Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Mass update links)
m (Mass update links)
Line 8: Line 8:
They begin investigating the affairs of the [[Mad Scientist|mysterious German scientist]], Dr Totenkopf, after his machines attack [[New York City]]. Further implicating Totenkopf is a string of kidnapped scientists all leading back to his involvment.
They begin investigating the affairs of the [[Mad Scientist|mysterious German scientist]], Dr Totenkopf, after his machines attack [[New York City]]. Further implicating Totenkopf is a string of kidnapped scientists all leading back to his involvment.


The plot shamelessly uses the [[Awesome but Impractical|outrageous gadgets]] and cliches of the [[Pulp Magazine]] and [[Comic Book]] genres, plus numerous [[Shout Out|shout outs]] to other media of the period. Filmed with live actors against computer-generated surroundings, the movie did not make enough money to offset its production costs, so a sequel is unlikely.
The plot shamelessly uses the [[Awesome but Impractical|outrageous gadgets]] and cliches of the [[Pulp Magazine]] and [[Comic Book]] genres, plus numerous [[Shout-Out|shout outs]] to other media of the period. Filmed with live actors against computer-generated surroundings, the movie did not make enough money to offset its production costs, so a sequel is unlikely.
-----
-----
=== The movie has the following [[Awesome but Impractical]] machines: ===
=== The movie has the following [[Awesome but Impractical]] machines: ===
Line 18: Line 18:
* [[Humongous Mecha|Humongous]] [[Tin Can Robot|Tin Can]] [[Humongous Mecha|Mecha]]: Giant bipedal robots armed with [[Frickin' Laser Beams]] stomp through the streets of New York. They can [[Flying Brick|fly as well]].
* [[Humongous Mecha|Humongous]] [[Tin Can Robot|Tin Can]] [[Humongous Mecha|Mecha]]: Giant bipedal robots armed with [[Frickin' Laser Beams]] stomp through the streets of New York. They can [[Flying Brick|fly as well]].
* [[Military Mashup Machine]]: Sky Captain's Curtiss P-40 can change into a submersible. It also has the ability to project limpet mines and [[Grappling Hook Gun|grapnel-wires]].
* [[Military Mashup Machine]]: Sky Captain's Curtiss P-40 can change into a submersible. It also has the ability to project limpet mines and [[Grappling Hook Gun|grapnel-wires]].
* [[Schizo Tech]]: A radio-imager drone sends back underwater pictures to Franky's heliocarrier. Also, zeppelins next to mecha, and UCAVs.
* [[Schizo-Tech]]: A radio-imager drone sends back underwater pictures to Franky's heliocarrier. Also, zeppelins next to mecha, and UCAVs.
* [[Shiny-Looking Spaceships]]: Totenkopf's brobdingnagian [[Retro Rocket]].
* [[Shiny-Looking Spaceships]]: Totenkopf's brobdingnagian [[Retro Rocket]].
* [[Spider Tank]]: The crab robots guarding the underwater approaches to Totenkopf's [[Island Base|island]].
* [[Spider Tank]]: The crab robots guarding the underwater approaches to Totenkopf's [[Island Base|island]].
Line 54: Line 54:
* [[Diesel Punk]]: With a healthy helping of [[Nikola Tesla|Tesla Punk]] to boot.
* [[Diesel Punk]]: With a healthy helping of [[Nikola Tesla|Tesla Punk]] to boot.
* [[Disintegrator Ray]]: [[Gadgeteer Genius]] Dex is shown testing a [[Buck Rogers]] raygun that can burn a hole through solid metal with luminous <s>Lifesavers</s> rings of energy.
* [[Disintegrator Ray]]: [[Gadgeteer Genius]] Dex is shown testing a [[Buck Rogers]] raygun that can burn a hole through solid metal with luminous <s>Lifesavers</s> rings of energy.
* [[Dog Fighting Furballs]]: Multiple furballs, including air ''and'' submarine battles.
* [[Dogfighting Furballs]]: Multiple furballs, including air ''and'' submarine battles.
* [[Doing It for The Art]]: The film's creator spent years developing software to achieve a film with ''this specific look,'' and then pitched a film around it.
