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Mortal Engines

Mortal Engines

  • Status: Released
  • 27-11-2018
  • Runtime: 128 min
  • Score: 6.215
  • Vote count: 4728

Many thousands of years in the future, Earth’s cities roam the globe on huge wheels, devouring each other in a struggle for ever diminishing resources. On one of these massive traction cities, the old London, Tom Natsworthy has an unexpected encounter with a mysterious young woman from the wastelands who will change the course of his life forever.

Hera Hilmar

Hester Shaw

Robert Sheehan

Tom Natsworthy

Hugo Weaving

Thaddeus Valentine

Jihae

Anna Fang

Ronan Raftery

Bevis Pod

Leila George

Katherine Valentine

Patrick Malahide

Magnus Crome

Stephen Lang

Shrike

Colin Salmon

Chudleigh Pomeroy

Mark Mitchinson

Vambrace

Regé-Jean Page

Captain Khora

Menik Gooneratne

Sathya

Frankie Adams

Yasmina Rashid

Leifur Sigurdarson

Nils Lindstrom

Kahn West

Toa Heke

Andrew Lees

Herbert Melliphant

Sophie Cox

Clytie Potts

Kee Chan

Governor Kwan

Sarah Peirse

Dr. Twix

Mark Hadlow

Stigwood

Caren Pistorius

Pandora Shaw

Poppy Macleod

Young Hester

Joel Tobeck

Bürgermeister

Terry Norris

Professor Arkengarth

Calum Gittins

Chief Navigator

Megan Edwards

Mrs. Wreyland

Peter Rowley

Mr. Wreyland

Aaron Jackson

Gench

Stephen Ure

Pewsey

Nathaniel Lees

Pierrepoint

Paul Yates

Dietrich

Nick Blake

Waving Aviator

Beatrice Joblin

Young Mother

Thomas Lahood

Lookout

Simbarashe Matshe

Water Hawker

Lee Tuson

Salzhakener

Jason Whyte

Food Hawker

Michael Homick

De Groot

Royden Davys

Salvage Man #1

Richard Mills

Salvage Man #2

Shane Rangi

Burly Salvageman

Yoson An

Major Chen

Nicholas Quirke

Himself

Lynda Lester

Medusa (voice)

Rick Baker

Tube Tannoy (voice)

Katie Jackson

Londoner with Book

Billy Jackson

Londoner with Headphones

Carter Nixon

Scav Trader Carter

Philip Reeve

Shan Guo Man

Sam Reeve

Shan Guo Teenager

Nicholas Quirke

Nicholas Quirke

Martin Kwok

Shan Guo Control

Seth F. Miller

Airhaven Control

Rodney Cook

Scuttlebug Thug (uncredited)

Stephen Grey

Salzhaken Refugee (uncredited)

Peter Jackson

Sooty Pete (uncredited)

Gimly

Shocking nobody, _Mortal Engines_ was not very good. Trying to jam way too much into two hours than is reasonable, it instead delivers on zero things. I guess I was **kind of** interested in the character of Shrike, but that was really the whole of my positive experience with _Mortal Engines_. Maybe if this thing had come out about eight years ago in the **height** of the bizarre Steam Punk obsession that gripped the globe (even if it was a weird sort of obsession where everybody called everything they like, and themselves Steam Punk but it really wasn't required to have any relation to actual Steam Punk) then the movie could have at least done well financially, but there's no world wherein this version of _Mortal Engines_ is a consumate film. _Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product._

TalisBriedis

Good attempt. Different, unique, and the sets are great. Yeah, it has some weak points, and some of the writing/editing could have been better. But this is a refreshing change in the usual sci-fi stuff that has been coming out. Marvel and DC are flooding the market with their super heroes (not all bad, just too much) I detest all these vampire/werewolf/zombie crap (all of it) This is a nice change, and I enjoyed it! I did not know what to expect when I started to watch this, but I was pleasantly surprised. Ignore the negative reviews. Those are probably written by zombies/vampires/werewolves....

Per Gunnar Jonsson

I have to say that I liked this movie a lot. It is kind of fantasy, science fiction (emphasis on fiction here) and steam punk (or perhaps I should say diesel punk) mixed together. The world is a fairly dark post apocalyptic world where moving predator cities prays on each other. The entire concept is really quite ridiculous of course but it makes for some really fantastic and spectacular special effects and I am a sucker for spectacular special effects. In addition the overall story holds together fairly well. That is, in the context of the ludicrous world that is the background of this story in the first place of course. It is quite straightforward without too much annoying social or green preaching that plagues so many movies nowadays. Somewhat predictable but overall a good vehicle for the plentiful action. I also liked most of the characters. Both the bad guy and the good guys had decent charisma with the exception of Tom who was a bit of a naive whiner although he got it together towards the end. There where few flaws. Nothing really major except that, in one scene at the end, the city of London was shown against the wall and it was bloody tiny compared to the wall. The main bad guy’s last resort was to pummel London against the wall and was expected to break it down. Before in the movie London was depicted as really huge. That scene really screwed that and made him delusional. Apart from that, end Tom’s whining and naivety, I really liked this movie. It was the kind of over the top, fantasy/fiction movie with a big budget that you do not see every day. Of course the dickwads, a.ka “critics”) at Rotten Tomatoes and other mainstream media assholes did their best to tell everyone how bad it was. As usual that’s just the stuff that comes out of the south end of a north bound bull.

CinemaSerf

From the team that brought us everything from Middle Earth comes this great to look at, but highly derivative fantasy adventure that regurgitates a hybrid of stories and spits them out pretty unremarkably. To be fair, there is charisma between the two leads - both attractive, young, and ballsy - Hera Hilmar ("Hester)' and Robert Sheehan ("Tom") as they try to thwart the maniacal ambitions of "Thaddeus Valentine" (a suitably dramatic, "Elrond" like, Hugo Weaving) who is charged with providing an uninterruptible power source for the marauding mechanical city of London. The visual effects are super, as you might expect, and the score certainly has something of the Howard Shore about it, but the relentlessness of the out of the frying pan into the fire scenarios against impossible odds just recycle themselves once too often and the ending, though impressive to appreciate creatively, has all the jeopardy of night following day. Money has clearly been spent on this, but not on the script nor the plot. It's fine, but nothing more...