A mysterious building is the gateway to infinite parallel Earths.A mysterious building is the gateway to infinite parallel Earths.A mysterious building is the gateway to infinite parallel Earths.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaParallels was created as a television pilot, but Fox Digital Studios morphed it into a stand-alone movie.
- GoofsThe film is set in New Orleans, which is below sea level, and kept from flooding by a levee system which includes pump stations which constantly remove water from the city. If New Orleans was nuked, it would be under water, as it was when the pumps failed during Hurricane Katrina.
- Quotes
Ronan Carver: You're saying you're from some weird alternate Earth?
Polly: Not from my point of view. You guys are the ones who are drinking coffees that look like ice cream sundaes and shit.
- ConnectionsVersion of The Building
- SoundtracksWork For It
Composed by Jason Crenshaw, Carly Greenberg, Skylar Mones, Joshua Walker
Performed by 21st Century Girl
Featured review
If you have managed to find your way to this review then you already know that this film is not really a film, it is more of a indie production tied to Netflix, intended for a series, possibly orphaned, maybe not, no one knows as this review is penned.
It is hard to review "orphaned" pilots which dead-end. That is a given.
That said, I liked it.
I liked it because it belongs to what I consider the "dirty" sci-fi genre, that is, sci fi produced on such a barebones budget that all the money goes into the human elements while the sets (even in the Earth that never experienced the nuke!) look like they need Molly Maid.
In "dirty" sci fi, the actors are unknowns (which by no means suggests that they are bad) and the FX are minimal, and every now and then you get a scene where you swear that someone ad-libbed a line and they left it in anyway because that was cheaper than re-shooting.
Again, I liked it. It is a refreshing change from the "perfection" you tend to see these days in mainstream TV sci-fi, especially the stuff from Canada, where (they say) getting the lighting wrong when setting a scene is a hanging crime.
In many ways it reminds me of the British series Utopia (not the US knockoff) where interesting characters and good performances drove the show.
Watching, I made a mental note to myself that, if I ever end up in a hub to parallel universes, I would welcome a cute Asian chick popping out of a closet, with a lot of 'tude, and who generally acts like she read the script to the end and already knows how things are supposed to turn out.
Just sayin.
It is hard to review "orphaned" pilots which dead-end. That is a given.
That said, I liked it.
I liked it because it belongs to what I consider the "dirty" sci-fi genre, that is, sci fi produced on such a barebones budget that all the money goes into the human elements while the sets (even in the Earth that never experienced the nuke!) look like they need Molly Maid.
In "dirty" sci fi, the actors are unknowns (which by no means suggests that they are bad) and the FX are minimal, and every now and then you get a scene where you swear that someone ad-libbed a line and they left it in anyway because that was cheaper than re-shooting.
Again, I liked it. It is a refreshing change from the "perfection" you tend to see these days in mainstream TV sci-fi, especially the stuff from Canada, where (they say) getting the lighting wrong when setting a scene is a hanging crime.
In many ways it reminds me of the British series Utopia (not the US knockoff) where interesting characters and good performances drove the show.
Watching, I made a mental note to myself that, if I ever end up in a hub to parallel universes, I would welcome a cute Asian chick popping out of a closet, with a lot of 'tude, and who generally acts like she read the script to the end and already knows how things are supposed to turn out.
Just sayin.
- A_Different_Drummer
- May 19, 2015
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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