Damnation Alley

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The world is devastated by a nuclear holocaust, causing the Earth to tilt on its axis and bringing vast meteorological chaos. As the weather stabilizes, mutated insects start to emerge, preying on the survivors. The surviving crew at a U.S. Air Force bomb shelter in the Mojave Desert picks up radio signals coming from Albany. The commander, Major Eugene Denton (George Peppard), unveils two armored vehicles he has constructed and announces a plan to cross Damnation Alley, the hundred-mile-wide strip between areas of radiation hazard, to join the survivors. They set off, taking on two civilians, a novice singer they find in the ruins of Las Vegas and a wild teenager (Jackie Earle Haley), along the way. The journey is also beset by giant mutated cockroaches, storms and crazed survivalists, making for some hair-raising escapes in this post-apocalyptic thriller. (Signal One Entertainment)

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D.Moore 

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English This post-apo has a great opening, in which we see the nuclear war unleashed, a great Goldsmith score (which is why I watched Damnation Alley in the first place), and then one or two interesting scenes worth watching. But most of the rest of the time it's really boring. It gets two below-average stars. ()

JFL 

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English The talk about how Damnation Alley is a great cult sci-fi flick with souped-up effects that only languishes in the shadow of Star Wars, which was released only a few months before by the same studio, is very misleading. The creative brilliance of George Lucas and the revolutionary nature of his special effects are entirely evident when set side by side with Damnation Alley. If the sources on IMDb can be believed, even Star Wars cost less to make than Damnation Alley, where apparently a large part of the budget went into the production of fully functional futuristic vehicles, which the film doesn’t use as an attraction at all, and we only learn about the ingenuity of their construction from bonus interviews, but not from the film itself. Besides the rather poor and ridiculous visual effects, which are limited to re-colouring the sky in whole shots, the film’s fatal weakness is it’s mediocre screenplay and its undramatic execution in episodic sequences, which are basically interchangeable and have no meaning in the story as a whole. When we add to that characters who have no personality at all, then it’s really no wonder that Damnation Alley and its outdated effects didn’t hold up in comparison with Star Wars. But what’s really surprising is the existence of a handful of avowed fans who swear by this film. ()

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