Metacritic Film

Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within

Starring Ming-na, Alec Baldwin, James Woods, Donald Sutherland, Ving Rhames, Steve Buscemi, and Peri Gilpin

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for sci-fi action violence

Columbia Pictures / Sony Pictures Entertainment
Sci-fi
106 minutes | Color
Japan / USA
Released In Theaters July 11, 2001

Set on Earth in the year 2065, an invasion threatens to extinguish the remains of mankind and quite possibly every living creature on the planet. The fate of all life on Earth relies on one woman's determination. But time is running out. (Columbia Tristar)

WRITTEN BY
Al Reinert
Hironobu Sakaguchi
Jeff Vintar

DIRECTED BY
Hironobu Sakaguchi

Overall Metascore

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

49 / 100

Critic Reviews

90 New Times (L.A.)
Spectacular entertainment.
88 Chicago Sun-Times
The story is nuts-and-bolts space opera, without the intelligence and daring of, say, Steven Spielberg's ''A.I.'' But the look of the film is revolutionary. Final Fantasy is a technical milestone, like the first talkies or 3-D movies.
83 Entertainment Weekly
May not tell a great story, but it's a great wow.
78 Austin Chronicle
Unlike anything you've ever seen before, Final Fantasy is, finally, one for the history books, and tremendous fun to boot. It makes Lara Croft look like an old maid.
75 Baltimore Sun
It's a blast!
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
Is Final Fantasy decent sci-fi? Yes, more than decent.
75 Boston Globe
Despite its conceptual shortfall, is worth seeing, if only to update yourself on what can emerge from a keyboard these days.
63 New York Daily News
You watch with amazement their physical movements, how closely their lips match their overly precise, prerecorded dialogue, yet they're not human enough to get us past the stunt factor and lost in the drama.
63 USA Today
Moviegoers accustomed to Hollywood action probably won't find this contemplative adventure so appealing.
63 San Francisco Chronicle
Tends to be lugubrious.
60 Mr. Showbiz
The result is a feast for the eyes but frequently a famine for the frontal lobes, a movie of towering imagination and middling rewards.
60 Variety
As computer game-derived features go, it sure beats "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider."
60 Rolling Stone
But the film exerts a hold. The crux is: for how long?
50 Christian Science Monitor
This sort of cinema is as dehumanizing as the aliens who serve as its intergalactic bad guys.
50 Village Voice
The techies still can't manage to make two characters look convincingly into each other's eyes -- it's like watching Disney World animatronic figures do soap opera.
50 Chicago Tribune
Isn't likely to satisfy the gamers' appetite for action. It also probably isn't heady enough for the science-fiction crowd, and it's too remote for those who simply wish to be immersed in a head-spinning fantasy world.
50 Los Angeles Times
The film's plot gets so convoluted no nongamer older than 14 will be able to follow it all.
50 New York Post
What makes Final Fantasy a final failure is a predictable, nonsensical plot, laughably lame dialogue and a surfeit of cloying environmentalist piety.
50 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
For all the grace of the animation and visual splendor, the stilted script and emotionless "performances" give this digital artifact a distinctly stiff, wooden flavor.
42 Portland Oregonian
Final Fantasy doesn't pop.
40 TV Guide
The movie exists only as a showcase for the animation technology known as hyperReal, a photo-realistic simulation of space, figure and movement that hopes to one day erase the line between animation and live action once and for all.
40 Salon.com
An offshoot of a popular computer game, is really all about inducing visual awe. And for the first few minutes, it does.
30 Wall Street Journal Ed Epstein
Although packaged as a movie, is in reality a clever 106-minute promo for Sony's PlayStation II games.
30 LA Weekly
A soulless affair.
30 The New York Times
The lip movements of the animated figures are slightly slow, so you feel as if you're watching a badly dubbed Japanese creature feature from the 1960's. The dialogue is almost as stilted, and after a while you drift into that half-dream state that inert movies can create.
30 Chicago Reader
The thin story covering her acquisition of one wave after another while narrowly escaping death time and again is strictly for player one.
20 Washington Post
As monotonous as Muzak, and when it comes to the plot, both bewildering and trite.
20 Washington Post
I never forgot for a minute that I was watching a cartoon, all the way down to the silly, pseudo-spiritual ending, an ending whose very incomprehensibility is actually one of the more endearing hallmarks of anime.

CLOSE THIS WINDOW

©2009 CNET Networks Inc. All rights reserved.