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  1. On June 25, 2020, Museum of the Moving Image's Science on Screen series presents a live online event featuring CDC medical illustrator Alissa Eckert, the per...

    • 62 min
    • 4,6K
    • Museum of the Moving Image
  2. Fantastic Voyage. The crew of a miniaturized submarine is injected into a man's body on a mission to rid the brain of a deadly blood clot in this 1966 tale. IMDb 6.8 1 h 40 min 1966. X-Ray 7+. Adventure · Science Fiction · Strange · Wondrous. Available to rent or buy.

  3. Critics reviews. A diplomat is nearly assassinated. In order to save him, a submarine is shrunken to microscopic size and injected into his blood stream with a small crew. Problems arise almost as soon as they enter the bloodstream.

  4. Scientist Jan Benes (Jean Del Val), who knows the secret to keeping soldiers shrunken for an indefinite period, escapes from behind the Iron Curtain with the help of C.I.A. Agent Grant (Stephen Boyd). While being transferred, their motorcade is attacked. Benes strikes his head, causing a blood clot to form in his brain.

  5. The film is absolutely mind boggling! Sure it's kitschy, that's part of its charm, come on cut it some hard earned slack, it's nearly 50 years old and for its day it was quite a technical marvel! It was just as exciting today as the day it was released! 89 likes. Review by Lou (rhymes with wow!) ★★★½.

  6. 14 de mai. de 2024 · As the scientist Cora, Raquel Welch appeared in one of her first leading roles. The special effects in Fantastic Voyage, which were state-of-the-art in 1966, have continued to hold up reasonably well. The movie’s representation of the human body’s systems remains useful for understanding how these systems work.