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Directed by Stephen Norrington Written by Alan Moore, Kevin O'Neill Cast Sean Connery, Naseeruddin Shah, Peta Wilson, Tony Curran, Stuart Townsend [more] Release Date • USA: Jul 11, 2003 • UK: 17 Oct 2003 DVD Release Date • R1: Dec 16, 2003 • R2: 16 Feb 2004
Budget $78,000,000
Official Website:
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Website
MPAA Rating Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of fantasy violence, language and innuendo.
Running Time 1 hour, 50 minutes
Country USA, Germany, Czech Republic, UK
Studio 20th Century Fox
More info on IMDb.com
Other Titles • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen • LXG • LXG: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen • The League
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Review of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003) by Susan GrangerSusan Granger's review of "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" (20th
Century-Fox)
When a major studio, big-budget action-adventure is as dreary and dismal
as this, it's often interesting to dissect its various elements and discover
what went wrong.
Based on the graphic novel (i.e.: comic book) by Alan Moore and Kevin
O'Neill, the story assembles adventurer Allan Quatermain (Sean Connery), Captain
Nemo (Naseeruddin Shah), "Invisible Man" Rodney Skinner (Tony Curran), Dorian
Gray (Stuart Townsend), Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde (Jason Flemyng), Tom Sawyer (Shane
West), and Mina Harker (Peta Wilson), a Dracula-inspired vampire. It's 1899 when
they're summoned by Britain's Secret Agent M (Richard Roxburgh) to sail to
Venice, Italy, to battle a powerful enemy known only as The Fantom.
While these living legends have colorful reputations, they're uniformly
dull - with the notable exception of Quatermain, who struggles valiantly to turn
the American lad into a surrogate son. Working from a clumsy, confusing,
convoluted script by James Dale Robinson, director Stephen Norrington ("Blade")
seems totally at a loss with how to connect with the actors at his disposal. As
a result, emotional relationships between the misfit characters are
non-existent. And it's impossible to suspect disbelief when the special effects
are this silly. "The Invisible Man" is just an actor in white-face makeup and -
even with a comic book mentality - one cannot conceive how the gigantic
"Nautilus" submarine could skim undetected through the narrow Venetian canals,
nor how everyone is able to drive cars. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10,
"The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" is a ponderous, inconsequential 3. Is it
possible that the vision of producer Don Murphy ("From Hell") was actually to
dumb-down a comic book?
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X-RT-RatingText: 3/10
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