots fighting giant Godzilla ... -like monsters, filled with shallow characters, goofy dialogue, great thrills, and exciting action sequences. Charlie Day’s wacky scientist was exceedingly annoying, but then you also have Idris Elba’s inspiring gritty performance of Stacker Pentecost in the same film. Those two performances perfectly define the movie as one of extremes. Extreme robot monster action. Extreme goofiness. All mixed in together for a unique movie worth a watch but not the movie hall of fame.
**It could be so much better with some logic.** Guillermo Del Toro is a good director, but he seems to be learning too much from Tim Burton instead of forging his own path. I really liked some of his films, especially “Pan’s Labyrinth”, but this film, despite its merits, has nothing to do with th ... at and doesn’t even seem to be from the same director. The best thing about this film is the extremely high production values. Visually, the film is amazing and it's really nice to watch. We've got great visuals, stunning cinematography, and an absolutely immersive dose of high-quality CGI. In addition, the film has very well-made sets and costumes, thought out in detail and indisputably expensive. The special effects department, despite all the computer graphics used, also had a series of good opportunities to show its value, and it never failed to do so. The editing is good, the cuts are barely felt and the pace of the film is extremely pleasant. All good reasons to see the film, which was a great blockbuster. Director Del Toro, I have no doubt, had the courage to take a risk on a film that looks like nothing I've seen of him. However, and as I said, he is good, he is creative, and he is a perfectionist in his work, assuring us of an impeccable job in this film. The cast has great actors, and all of them were at the best level. Idris Elba is, for me, the most notable and the best of them all, but I also appreciated the efforts of Rinko Kikuchi and Charlie Day. The worst performance came from Ron Perlman, but this is largely due to the poor conception of the character, who is a crude caricature of a common drug dealer with no taste. Charlie Hunnam, honestly, was an actor that I completely missed. I felt that not only did he lack the charisma and ability to hold the audience and be the protagonist, but he also lacked the skills for the task. I deliberately left the script for the end because, for me, this is where all (or almost) of the film's problems lie. The script is based on an alien invasion of Earth: coming from the bottom of the sea, aliens take the form of gigantic monsters, forcing the entire planet to unite and create metal monsters capable of breaking their faces. The first problem is the illogicality of these premises: how and when did aliens arrive in our world, and how could they penetrate the Earth's crust? This is not explained, nor how countries funded the construction and maintenance of such metallic machines, nor how they manage to walk and fight in an ocean as deep as the Pacific. How did they withstand the heat of the planet? How did they withstand the pressures on the ocean floor? The battles against the monsters almost always take place in the coastal area next to the big cities, threatened, in a clear allusion to films like “Godzilla” or “Transformer’s”. The dialogues also lack any kind of authenticity. The movie simply makes up for it all with tons of action.
Guillermo del Toro does “Transformers” meets “Godzilla” - and thanks to a spirited effort from Charlie Hunnam turns out quite a decent adventure. There’s some sort of rift between the surface dwellers and these prehistoric beasts that bide deep within the planet. They have an habit of coming up to v ... isit every now and again and causing havoc, so mankind has developed these great nuclear-powered machines to guard the entrance and send them packing. Under the guidance of the grumpy “Pentecost” (Idris Elba) these “Jaegers” (that’s hunters in case you didn’t know) are our main line of defence, but when they start to become overwhelmed by the sheer size and power of their foes, the world must turn it’s hopes to the veteran “Becket” (Hunnam) and his novice partner “Mako” (Rinko Kikuchi) and hope they can find a way to seal this doorway once and forever. It takes a while to get going, indeed it could probably lose twenty minutes, but once it gets going there’s loads of action set amidst some impressive visual effects and featuring extended combat scenes that don’t just repeat themselves over and over. There’s a bit of testosterone zinging about between “Becket” and the other “Becket” (Diego Klattenhoff) and there’s also plenty of entertainingly geeky science from Bruno Gorman’s “Gottlieb” and Charlie Day’s “Dr. Geiszler” as the adventure hots up. Nobody watches these films for the writing, so little effort has been expended on that front beyond giving them something to do with their mouths whilst doing their own, more sophisticated, impressions of Sigourney Weaver from 1986 and it is all enjoyably easy on the eye for a couple of hours.