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Moontrap

Moontrap (1989)

April. 28,1989
|
4.8
|
R
| Horror Science Fiction

The Space Shuttle returns to earth, but some of the equipment brought back on it begins to behave strangely. Scientists are unsure what is happening, and decide to take all necessary precautions.

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Reviews

Cebalord
1989/04/28

Very best movie i ever watch

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Hadrina
1989/04/29

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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Zandra
1989/04/30

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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Bob
1989/05/01

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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RoboRabbit89
1989/05/02

Let me get to it,this movie was good and original, a little corny in places, but damn good non the less.Walter Koenig and Bruce Campbell are great together and have good chemistry. I like how this is kinda like a buddy movie and a monster movie blended into one. And the space woman they find is very hot, I don't know her but she did a good job as well, especially being mute for most of it.I think this was well made for it's time, I think what works best about this is, it's high concept story and chemistry with it's characters, having never seen the movie before I think it has aged well, I also like that the movie released the year I was born.Overall, a well made film that is entertaining, and I hope to see more stories to this soon. Now I have seen "Moontrap: Target Earth" staring Sarah Butler, which described by the filmmakers is a stand alone sequel. I personally liked it, I seen that one first before this one and I can honestly say this movie is much better, but I still liked the sequel, it's a guilty pleasure of mine and so is this one.I give this one a 5/10. A cool, fun B-movie. Highly recommended.

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Scott LeBrun
1989/05/03

Astronauts Jason Grant (Walter Koenig of 'Star Trek' fame) and Ray Tanner (Bruce "Ash" Campbell) discover some ancient alien artifacts in the vicinity of the moon. Among them are an alien corpse (that turns out to be 14,000 years old), and an object somewhat resembling one of the eggs from the "Alien" franchise. When the object and the corpse merge into a menacing cyborg, our heroes are motivated to make a return trip to the moon to see what else is out there. They're in for some more discoveries. This time, one of them is a very human looking female named Mera (lovely Leigh Lombardi).Director Robert Dyke and screenwriter Tex Ragsdale try not to overstate matters. Basically, Jason has to figure out for himself what the story is, and expresses it out loud just to make sure that we get it. Dyke does a creditable job of working with an obviously very limited budget, but establishes a fairly grim atmosphere right from the start. The practical special effects are actually pretty damn good considering the constraints. Joseph LoDuca composed a decent enough score. While Dyke and Ragsdale are to be commended for creating a serious mood, they don't hesitate to insert a little levity here and there. As can be expected, the swaggering Campbell does have his moments. There's just a little bit of gore, but folks looking for exploitable elements will be pleased to see that Lombardi and an exotic dancer both bare their breasts. The dialogue isn't always so hot, but the performances are fine from the two leads, and they do create some chemistry. It IS nice to see veteran Koenig in a top billed hero role.Be sure to wait through the closing credits for a little bit of an epilogue."Moontrap" is decent, deliberately paced entertainment that may have some appeal for lovers of sci-fi / horror combos.Six out of 10.

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shinsrevenge
1989/05/04

I was very impressed the first time I saw the movie. And my opinion hasn't changed over the years. Honestly, I can't find any flaws or weak points in Moontrap. The special effects are great, everything from the alien space ships to the robot creatures was imposing. The music helps building up the right atmosphere and is always fitting. The plot is exciting, dramatical and quite pacey. You never get the chance to bore. The acting is pretty good, too.I'd say, that the story isn't very predictable. I can't be sure about that, though, because I've seen Moontrap so many times that there are hardly any surprises. But even the fact that you can see it over and over again should tell much about the quality of the movie.There are some films, that you can (barely) watch once and then never again. This isn't one of them.

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Vomitron_G
1989/05/05

I had me some fun revisiting MOONTRAP the other day. Had not seen it since my teen-days. A small but ambitious sci-fi/horror film about a race of robotic aliens hidden on the dark side of the moon, occupying themselves since ages with building a giant mother-ship - that thing was huge! - to invade earth and using human bodies for spare-parts (VIRUS with Jamie Lee Curtis, anyone?). A weird film altogether with a lot of great and some not-so-great special effects, including nifty looking miniatures. Starring none less than Walter Koenig (from the original STAR TREK series) and Bruce Campbell, who's acting his way very inappropriately through this film, like if he was convinced he was doing another EVIL DEAD film. Can't really call this a great film, with its pacing problems and illogical goings-on, but it was a blast seeing it again.

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