* [[Doing It for The Art]]: The film's creator spent years developing software to achieve a film with ''this specific look,'' and then pitched a film around it.
* [[The Dragon]]: Dr. Totenkopf's [[Action Girl]] agent. {{spoiler|A rather extreme case of [[Dragon Their Feet]].}}
* [[The Dragon]]: Dr. Totenkopf's [[Action Girl]] agent. {{spoiler|A rather extreme case of [[Dragon Their Feet]].}}
Line 85: Line 85:
'''Dex:''' "...I meant throw something." }}
'''Dex:''' "...I meant throw something." }}
* [[Justified Title]]: The [[Character Name and The Noun Phrase]] title is obviously a reference to the retro-futuristic nature of the movie, but "Sky Captain" is the nickname of the main character, and the villain calls his scheme {{spoiler|to seed life on another planet}} the "World of Tomorrow".
* [[Justified Title]]: The [[Character Name and The Noun Phrase]] title is obviously a reference to the retro-futuristic nature of the movie, but "Sky Captain" is the nickname of the main character, and the villain calls his scheme {{spoiler|to seed life on another planet}} the "World of Tomorrow".
* [[Let's Split Up Gang]]: Sky Captain, while in Dr. Totenkopf's abandoned uranium mine.
* [[Let's Split Up, Gang!]]: Sky Captain, while in Dr. Totenkopf's abandoned uranium mine.
* [[Mad Scientist Laboratory]]: The laboratory of Dr. Walter Jennings (with mutated fetus and tiny elephant), and the room in [[Shamgri La|Shangri-La]] (shown in a deleted scene) where Totenkopf conducted experiments on radiation victims from his uranium mine.
* [[Mad Scientist Laboratory]]: The laboratory of Dr. Walter Jennings (with mutated fetus and tiny elephant), and the room in [[Shamgri La|Shangri-La]] (shown in a deleted scene) where Totenkopf conducted experiments on radiation victims from his uranium mine.
* [[Minor Crime Reveals Major Plot]]: Kidnapping scientists -> {{spoiler|Plot to build a spaceship that will destroy the Earth's atmosphere.}}
* [[Minor Crime Reveals Major Plot]]: Kidnapping scientists -> {{spoiler|Plot to build a spaceship that will destroy the Earth's atmosphere.}}
Line 107: Line 107:
* [[Shoot Out the Lock]]: The title character throws an object and hits the control box for a door, causing the door to close.
* [[Shoot Out the Lock]]: The title character throws an object and hits the control box for a door, causing the door to close.
* [[Shoulder Cannon]]: The missile launcher of the [[Giant Robot]] guarding the underwater entrance to Dr. Totenkopf's island.
* [[Shoulder Cannon]]: The missile launcher of the [[Giant Robot]] guarding the underwater entrance to Dr. Totenkopf's island.
* [[Shout Out]]: '''By the dozen'''. Everything from ''The Land That Time Forgot'', ''[[The Neverending Story (Film)|The Neverending Story]]'', Apple's ''1984'' commercial, ''[[Star Wars]] Episode I'' and the anime film ''[[Castle in The Sky]]''.
* [[Shout-Out]]: '''By the dozen'''. Everything from ''The Land That Time Forgot'', ''[[The Neverending Story (Film)|The Neverending Story]]'', Apple's ''1984'' commercial, ''[[Star Wars]] Episode I'' and the anime film ''[[Castle in The Sky]]''.
** Some people view the movie as a [[Spiritual Licensee]] of ''[[Crimson Skies]].''
** Some people view the movie as a [[Spiritual Licensee]] of ''[[Crimson Skies]].''
** Godzilla appears on one of the newspaper headlines in a "blink and you'll miss it" cameo
** Godzilla appears on one of the newspaper headlines in a "blink and you'll miss it" cameo
Line 130: Line 130:
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Films of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Hugo Award]]
[[Category:Hugo Award]]
[[Category:Sky Captain And The World Of Tomorrow]]
[[Category:Sky Captain And The World Of Tomorrow]][[Category:Pages with comment tags]]
[[Category:Trope]][[Category:Pages with comment tags]]

