Read our review of '65,' a science fiction action movie where Adam Driver fight dinosaurs on prehistoric Earth.
The main event of it all, Driver fighting a T-rex, is something the film teases for all its worth before it unfolds in the conclusion. What should have been a stripped-down story is made into an overwrought and ambling film where the staging of the action ensures that it only rarely carries any actual weight. The fact that this species with the capacity to travel through space is still one where healthcare is not accessible to all is a grim prospect, but there is no interest in exploring this as it is all about getting the story in motion. A narrative built around traveling from point A to point B could work to keep the emphasis on the action. The trouble is that it can’t overcome what proves to be an unimaginative experience that is further hampered by poor direction, writing, effects, and everything a film needs to hold together. This all begins with on-screen text informing us of the necessary information to understand that our humanoid protagonist Mills (Driver) is actually part of an entirely different species than our own.
Adam Driver has his fans, but he seems determined to test their loyalty with some of his recent film choices, the sci-fi thriller "65" being the latest ...
Written and directed by the team of Scott Beck and Bryan Woods (whose writing credits include “A Quiet Place”), “65” somehow manages to include a lot of dinosaurs and still be fairly boring. The only other survivor is an orphaned young girl, Koa (Ariana Greenblatt), which, shades of Although the title refers to how many million years ago Driver’s character visits Earth – encountering dinosaurs when he gets there – it could just as easily denote the score the movie earns on a scale of one to 200. [“Marriage Story”](https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/06/entertainment/marriage-story-review/index.html) the tale of the tape has been pretty bleak, including “ [Annette,”](https://www.cnn.com/2021/08/06/entertainment/annette-review/index.html) [“House of Gucci,” “White Noise”](https://www.cnn.com/2022/12/29/entertainment/white-noise-revew/index.html) and now this tepid thrill ride, raising the question of whether it’s time for him to become a bit more choosy. Yet after his Oscar-nominated turn in [has his fans](https://www.cnn.com/style/article/adam-driver-burberry-ltw/index.html), but he seems determined to test their loyalty with some of his recent film choices, the sci-fi thriller “65” being the latest among them.
If you were to travel back in time you'd find a mix of the familiar and strange on our planet.
Of course, the question hanging over all of 65 is whether the inhabitants of the Cretaceous world would chase down a human morsel just for the novelty of it. Almost certainly mysteries and dangers existed in the Late Cretaceous of North America that we don’t know yet. rex in 65 indicates that the story unfolds in what’s now western North America, one of the areas of the Cretaceous world we’ve come to know quite well. “If a time traveler should be lost in the latest Cretaceous of North America,” says Alfio Alessandro Chiarenza, a paleontologist with the University of Vigo in Spain, they would see “lush tropical forests covering the lowlands to an abundance of streams running through them from nearby mountains.” The range wouldn’t look like it does today, but would be lower and still be in the process of being pushed up. Despite the impression that the Late Cretaceous was the peak of the “Age of Dinosaurs,” the great reptiles wouldn’t necessarily be around every other tree. For that reason, many production companies often shoot their prehistoric films in places like British Columbia, where mossy forests of redwoods at least approximate the Cretaceous look. Before considering a stroll through the Late Cretaceous forest, or to the theater, you should know a few things. Earth was still very much a greenhouse world, with high levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere but relatively lower amounts of oxygen than today. The world was warmer than it is now, with an average summer temperature of about 82 degrees, but ice had once again begun to build at the poles. We still inhabit the same planet as our favorite saurians, after all, and the world of the dinosaurs was not quite like what we often see in the movies. [revised the end of the Cretaceous Period](https://stratigraphy.org/ICSchart/ChronostratChart2012.jpg) to be about 66 million years ago rather than the previous estimate of 65.5. From the trailers released so far, 65 follows the struggle of a pilot (Adam Driver) and a child (Ariana Greenblatt) as they stumble through Cretaceous forests and past ancient geysers as they’re chased by Tyrannosaurus, Velociraptor-like carnivores and other prehistoric terrors.
