Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Fantastic Voyage is a 1966 American science fiction adventure film directed by Richard Fleischer and written by Harry Kleiner, based on a story by Otto Klement and Jerome Bixby. The film is about a submarine crew who is shrunk to microscopic size and venture into the body of an injured scientist to repair damage to his brain.
Fantastic Voyage is an American animated science fiction television series based on the famous 1966 film directed by Richard Fleischer. [1] The series consists of 17 half-hour episodes, airing Saturday mornings on ABC-TV from September 14, 1968, through January 4, 1969, then rebroadcast the following fall season.
[27] [28] After screen testing for Saul David's Our Man Flint, [29] she was cast in a leading role in David's sci-fi film Fantastic Voyage (1966), in which she portrayed a member of a medical team that is miniaturized and injected into the body of an injured scientist with the mission to save his life. The film was a hit and made her a star.
Raquel Welch, known for her roles in Fantastic Voyage and Bedazzled, has died at age 82. Celebrity Deaths in 2023: Stars We've Lost Read article “The legendary bombshell actress of film ...
Kanemoto attended high school in Kamogata, Okayama and enrolled in the voice acting course at the vocational school of Art College in Kobe.She joined Production Baobab. She made her anime debut Sora no Manimani with her stage name Juri Aikawa, after being selected to play Shirley by an audience vote at the DreamParty Tokyo convention
As for other pursuits, the filmmaker once again brought up his plans to produce a remake of the 1966 tour-through-the-human-body “Fantastic Voyage,” a project Cameron and his partner Jon ...
Moana (voiced by Auli‘i Cravalho, far left) sails set sail with a new crew of unlikely seafarers including farmer Kele (David Fane), storyteller Moni (Hualālai Chung) and engineer Loto (Rose ...
[3] In the 1960s, Fantastic Voyage featured miniature people, but no major film revisited the concept until the 1980s. Grantland ' s Claire L. Evans said in 2015, "The conceit, being inherently silly, was reframed as a vehicle for broad physical comedies and family movies." She said, "These kinds of films reframe domestic life—a bowl of ...