The Wandering Earth (Liu Lang Di Qiu)
Struggling against saving humanity from frozen and destruction, after the death of the sun, the whole world unite and build a large planet to send earth to another star system, the thing that brings destruction and risks the life of humanity, so a group of teenagers go and fight for the safety of the whole world.
September 25, 1974 in Chongqing, China
9 September 1979, Shanxi China
3 April 1974, Beijing, China
2 January 1952, Xiamen, Fujian, China
August 29, 1983 in Tiedong, Anshan, Liaoning, China
April 23, 1981 in Pingdingshan, Henan, China
February 11, 2019
It's worth a look if you're curious about the future of tentpole cinema.February 19, 2019
It makes absolutely zero sense at times, especially in the frantic and bonkers third act.February 11, 2019
Director Frant Gwo gives the film a surprising stateliness, especially in the scenes of the mobile Earth wandering the cosmos, wreathed in tiny blue jets that leave eerie space-contrails behind.February 17, 2019
The Wandering Earth is a marvel of imagination, inspiration, execution, and excitementFebruary 17, 2019
It certainly proves that the Chinese film industry can hold its own at the multiplex: It is just as awash in murky computer imagery, stupefying exposition and manipulative sentimentality as the average Hollywood tentpole.February 06, 2019
Even before it concludes in a bombastic manner that is more Michael Bay than Christopher Nolan, it's apparent that The Wandering Earth has made a giant leap for China's science fiction cinema but not for the genre itself.February 15, 2019
I can't think of another recent computer-graphics-driven blockbuster that left me feeling this giddy because of its creators' consummate attention to detail and infectious can-do spirit.February 15, 2019
If you have any palate for big over-the-top scifi blockbusters I think you will really enjoy The Wandering Earth. Who knows? You might even find yourself cheering the Chinese on as they save the EarthFebruary 21, 2019
The characters remain archetypes, but the film eventually earns its syrupy sentimentality.