Revision as of 01:21, 26 January 2014

 "This is Sky Captain. I'm on my way."

Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow is a 2004 movie homage to the Two-Fisted Tales of the 1930's. The film follows the adventures of Ace Pilot 'Joe' Sullivan, known as Sky Captain (Jude Law) and newspaper reporter Polly Perkins (Gwyneth Paltrow).

They begin investigating the affairs of the mysterious German scientist, Dr Totenkopf, after his machines attack New York City. Further implicating Totenkopf is a string of kidnapped scientists all leading back to his involvment.

The plot shamelessly uses the outrageous gadgets and cliches of the Pulp Magazine and Comic Book genres, plus numerous shout outs to other media of the period. Filmed with live actors against computer-generated surroundings, the movie did not make enough money to offset its production costs, so a sequel is unlikely.


The movie has the following Awesome but Impractical machines:

Other tropes include:

  • Action Dress Rip: Polly tears her skirt to run better during the NYC robot attack. But leaves on the heels....
  • Action Girl: Commander Francesca "Franky" Cook of the Royal Navy, who sports an Eyepatch of Power. There's also The Mysterious Woman, a silent but deadly woman who controls Totenkopf's machines and turns out to be a Robot Girl.
  • Aerial Canyon Chase: The title character flies his fighter plane along the streets of New York just above ground level while trying to escape Dr. Totenkopf's robot ornithopters.
  • Alternate History: Set in a 1939 (with The Wizard of Oz showing in theaters) where World War Two either happened earlier than our world's, is still brewing, or not at all, though apparently the Japanese invasion of Manchuria still happened.
    • There is also a Hindenburg III in the opening scene (which implies either that the first Hindenburg did not explode, or else its explosion was not an impediment to further airship construction).
    • A First World War is mentioned, so WWII definitely has happened. Or they figured audiences wouldn't understand a reference to "The World War" or "The Great War", which was how WW 1 was referred to in those days.
  • Anachronism Stew
  • Anguished Declaration of Love: Spoofed. Joe Sullivan believes Polly Perkins deliberately sabotaged his plane in China while Going for The Big Scoop. When they're trapped in a cave packed with dynamite that's about to explode, Joe looks her in the eyes and asks...if she really did cut his fuel line. Polly is understandably annoyed that they're going to spend their last moments on Earth discussing this point. And on Totenkopf's island, she admits she did. A pissed off Joe then admits that he did sleep with Franky.
  • Apologetic Attacker - Played With: Totenkopf's note at his deathchair reads "Forgive me", and there's indications he tried to shut down his robot servant that was hunting scientists.
  • Belligerent Sexual Tension: Polly and Joe bicker throughout the movie.

 Joe: Could we just for once die without all this bickering?

