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Released on June 16, 2000 by 20th Century Fox's Fox Animation Studios after less than two years in production, it was an ...
Cale joins Korso and his team to find Project Titan, the Drej hot on their trail. Here’s the thing about Titan A.E.: it wasn’t supposed to be an animated movie, let alone an animated Don Bluth ...
The villainous Drej are a bit disappointing: Made of pulsating blue light, these skeletal creatures are cold and ruthless-looking, but not all that scary. Still, "Titan A.E." provides that staple ...
TITAN A.E.: Sci-fi animation. Voices of Matt Damon, Drew Barrymore and Bill Pullman. Directed by Don Bluth and Gary Goldman. (Rated PG. 90 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.) Many of the special ...
The fact is that the Drej were hell-bent on the destruction of Earth, so hell-bent in fact that they succeeded. However, all is not lost for mankind. Luckily somewhere in space lies the Titan ...
Cale refuses, but when the Drej turn up at the space station and ... But in the end, it is inadequate, juiceless storytelling that deprives “Titan A.E.” of any dramatic force: There are ...
Titan A.E.” is an awful lot like the 1977 “Star ... and their partly invisible extraterrestrial nemeses, the Drej. Bluth and Goldman’s movie gives us the same kind of bleak future dystopia ...
Titan A.E., the bafflingly star-studded (as of now ... In the 31st century, Earth is under imminent attack by an alien species, the Drej. The young boy Cale escapes moments before the planet ...
all except for one young man who holds the map to the universe's last hope: Titan. In a race against time, the human race has to find the Titan before the illusive Drej destroy it.
Send your birthday love to Planet Bob as we reminisce about this spirited post-apocalyptic gem. “After Earth Ends, The Adventure Begins!” Sometimes a work of unique art arrives on the scene ...