Lost City Raiders | |
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Directed by | Jean de Segonzac |
Produced by | Marlow De Mardt, Brigid Olen |
Screenplay by | Jean de Segonzac |
Starring | James Brolin, Ian Somerhalder, Ben Cross, Jamie King, Elodie Frenck, Bettina Zimmermann |
Music by | Gert Wilden, Jr. |
Cinematography | Giulio Biccari |
Editing by | Hans Funck, Scott Powell |
Studio | ProSieben, Sci Fi Channel, Tandem Communications |
Release date(s) | October 31, 2008(Germany) |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States; Germany; Austria |
Language | English |
Budget | $6 million |
Lost City Raiders is a 2008 made-for-television science fiction film written and directed by Jean de Segonzac. It starred James Brolin, Ian Somerhalder, Ben Cross, Jamie King, Elodie Frenck, and Bettina Zimmermann.
Contents |
In year 2048, global warming has caused much of the surface of the earth to become flooded. In the city of New Vatican, Cardinal Battaglia believes that the global inundation can be gotten rid of by using the "scepter of Moses." This is the staff that Moses used to part the Red Sea with during The Exodus.
Cardinal Battaglia contacts John Kubiak (James Brolin) and his sons Jack (Ian Somerhalder) and Thomas (Jamie King). The Kubiak family is raiding the sunken New York City for various treasures lost beneath the waves. The Kubiaks are to assist Brother Fontana and Father Giacopetti in a submarine to retrieve the scepter and save the earth. They are opposed by Nicholas Filiminov (Ben Cross), who wants the scepter for his own purposes. The Kubiak brothers are also involved with two women, Giovanna (Bettina Zimmermann) and Cara (Elodie Frenck) who may or may not be on their side.
German commercial television station ProSieben, the American cable television network Sci Fi Channel, Austrian production company Tandem Communications produced the film.[1] Its budget was US$6 million.[2]
The film was first announced in March 2006.[3] Tandem Communications intentionally picked an international cast, part of the company's successful strategy of making films easily marketable around the world.[3] Within weeks of the announcement of the production, the film had already been pre-sold in Germany, France, and Spain.[3]
Principal cinematography was to have begun in the summer of 2006,[3] but did not begin until April 2008.[1]
The 90-minute film was intended to air in two parts.[4] The Sci Fi Channel hoped that it would lead to a series.[5] The film had its worldwide television debut on 31 October 2008 in Germany. It debuted on the Sci Fi Channel on 22 November 2008.
David Hinckley in the New York Daily News found the production values exceptionally low and the film predictable. "Sadly, the action turns out to be fairly predictable. Not as predictable as Brolin's acting, but predictable nonetheless, which may be why the filmmakers insert a romantic subplot involving not one, but two spirited, adventuresome women."[6] Linda Stasi of the New York Post called it bad and cheesy.[7] The Tampa Tribune called it "Waterworld without the budget" and an "awful movie".[8]