Movie About Family Surviving a Plane Crash in Alaska

1996 action-adventure flick directed past Fraser Clarke Heston

Alaska
Alaskaposter1996.jpg

Theatrical release affiche

Directed by Fraser Clarke Heston
Written by Andy Burg
Scott Myers
Produced by Andy Burg
Starring
  • Thora Birch
  • Vincent Kartheiser
  • Dirk Benedict
  • Charlton Heston
Cinematography Tony Westman
Edited by Rob Kobrin
Music by Reg Powell

Product
companies

  • Columbia Pictures
  • Castle Rock Entertainment
  • Fuchs/Burg Productions
Distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing

Release engagement

  • Baronial 14, 1996 (1996-08-xiv)

Running time

109 minutes
Land U.s.a.
Language English language
Budget $24 meg[ citation needed ]
Box office $11,829,959[one]

Alaska is a 1996 American gamble survival pic directed by Fraser Clarke Heston and produced by Andy Burg. The story, written by Burg and Scott Myers, centers on two children who search through the Alaskan wilderness for their lost begetter. During their journey they find a polar conduct who helps lead them to their father. However, a poacher with a want to capture the acquit follows shut backside the kids and the polar bear. The flick was filmed primarily in the Purcell Mountains of British Columbia in Canada and the city of Vancouver. The film was a box office bomb, grossing only $11,829,959 over a $24 million budget. It received negative reviews upon its release.

Plot [edit]

Jake Barnes (Dirk Benedict) is flying a aeroplane over the Alaskan wilderness. While he is flight, he is communicating with a man named Charlie (Ben Primal), who works for Quincy Air Service. A polar carry cub and its mother are then shown playing in the snowfall, not knowing that they are beingness watched by a pair of poachers, Colin Perry (Charlton Heston) and Mr. Koontz (Duncan Fraser), and the adult behave is so shot, leaving the cub orphaned.

Jake'due south daughter Jessie (Thora Birch) and her friend Scrap (Ryan Kent) are observing wild fauna in their kayaks before her dinner. Jake begins telling her where he is flight from, at what time he left that location, and his air speed. Jessie calculates that her male parent is passing Devils Thumb. Jake then lands his plane on a lake, where Charlie is waiting to tie the plane up to the dock. His son, Sean (Vincent Kartheiser) scolds his father for moving their family to Alaska after their female parent'south decease. Every bit Jake is making an emergency run, his plane's engines stall, causing him to lose control and crash in the Alaska wilderness. Frustrated by the lack of search effort past the constabulary, Sean and Jessie leave to find their father on their ain.

As they kayak through the chilly waters of the Gulf of Alaska, they stop to rest on a beach. They presently realize that the shore is habitation to a poachers' camp. They and so discover the skin of a polar carry and the young polar bear from earlier, that has been locked in a cage. They let the polar bear run free, hoping that information technology will salvage itself. Afterward the conduct leaves their army camp, Colin Perry appears, in hunt of the polar acquit that he believes is rightfully his property as he intends to sell the cub to a customer in Hong Kong. Koontz so arrives and notices teeth marks on the frying pan, alerting Perry that the bear was there. Colin's beliefs that the children stole the conduct from his campsite are confirmed when he finds his missing lighter next to their camping gear. Perry orders the kids to tell the bear to "come domicile" (Perry is referring to the cage at his camp as the bear's home). The adjacent day, Jessie and Sean proceed in their search to find their missing father. They exit their kayak and begin searching on foot. They soon observe that the polar comport has in one case again followed them on their journey. Perry and Koontz, likewise, have followed the youngsters, and this time, they destroy the oars in their kayak and hibernate the kayak in the woods but in case someone comes looking for them. Just so, Charlie arrives in a helicopter in search of Jessie and Sean. Perry shows Charlie a piece of the oar and tells him that he found it 25 miles northward of their electric current position. Charlie then departs in his helicopter in hopes of finding the children, who he believes to be in grave danger and eventually discovers the two men were actually poachers after finding their campsite.