65, starring Adam Driver and Ariana Greenblatt, is out now in cinemas, but the sci-fi dinosaur movie just never lives up to its premise.
Instead of keeping them to separate movies, they merged them together and didn't succeed with either. Although the less said about where this story actually ends up, the better, even if the awkward nature of the final montage is a perfect capper to the confused tone of the entire movie. Beck and Woods certainly want to hit on deeper themes of grief and death, yet their own concept is inherently ridiculous so it's a tonal misfire. Here, there are dark, adult moments (such as Mills considering suicide) and they mesh awkwardly with the family-friendly sci-fi action. The movie was shrouded in secrecy until that [first trailer](https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/trailers/a42230581/65-movie-trailer-adam-driver/) made the title clear: it's 65 million years ago and a stranded pilot finds himself facing down dinosaurs. There's no real depth or subtlety here with an obvious metaphor of Mills trying to protect Koa like he couldn't his own daughter, so the emotional beats never land as you see them coming a mile off.
Adam Driver stars in '65' as a spaceship pilot stranded on Earth 65 million years ago. But is he supposed to be an alien? A time-traveler?
In a movie that didn’t start off by telling us it was taking place on Earth, this might be the final reveal, an aha moment that makes the context of the title clear — but it isn’t. And when I posed the same question to a studio representative as I had to friends, I was told something along the lines of “the answer is in your heart,” making me feel a warm sense of connection as I considered the possibility that the people involved in making, distributing, and marketing this motion picture shared my confusion. At no point during 65, which is the work of A Quiet Place writers Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, do Mills and Koa show the slightest recognition that the dinosaurs repeatedly trying to murder them are dinosaurs, which would be a point in the “aliens” column, or a sign that paleontology will fall drastically out of fashion in the millennia to come. What I’m getting at here is that I was running a little late to my screening of 65, and when I finally clambered into my seat in the dark, the movie had already started and I’d missed the first few minutes. One said yes, with the caveat that she’d seen it early enough that that might have changed — the movie has clearly been edited into oblivion, and there were rumors of multiple versions being A/B tested for audiences as late as last month. Film criticism is more an art than a science — a deeply human endeavor to which we bring our own personal histories, our insights, our limits, and our baggage in what is, more than anything, an act of sublimated autobiography.
65 is a high-concept B-movie from writers of A Quiet Place Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, who this time both write and direct. Sam Raimi produces, while Adam ...
So while no sequel is primed, it’s worth staying through this initial set of names. 65 is set 65 million years ago. Which is frustrating as the film doesn’t need such a heavy-handed moment to tug on audience heartstrings, and while the scene is clearly there to trigger tears, it’s much more likely to elicit groans.”
Adam Driver fights to survive on prehistoric Earth in this entertaining popcorn movie. 65. Source: Sony Pictures. '65'. Dirs/scr: Scott Beck, Bryan Woods.
Left to create a world between a soundstage and a swamp, Kevin Ishioka, aided by Salvatore Torino’s lensing, provides a credible world for Mills and Koa. The thrill of 65 is simple ‘they’re behind you’ jumps. Thankfully Mills is brave, super-ripped-fit, a crack shot and able to take repeated punishment (a stabbing, a dislocated shoulder, being consumed by a swamp) and still soldier on. How has the production design managed to be so creative given most of the film’s budget seems to have been spent on Driver and dino-effects? Adam Driver gives the type of performance almost never associated with an action film in 65, a highly efficient thriller from the writers of A Quiet Place. 65 is a high-concept film – dinosaurs, space, Adam Driver, a kid – with a tiny cast, one of whom conducts most of her performance via hologram: it’s old style, in other words.
Chief art critic Mark Hudson urges everyone to go and check out the Cézanne exhibition while there's still a chance, and features writer Annabel Nugent walks us ...
