Metacritic Film

Blast from the Past

Starring Brendan Fraser, Alicia Silverstone, Christopher Walken, Sissy Spacek, Dave Foley, Joey Slotnick, Dale Raoul, and Don Yesso

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for brief language, sex and drug references

New Line Cinema
Romance
112 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters February 12, 1999

A romantic comedy about the fallout of falling in love. At its center are two children of the Nuclear Age -- one a savvy, cynical, modern L.A. woman; the other an innocent, naïve young man cocooned since 1962 in a bomb shelter. (New Line)

WRITTEN BY
Hugh Wilson
Bill Kelly (also story)

DIRECTED BY
Hugh Wilson

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

48 / 100

Critic Reviews

75 USA Today
Blast feels positively timely if not downright positive about the human race's ability to endure. Forget radiation. Fraser and folks actually survive three decades-plus of Perry Como music. [12 February 1999, Life, p.8E]
75 San Francisco Examiner Jane Ganahl
Spacek and Walken are pure comic energy.
75 ReelViews
As a date movie or for a solo night out, Blast from the Past offers more than standard romantic comedy fare.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
The movie is funny and entertaining in all the usual ways, yes, but I was grateful that it tried for more: that it was actually about something, that it had an original premise, that it used satire and irony and had sly undercurrents.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
It would be nice to say that Blast From the Past is, but it ain't exactly. Half-blast is more like it.
70 Newsweek
Spacek is brilliantly funny, slowly transforming Helen from a nervous 60s housewife into a liquored-up one. I could have watched her in the vibrating fat-burner, eyes closed, lazily gripping a martini glass, for hours.
67 Entertainment Weekly Troy Patterson
As pleasantly plastic as its retro-chic sets.
60 Washington Post
Like last winter's "Pleasantville," this movie juxtaposes classic virtues against modern mores. The former did so with far more invention.
60 The New York Times
Fortunately, the Webber shelter is a jaunty monument to kitsch, and the Webbers themselves are an appealingly batty crew.
50 Variety
A time-warp comedy that starts out kinda "Pleasantville" and gets pretty Tepidsville, Blast From the Past expends scant imagination or style on a fun premise that seems an open invitation to both.
50 Chicago Reader
Demands that we see as coincidental if not ironic the ease with which Fraser cuts a rug at a swing club when he's hopelessly naive about everything else that's being revived in the 90s when he emerges.
50 Washington Post
A mediocre comic romance.
50 Los Angeles Times
Intermittently appealing movie romance.
50 Village Voice Gary Dauphin
Most fun when it's locked up with daddy.
40 Austin Chronicle Hollis Chacona
It was sweet, but it should have been better.
40 TV Guide
This bizarre hybrid of romantic comedy cliches and less-than-subtle social commentary defeats their best efforts to make it sparkle.
38 Chicago Tribune
Blast is just shooting blanks. [12 February 1999, Friday, p.A]
30 LA Weekly
A flimsy premise to begin with, it’s been punctured beyond repair by an amateur script from Bill Kelly and director Hugh Wilson (The First Wives Club), and by Wilson’s shocking ineptitude with dialogue, framing and pace.
30 The Onion (A.V. Club)
The first 20 minutes of Blast From The Past, in which the film actually does something with its central concept, aren't that bad.

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