Jessie safely reaches the lesser, but Sean slips and tumbles downward the mountain, hitting his head on a rock. The two then continue their journeying and find a log cabin in the woods. They accept shelter and Sean lies down in the bed. While in the cabin, Sean notices a canoe hanging from the ceiling. Jessie and Sean take the canoe and go along on in their search for their begetter. While they are canoeing down a river, the ii kids meet brutal rapids that send them and their canoe downwards a waterfall. Jessie is able to escape the raging river but in one case again, Sean's lack of feel in the wilderness causes him to struggle. He is thrust downwardly the river where he is helped out of the common cold water past Jessie's friend Chip and his gramps Ben (Gordon Tootoosis). As the kids recover past the riverside, Scrap's father (Byron Chief-Moon) wants to send Jessie and Sean home, simply Ben and Fleck wish to help the ii on their journey. The ii proceed on their quest with their befriended polar bear, whom they named Cubby, past their side.

Cubby leads them until he is shot with a tranquilizer sprint past Colin. He then takes Cubby away in his helicopter, but Koontz didn't load the darts with enough tranquilizer fluids, assuasive Cubby to awaken in the helicopter and trying to fight his manner gratuitous. Equally Koontz lowers the helicopter, Cubby escapes and bites Perry's right knee, causing Perry to shoot Koontz with a tranquilizer dart and damage the helicopter as well. Meanwhile, the children go along on in their search for their missing male parent. They stumble upon some wreckage from his plane crash and begin yelling for him to respond. Non able to yell, their father shoots another flare into the air. This fourth dimension the children see it and run to his rescue. They find the plane hanging on the border of a cliff, and Jessie lowers Sean down the side of the mountain to reach their father. Simply equally it looks like Jessie is going to lose control of the rope, Cubby appears and helps Jessie pull the rope. With Cubby's help, Jessie and Sean are able to enhance their father up the side of the mountain. Just as the family is reunited, Charlie shows up in his helicopter to have them abode and complete the rescue. Perry and Koontz are then shown to exist trekking from their now disabled helicopter afterwards their skirmish with Cubby, and Cubby is then introduced to a new polar bear family unit afterward saying proficient-bye to Sean and Jessie.

Cast [edit]

  • Thora Birch as Jessie Barnes
  • Vincent Kartheiser as Sean Barnes
  • Dirk Benedict as Jake Barnes
  • Charlton Heston equally Colin Perry, the Poacher
  • Duncan Fraser as Mr. Koontz, Perry's Pilot
  • Gordon Tootoosis as Ben, Quincy General Store
  • Ben Cardinal equally Charlie, Quincy Air Service
  • Ryan Kent as Chip
  • Don S. Davis equally Sergeant Sam Grazer
  • Dolly Madsen as Mrs. Ben
  • Stephen Eastward. Miller as Trooper Sam Harvey
  • Byron Chief-Moon equally Chip's Grandfather
  • Kristin Lehman equally Florence

Reception [edit]

Box office [edit]

The film managed to bring in US domestic revenues of only $11,829,959[1] against a product budget of $24 million.[ citation needed ]

Critical response [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 25% based on reviews from 12 critics, with an average of 4.70 out of 10.[2]

Emanuel Levy of Variety wrote: "Beautiful vistas, Thora Birch and a cute bear can't compensate for the routine story and sloppy direction of this old-fashioned family adventure."[3] Jeff Vice of the Deseret News wrote: "Really bad performances, an awful script straight out of a TV movie of the week and 1 of the to the lowest degree highly-seasoned, most irritating immature heroes in contempo screen history."[4]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "Alaska". Box Office Mojo.
  2. ^ "Alaska". Rotten Tomatoes. 1996. Retrieved 2022-03-01 .
  3. ^ Levy, Emanuel (12 August 1996). "Alaska". Diverseness.
  4. ^ Jeff Vice (one May 2001). "Film review: Alaska". Deseret News.

External links [edit]

  • Alaska at IMDb

saundersvene1945.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_(1996_film)

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