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National Features >
Village Voice
Looking back on his first term.
By Roy Edroso
SF Weekly
A studio apartment in San Francisco now costs $1,700 per month. Hence the madness.
By Ashley Harrell
Westword
What to do when your friends become rock 'n' roll stars? Go along for the ride.
By Adam Cayton-Holland
Journey to the Center of the Earth
Published on July 10, 2008
Let's be clear about one thing: Journey to the Center of the Earth is more a demo reel than a narrative feature. It's a decent compendium of familiar look-at-me moments intended to show off the latest and greatest in 3-D filmmaking, in which the same thing's shot twice, more or less merged into a blurry single image and rendered vaguely lifelike through the polarized shades of the RealD glasses you get to wear (and keep!). Brendan Fraser, who's played against green screens for so long that he has forgotten how to relate to people, is Trevor Anderson, a disheveled science professor nursing an ache for a brother who died looking for the center of the Earth. Directed by Eric Brevig, the movie takes it time arriving at the planet's core and then rushes to escape from it, almost in embarrassment. There's good reason not to linger downtown: Episodes of Land of the Lost were more inspired.