An ordinary man has to protect his children against alien invaders in this science fiction thriller, freely adapted from the classic story by H.G. Wells. Ray Ferrier (Tom Cruise) is a dockworker living in New Jersey, divorced from his first wife Mary Ann (Miranda Otto) and estranged from his two children Rachel and Robbie (Dakota Fanning and Justin Chatwin), of whom he has custody on weekends. On one such visitation, looking after the kids becomes a little more difficult when, after a series of strange lighting storms hit his neighborhood, Ray discovers that a fleet of death-ray robotic spaceships have emerged nearby, part of the first wave of an all-out alien invasion of the Earth. Transporting his children from New York to Boston in an attempt to find safety at Mary Ann's parents' house, Ray must learn to become the protector and provider he never was in marriage. Also starring Tim Robbins, War of the Worlds was directed by Steven Spielberg, who had been planning the project for years, but set it aside until a wave of "alien invasion" films (led by Independence Day) had run its course. — Mark Deming
AMG Review:
Steven Spielberg has crafted one of his most horrific nightmares with War of the Worlds, an unrelenting disaster pic that brings the genre to a bruised post-9/11 world. With imagery taken straight from history's darkest days, the master storyteller goes against his crowd-pleasing genes and delivers a harrowing tale of survival as only he could. Spielberg and America's favorite crazy man, Tom Cruise, follow up the inspired but bloated Minority Report with a surprisingly efficient picture that's as succinct in its running time as it is in its scares. Made under the gun with less than a year of production behind it, there's an energy to the 128-million-dollar film that hasn't been found in the famed director's work for quite some time. He once again shows his magical skills directing young actors with Dakota Fanning, whose traumatic performance sells every bit of the frightening action, while relative newcomer Justin Chatwin impresses as the older brother filled with blind retribution. Most surprising is actually Cruise himself, who's cast against the typical heroic mold in favor of a conflicted self-centered father forced to accept his responsibilities in the face of imminent death, which even then is questionable considering his plan of action. With superb effects and nerve-rattling sound design, War is filled with its share of jaw-on-the-floor awe moments, but they simply wouldn't work as well if not presented through the narrowly focused perspective of Cruise's character. The somewhat maligned third act with Tim Robbins is a perfect example of this, with Spielberg closing in the action to a single basement, where the fear comes not from what you see, but what you don't. In another person's hands, this could have been a soulless exercise — as it is now, War of the Worlds stands as a strong allegory for its time, taking its place in a summer full of movies with more on their minds than simple popcorn entertainment. — Jeremy Wheeler
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Tom Cruise | Ray Ferrier |
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Dakota Fanning | Rachel Ferrier |
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Miranda Otto | Mary Ann |
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Justin Chatwin | Robbie |
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Tim Robbins | Harlan Ogilvy |
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Rick Gonzalez | Vincent |
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Yul Vazquez | Julio |
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Lenny Venito | Manny the Mechanic |
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Lisa Ann Walter | Bartender |
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Ann Robinson | Grandmother |
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Gene Barry | Grandfather |
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David Alan Basche | Tim |
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Roz Abrams | Roz Abrams |
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Michael Brownlee | TV Reporter / Osaka |
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Camillia Monet | News Producer |
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Marlon Young | News Cameraman |
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John Eddins | News Van Driver |
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Peter Gerety | Hatch Boss |
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David Harbour | Dock Worker |
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Miguel Antonio Ferrer | Brazilian Neighbor |
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January LaVoy | Brazilian Neighbor's Wife |
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Stephen Gevedon | Neighbor with Lawnmower |
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Julie White | Woman |
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Marianne Ebert | Hysterical Woman |
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Rafael Sardina | Mechanic's Assistant |
| Director | Steven Spielberg |
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| Writer | Josh Friedman, David Koepp, H.G. Wells | |
| Producer | Damian Collier, Kathleen Kennedy, Paula Wagner, Colin Wilson | |
| Musician | John Williams | |
| Photography | Janusz Kaminski | |
| Edition | 2-Disc Limited Edition |
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| Packaging | Custom Case |
| Nr Discs | 2 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (1.85:1) |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo ENGLISH: DTS 5.1 FRENCH: Dolby Digital 5.1 |
| Subtitles | English | French | Spanish |
| Distributor | Dreamworks |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Nov 22, 2005 |
| Regions | Region 1 |