  • Bedmate Reveal: After an Outrun the Fireball moment, Polly wakes up naked in a bed next to an equally naked Joe. An embarrassed Polly tells him to turn around, which a grinning Joe does only to find he's also in bed with their guide, Kaji, who is also naked.
  • Bilingual Dialogue: Polly can understand both written and spoken German.
  • Billing Displacement: A sterling example. Law and Paltrow are billed diagonally. On the same card, Jolie gets the "and" honor by being billed as "and Angelina Jolie". They thus manage a triple simultaneous diagonal bill where everyone gets a position of honor.
  • Bring It: Dr. Totenkopf's female The Dragon makes a gesture to Sky Captain before fighting him outside the rocket ship.
  • Brits With Battleships: Flying battleships.
  • Camera Obscurer: Polly Perkins spends much of the movie with only one frame left on her only roll of film, and wants to save it for a truly awesome photo. In the film's denouement, she decides to take a photo of Joe Sullivan, only for Joe to look at her and say "Lenscap."
  • Catch Phrase: Joe (Sky Captain) says "Good boy, Dex" whenever his Sidekick Dex does something good.
  • Chair Reveal: Dr. Totenkopf. Only it turns out he's been Dead All Along.
  • Chekhov's Gun: The two metal tubes that Polly Perkins received from Dr. Jennings. Also, Dex's gun.
  • Chroma Key: The actors used only the most basic sets and props, with CGI backgrounds used in every shot.
  • Cut and Paste Environments - Toward the beginning of the movie, just after the robots attack Manhattan, Sky Captain lands at his base and drives his plane into a huge hangar. At the top of the doors of the hangar are these huge windows of 8x10 panes. In every window, some of the panes are broken. In every window, it's EXACTLY THE SAME PANES that are broken.
  • Cutting the Gordian Knot - Polly and the door to Dr. Jenning's lab.
  • Deliberately Monochrome: Filmed in colour and desaturated, then resaturated again to make it more like a painting than a photorealistic movie.
  • Diesel Punk: With a healthy helping of Tesla Punk to boot.
  • Disintegrator Ray: Gadgeteer Genius Dex is shown testing a Buck Rogers raygun that can burn a hole through solid metal with luminous Lifesavers rings of energy.
  • Dogfighting Furballs: Multiple furballs, including air and submarine battles.
  • Doing It for The Art: The film's creator spent years developing software to achieve a film with this specific look, and then pitched a film around it.
  • The Dragon: Dr. Totenkopf's Action Girl agent. A rather extreme case of Dragon Their Feet.
  • The End of the World As We Know It / Utopia Justifies the Means: The planet-colonizing rocketship seems benign, until it's revealed that its afterburners will ignite the Earth's atmosphere.
  • Eureka Moment: "Rana is a star!"
  • Fake Brit/Fake American: Englishman Jude Law plays the American hero, while American Angelina Jolie plays "Franky". Jolie's accent was mocked by some critics, though she's merely riffing on the luscious lower lip stiff-upper-lip jargon of British war propaganda.
  • Fake Shemp: Laurence Olivier, via the magic of stock footage and CGI, comes back to life as Dr. Totenkopf.
  • The Fantastic Trope of Wonderous Titles
  • George Lucas Throwback: to 30's sci-fi and 40's-50's war fiction.
  • Giant Flyer: The protagonists encounter giant prehistoric birds on Totenkopf's island.
  • A God Am I: Totenkopf, in the video that plays while his rocket is rising through the atmosphere. It plays a twisted version of the first few verses of Genesis, replacing him as God and him seeing that "Man was evil."
  • Gratuitous German: The German in this movie is often mangled.
    • A particularly noticeable example is a button labeled with "Dringlichkeitsfreigabe", which then gets translated as "Emergency Release", while it actually means "Urgency Release". It should be "Notfallfreigabe/-abkopplung/-entriegelung/-freisetzung".
    • The German newspaper headline about the robot invasion translates to "Very Big Metallc [sic!] Machines Steal Steal Reserves"
  • The Grotesque: The sole survivor of Dr. Totenkopf's uranium mining and experiments.
  • Gunship Rescue. An entire fleet of heliocarriers turns up to rescue the protagonists at the end, though they don't really need saving by that stage. And Dex has a Big Damn Heroes moment when he arrives in a hoversled just in time to save Joe and Polly from the swarm of flying killer robots.
  • Herr Doctor: All the scientists are German and Austrian.
  • Homages: The attack by giant bipedal robots is copied from the 1941 Superman cartoon "The Mechanical Monsters". Their laser sound-effects are the same as the Martian Disintegrator Ray in the 1953 The War of the Worlds film; similarly Polly's phoned-in report on the attack uses lines lifted from the famous Orson Welles radio broadcast. On seeing one of the robots, Dex mutters "Shazam!" The silhouette of Godzilla can be seen in a newspaper from Japan. During an underwater sequence we see both the wreck of the Titanic and the ship from King Kong, complete with ape-holding cage. King Kong himself can be seen at the top of the Empire State Building during one shot with the robots in the streets. The flying robots on Totenkopf's island have the same chest controls as Commando Cody's Jet Pack. Et cetera.
  • Hostage for Macguffin: When Dr. Totenkopf's thugs capture Polly Perkins in the uranium mine.
  • Hot Scoop: Polly.
  • Hologram Projection Imperfection: As the protagonists approach Dr. Totenkopf's office a Tesla-type generator creates a Huge Holographic Head of Totenkopf that explains his motives and warns them to get out or die. Both the image and voice are distorted when powering up, highlighting the more primitive 1930's zeerust technology of the film. The imperfections also hint this is a case of The Tape Knew You Would Say That.
  • Info Dump: Dex and the scientists explain Totenkopf's entire plan (as well as mentioning an offscreen escape where several of them got killed) in a single moment of exposition. Although not unusual in the Comic Books on which the movie is based, the scene appears clumsy on screen.
  • It Is Beyond Saving: Totenkopf's motive in creating his World of Tomorrow (and destroying the old one in the process).
  • Its the Only Way: Spoofed.

 Sky Captain: "Is it safe?"

Dex: "Well, there's only one way to find out."

(Sky Captain and Polly step across the booby-trapped threshold, holding hands, in lock-step and are relieved to be unharmed)

Dex: "...I meant throw something."

 Joe and Franky: PROTECT THE RABBITS!!! PROTECT THE RABBITS!!!

  1. Except the point of view during the shot is facing Polly and the front of her camera, and the audience can clearly see the lens cap is not on. Though you could Hand Wave this as Joe messing with her again.