[told The Independent this week](https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/features/mh370-plane-that-disappeared-netflix-b2296271.html). Cyrus recently said the new record is divided into “morning” and “night” themes, with the former capturing the “potential of new possibility” and the latter taking on a slinkier, sexier attitude. After Ellie’s (Bella Ramsey) traumatic ordeal with a cannibalistic religious group in the penultimate episode, she’s feeling pretty out of sorts in this grand finale. As part of New Diorama’s bold new season of work, a musical by Breach Theatre will explore the impact this law had on the lives of LGBT+ people. “A lot of the public debates that happened around gay rights are being almost resurrected around trans rights now,” said director Billy Barrett. The record’s fusion of jazz, hip-hop and classical music will be accompanied by powerful sound, light, and video installations. The film is often a bit of a stealth remake of past Scream incarnations, but when the blueprint for this series (masked killer; lots of suspects; likeable heroes) is so bulletproof, it’s hard to complain. Grab a last-minute ticket and you might even see The Independent’s own Nicole Vassell in the crowd – or you can read her review the next morning. Scream VI, featuring returning stars Jenna Ortega, Courteney Cox and Hayden Panettiere, shifts the action to New York and takes full advantage of the city’s eerie claustrophobia. Critics haven’t been able to see this “Adam Driver fights a dinosaur” pic, which usually isn’t the best sign of quality. The monumental Bathers series, as well as some wonderful brooding late landscapes and still lives, make it amply clear why the reclusive Post-Impressionist became one of the great progenitors of Modernism and still inspires legions of artists today. The Independent has compiled a guide to the best cultural activities and events taking place over the next few days, for our weekly Arts Agenda.
In 65, it's Adam Driver versus dinosaurs and personal demons, as he plays a pilot stranded in prehistoric times - here's our review...
Beck and Woods have clearly seen the popularity of The Mandalorian and The Last Of Us and noted that ‘reluctant adoptive dad’ is a formula that’s a guaranteed win. Mills is clearly troubled by the daughter he left behind and in many ways Koa is a presence causing both comfort and concern for him. It’s a movie that feels very tactile, as Driver is very rarely not covered in mud and various other gunk. Most of 65 involves Mills and Greenblatt trekking through the harsh wilderness – with an early scene demonstrating exactly how harsh. Only Mills and the young Koa (Ariana Greenblatt) survive, but they don’t speak the same language and he has no means of translating. Cut to a space ship that Mills is piloting, transporting cryogenically frozen passengers to an unknown destination.
Adam Driver's latest flick promises to entertain fans as he battles dinosaurs. Audiences want to know, does 65 have a post-credit scene?
The film currently has a score of 5.7/10 on IMDb and a 28% rotten score on the Tomatometer. From trees to skyscrapers, it is possible that this planet could be detailing the evolution of planet Earth. The film has a run-time of roughly 93 minutes, promising not to overstay its welcome.
While dino-confrontations can get bloody and the plot can get silly, 65's father-daughter story makes this B-movie better.
Even at 9, you’d think Koa would be a little suspicious, given the state of the other half of the ship and, y’know, the dead bodies there and stuff. Despite the language barrier between Mills and Koa, Mills still manages to lie to Koa—communicating to her that her parents are alive and well with the other half of the ship. He’s written for a number of other publications, too, including Time, The Washington Post and Christianity Today. And except for a rather surprising amount of dino-blood and guts, 65 plays it surprisingly clean. (It continues to cause him periodic discomfort throughout.) He also dislocates a shoulder, and sprains an ankle, and falls from a big tree, and is bitten by a very nasty dino and nearly perishes in a crumbling cave (as does Koa). Add the dino fatality count after that big event, and we’re looking at a pretty huge number. (It’s pretty impressive, really, that she can even lift the thing.) Mills smashes a much smaller dino repeatedly with his weapon. One of the most disturbing critters to attack actually does its work from the inside. When Mills realizes the predicament that he’s in, he’s ready to just give up. But once she understands that pretty much everything on the planet would like to eat her, Koa becomes surprisingly resourceful. And while 10 miles might not sound like a long way, it is when the crash pretty much sounded the dinner gong for the surrounding fauna. (Though one wonders why Mills, coming from the planet Somaris and all, is so fluent in it.) Her parents are dead, though she doesn’t know it just yet.
