Iceman Resident Scholar Profiles
TOP SCHOLAR: vjm 
SCHOLARS:
| Would you like to be a scholar and make five dollars per review?
Click here to submit a review! |
Click here for free online dating advice!
| Review Summary |
A prehistoric man is discovered encased in Arctic ice, and taken to Arctic Science Headquarters, where Dr. Diane Brady readies her team to take the body apart for scientific study. But monitors detect cell metabolism and brain function. The iceman is alive. Cryoprotectants in his diet are credited for defending his cells from collapse when frozen. While doctors Brady and Singe want to mine his body for clues to life extension, anthropologist Stanley Shephard argues that the iceman is not a specimen, but a man, and that more may be learned from his spirit than his flesh. He pleads for two weeks to prove the value of studying his nature rather than his anatomy.
The iceman awakens from sedation in the facility's glass-domed biosphere. Unaware that he is being observed in his little world of greenery and wildlife, he forages, kindles a fire, whittles weapons, and hunts. In time, Shephard descends into this world and approaches the iceman, winning his trust. Shephard interprets his name as "Charlie." A linguist observes unseen to try to decipher Charlie's considerable vocabulary. When Shephard sings by the bonfire, Charlie "sings" along.
But their bond is threatened. Intermittently, Charlie is put under for biopsies in the quest for the elusive cryoprotectant. Revived and returned to nature, he points angrily to his hurt torso, suspicious of Shephard. Shephard explains to Brady that this is alienating Charlie, and persuades her to come down to the iceman's world and meet him face to face. Her trepidation melts to sympathy after Charlie offers her a beetle for lunch and makes stick drawings of his family. But a helicopter flies over the dome and terrifies him. Believing it to be a bird-messenger from the gods, sent to judge him, he withdraws into hours of chanting. His trauma deepens when he touches the button that slides open the biosphere's door, and he walks alone into the alien high-tech world of photocopiers, light switches, intercoms, and forklifts. In panic, he stabs a man and escapes into a dreamwalk in the snow. Shephard realizes now that Charlie's future is limited to either terror at reality, or captivity and exploitation; and he is forced to redefine what is best for him.
vjm, Resident Scholar
|
| Detailed literary breakdown of Iceman |
| Our unique search engine breaks down books and movies into
dozens of literary elements, all of which are searchable.
New movie search (click here) New book search (click here) |
Ratings are on a 1-10 scale (Low to High)
Plot
Composition of Movie
Actual chase scenes or violence - 20% Planning/preparing, gather info, debate puzzle - 30% Feelings, relationships, character bio/development - 50%
**Fantasy or Science Fiction?**
- science fiction story
Time Travel:
- suspended animation
Inner Struggle
Yes
Plotlet:
- feelings of one human growing up among a very different group of humans
Time Travel Story?
Yes
To what time period?
- 1980's-2000
Main Character
Identity:
- Male
Profession/status:
- scientist
Age:
- 20's-30's
Is this an ordinary person caught up in events?
Yes
Hair color?
- brunette (Brown)
Hair type
- (man) short/medium curly
Body type
- average (man)
Events of movie makes character more...
- introspective
Ethnicity/Nationality
- White (American)
How sensitive is this character?
- sensitive to others' feelings
Sense of humor?
- Strong but gentle sense of humor
Intelligence
- Smarter than most other characters
Secondary Main Character
Identity:
- Male
Hair color
- brunette (Brown)
Body type
- muscular (man)
Unclothed?
- very tight clothes
How much in movie?
- 90%-100%
Main Adversary
Identity:
- general circumstances
Setting
Earth setting:
- 20th century (1970's to Present)
Takes place on Earth?
Yes
Ice world?
Yes
Misc settings
- lab
Style
Accounts of torture and death?
- generic/vague references to death/punishment
Tone of movie
- spiritual
|
| Most similar reviews by Gordonator ranking |
| Laserblast
starring Kim Milford, Cheryl Smith, Gianni Russo, Ron Masak, Dennis Burkley, Barry Cutler, Keenan Wynn, Roddy McDowall, Eddie Deezen
|
| The Butterfly Effect
starring Ashton Kutcher, Amy Smart,Elden Henson, William Lee Scott
|
| A Scanner Darly
starring Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey, Jr., Woody Harrelson, Winona Ryder, Rory Cochrane
|
| Open Your Eyes
starring Eduardo Noriega, Penelope Cruz
|
| Alien Nation
starring James Caan, Mandy Patinkin, Terence Stamp
|
Think you can enter a better review
of this movie? Click here to try! |
|