Sci-Fi Adventure Movie – Unknown World (1951)



PG Scientists use a gigantic drilling machine for an expedition seeking livable space deep beneath the Earth’s surface.

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42 thoughts on “Sci-Fi Adventure Movie – Unknown World (1951)

  1. In some ways reminded me of the movie"Petrified World."Found both of these pretty boring but there was some action in PW though nothing too exciting. The premise of this movie is a little far out but I guess there are people who really like it

  2. I skipped the first bit, the preachy bit, the rest of the film was predictable. No promise land, half the group dying, and the old guy not able to face that his hope failed. The acting was a bit stilted. I am not sure that the leader and sheep thing meant that neither really works. I am not enamored by this fetish for B & W films.

  3. It's incredible how much scientific knowledge has advanced in 75 years. What passes for science in this science fiction is on par with Jules Verne imagining people loaded into cannons and shot onto the moon through a ballistic trajectory. Our scientific knowledge doubles every seven years. Over half of humanity's scientific understanding has occurred in the lifespan of a person.

  4. I am now in the future and can see atom bombs going off in many parts of the world Russia just had an explosion just like this atomic explosion. So I am going back to before I was born to see what the world was.

  5. This movie is great. And clean. That's rare no days. People always jumping in the SACK. UGH. I think More moral folks out there than we realize. 😊. These texts suck. Messed up. Sorry. Said sucks. 😂

  6. I grew up on the old movies and prefer them. I would be perfectly happy with a black and white TV that rolls around on a little cart with clear yellow plastic Wheels. I would be perfectly happy to live in a roadside cabin and enjoy simple meals of fried eggs and bacon. while watching The Fugitive in black and white from 1962.

  7. A historic classic! I believe it was Teller who did raise the specter of the Los Alamos project setting the atmosphere on fire. On the other hand, my 1970's "conceptual physics" teacher was on board that nuke reactors would save the world from oil and coal. History seems to tell us that if somebody actually has the energy-without-damage solution:
    (Tesla?) that person will not be believed, and anybody who does believe him/her will make sure the idea doesn't get anywhere because they can't make any money off it!

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