Read our explanation of the ending of '65,' the new science fiction action film where Adam Driver fights dinosaurs.
This is something audiences will be able to relate to having had to sit through the cinematic slog that is 65 along with them. This isn’t well executed by any means, but that is the rather explicit meaning it is trying to lay out. The main event of the whole thing is him having to fight a T-rex that seemed to be stalking the traveling duo. Before it touches down, there is one more fight that Mills must take part in that was the one we were waiting to see for the entire film. This is the film’s rather blunt way of tying up the emotional thematic journey alongside the physical one as the two characters were able to help each other heal. This creates a new urgency as they will have to make it to the ship before the planet is consumed in fire that will leave almost nothing alive. Finally, with a moment to exhale, the two sit in silence until Koa reaches out and grabs MIlls’ hand. This time away from them is the sacrifice that he is willing to make so that she can live. The problem is there is one more, resembling a turtle of sorts, who chases him out onto a field of geysers that blast extremely hot water into the air. The reason that Mills is taking this job is so that he and his wife can afford care for his ailing daughter. After his ship crashes into an asteroid field that seems to come out of nowhere, this initially leaves Mills ready to take his own life as he thinks that all the passengers in cryosleep are dead. In case it wasn’t already clear, this piece is going to spoil the entire film.
65 is a decent film about fatherhood and dinosaurs that leans on prehistoric survival thrills in a sometimes too-simple story that begs for a bit more meat ...
[Castlevania Enthusiasm is 'Really Motivating' Konami to Do More1h ago - Konami's classic vampire-slaying franchise is slowly coming back to life.](/articles/castlevania-dead-cells-interview-konami) [Destiny 2: Lightfall's World First Raid Has an Unlikely Winner2h ago - "This is for sure one of the highlights of our lives." So ride along as we go through all of the biggest video game releases you’ll be able to play on PlayStation, Xbox, and PC in March 2023.Also, you can browse the IGN Playlist of all the biggest titles launching in March. Mills' never-quite-emptied blaster (the fact that it recharges itself undermines a fair amount of survival tension) and their holographic GPS tracker are neat devices, but they beg for expanded lore about the people who built them. Matt Donato [The Biggest Game Releases of March 2023The mad dash of February games is finally behind us, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t some great games still on the horizon for March. Beck and Woods' screenplay gives us a glimpse of an advanced cosmic race of humans that arose long before our own, complete with solve-all gadgets that can be too convenient for their own good and interstellar travel. [Cowboys & Aliens](/articles/2011/07/28/cowboys-aliens-review)?
Adam Driver gives yet another standout, committed performance in 65. The sci-fi thriller is now playing in theaters.
In a way, the cut-and-dry nature of Driver’s performance is ultimately a reflection of 65 itself, a film that understands how even the most pared-down version of a story can still be compelling and entertaining if told with enough passion and focus. Driver’s performance as Mills is so unsentimental and to the point that it ensures that the character’s rare moments of emotional vulnerability land with real force. That’s particularly true of one sequence in which Driver’s Mills is forced to fix his dislocated shoulder before a pack of dangerous, raptor-like dinosaurs get the chance to rip him and Koa apart. The film spends the bulk of its runtime following Mills and Koa as they encounter a series of dangerous creatures and obstacles over the course of their journey together. The film’s straightforward, obstacle-driven structure results in it feeling a bit repetitive in its second and third acts, which only makes the thinness of 65’s story feel that much more apparent at times. The film employs no more visual effects than it absolutely needs, and it consistently makes strong use of its real-life environments and locations — most of which prove to be far more dangerous than they initially seem.