This was always on tv when I was young but now seems only to surface as a crummy VHS rip.
A pity because this lavish, big(ish) budget sf yarn is good fun.
Colourful and fast paced with impressive (mostly) fx, it really doesn't deserve such obscurity.
A well-meaning but misguided scientist (Dana Andrews) decides to tap the Earth's molten magma by firing a nuclear warhead down a borehole and blowing a hole in the last bit of rock holding the magma back. Needless to say, things don't go quite as planned and a crack opens in the crust which threatens to split the planet in two.
Fortunately Kieron Moore and Janette Scott are on hand to sort things out with all the hi-tech 1965 can provide. Moore gets to play Doc Savage, Scott gets to throw a world-class wobbler in a collapsing lift shaft and the solar system gets somewhat rearranged.
The science may be outdated/bonkers but the movie is right up there with other batty masterpieces like "Fantastic Voyage", "The Day the Earth Caught Fire" and "Quatermass"
"Stop! You're heading for the crack!"
A pity because this lavish, big(ish) budget sf yarn is good fun.
Colourful and fast paced with impressive (mostly) fx, it really doesn't deserve such obscurity.
A well-meaning but misguided scientist (Dana Andrews) decides to tap the Earth's molten magma by firing a nuclear warhead down a borehole and blowing a hole in the last bit of rock holding the magma back. Needless to say, things don't go quite as planned and a crack opens in the crust which threatens to split the planet in two.
Fortunately Kieron Moore and Janette Scott are on hand to sort things out with all the hi-tech 1965 can provide. Moore gets to play Doc Savage, Scott gets to throw a world-class wobbler in a collapsing lift shaft and the solar system gets somewhat rearranged.
The science may be outdated/bonkers but the movie is right up there with other batty masterpieces like "Fantastic Voyage", "The Day the Earth Caught Fire" and "Quatermass"
"Stop! You're heading for the crack!"