PG-13
1999    1h 52mComedy, Drama
6.759%57%6.8
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Adam Weber is the child of an eccentric inventor and his wife. Following a bomb scare in the 1960s that locked the Webers in their bomb shelter for 35 years, Adam Weber must venture out into Los Angeles and obtain food and supplies for his family. He meets Eve, who reluctantly agrees to help him out.
Directed by Hugh Wilson
  • Brendan FraserAdam
  • Alicia SilverstoneEve
  • Christopher WalkenCalvin
  • Sissy SpacekHelen
  • Dave FoleyTroy
  • Joey SlotnickSoda Jerk
  • Rex LinnDave
  • Deborah KellnerMiss Sweet
  • Nathan FillionCliff
  • Jenifer LewisDr. Aron
  • Cynthia MaceBetty
  • Don YessoJerry
  • Carmen MoreSophie
  • Dale RaoulMom
  • Hayden TankAdam age 3 1/2
  • Ryan SparksAdam age 8
  • Douglas SmithAdam age 11
  • Scott ThomsonYoung Psycho
  • Ted KairysNavy Pilot
  • Harry S. MurphyBob
  • eckoryanJune 16, 2025
    I have to admit that I am an odd bit of a romantic, and this film tears at my heart strings. I do have a personal attachment to the characters in the movie, which makes it a clear winner for ME, but a rom-com with these actors may not be everyone’s cup of tea.
  • Manuel FrangisApril 14, 2025
    I just watched Blast from the Past, and I give it 5 out of 5 stars. This movie is such a hidden gem. It is sweet, funny, weird in the best way, and filled with so much charm that you cannot help but enjoy every second of it. It has that cozy, feel-good energy that makes you want to revisit it anytime you need something light but meaningful. I was smiling through most of it, and by the end, I was just glad I finally watched it again. The story is about a man named Adam, played by Brendan Fraser, who has spent his entire life living in a fallout shelter because his parents thought the world ended during the Cold War. He is raised with manners, old-school values, and zero knowledge of modern life. When he finally comes up to the surface, everything is new and strange to him. The setup is totally unique and makes for so many great moments. Brendan Fraser is perfect in this role. He plays Adam with so much innocence and heart that you cannot help but root for him. He is kind, polite, and completely out of place in the modern world, but he never stops being true to himself. Fraser brings this wide-eyed charm that just makes you feel good. His timing is great, and his character has this natural optimism that feels refreshing. Alicia Silverstone plays Eve, a smart and grounded woman who ends up helping Adam navigate the world. Their chemistry is great. She starts off skeptical of him, but the way their friendship grows feels real and sweet. Watching her react to how kind and sincere Adam is makes for some of the best parts of the movie. They balance each other really well, and the relationship builds slowly, without feeling forced or cheesy. The movie does a great job mixing comedy with heart. A lot of the humor comes from Adam trying to understand how the world works. Everything is new to him — from food to slang to dating. The way he reacts to things we take for granted is hilarious, but it also says something about how much the world has changed. The movie never makes fun of him. It laughs with him, not at him. That makes all the difference. The supporting cast is strong too. Christopher Walken and Sissy Spacek play Adam’s parents, and they are fantastic. Walken is the paranoid but lovable dad who is convinced he saved his family, and Spacek brings so much warmth and humor as the mom trying to keep it all together underground. Their scenes are just as funny and heartfelt as the stuff happening on the surface. The music, the clothes, the way it compares the past to the present — it all adds to the movie’s charm. It is a comedy, but it has something real underneath. It is about being yourself in a world that does not always value sincerity. And it reminds you that kindness, honesty, and good manners never really go out of style. I give Blast from the Past 5 out of 5 stars because it is funny, heartfelt, and just plain enjoyable. It is the kind of movie that leaves you in a better mood than when you started it. Overall Blast from the Past is a sweet, charming comedy that balances laughs with real heart. It is unique, full of great performances, and a total feel-good favorite I will always come back to.
  • DaydreamJanuary 7, 2026
    one of the most severely underrated comedies of the 90's. cute and meaningful with depth while managing to avoid any awkward pacing or unpleasant moments. truly one of the best comfort movies with some of the best actors.
  • Y0URmessiahMay 1, 2026
    By far one of my favorite movies. A true fish out of water tale.
  • slayanne666June 10, 2026
    Did not hold up. The acting was so bad! And the story line was very thin.
  • ርልዪረFebruary 26, 2026
    What a wonderful film! "Blast from the Past" is charming, sweet, and hilarious. Very funny. The premise is original and interesting, and I thought the film was engrossing and thoroughly entertaining -- I laughed out loud several times. Brendan Fraser is perfectly cast as the goofy, innocent Adam. Alicia Silverstone is better than she's ever been, I'm certainly no fan of her, but she did a more than okay job in this film. But the really ingenious casting decision was to give the roles of Adam's parents to Sissy Spacek and the always brilliant Christopher Walken -- I dare say that the casting of Spacek and Walken in this film is the _opposite_ of type casting, :-).
  • GavOctober 25, 2025
    Great Brendan Fraser movie
  • CallumJune 8, 2026
    ⭐⭐⭐½ – Blast from the Past – Old-school charm meets the modern world. This film is built around a wonderfully simple idea: what happens when someone raised with the values, manners, and worldview of the 1950s is suddenly dropped into the modern world? Of course, the version of the 1950s presented here is probably viewed through some fairly rose-coloured glasses. It's less a historical period and more an idealised memory of one. But that's part of the film's charm. Brendan Fraser is fantastic in the lead role. Then again, Brendan Fraser being effortlessly likeable was practically a superpower during the late 1990s. His character's innocence, politeness, and genuine kindness make him impossible not to root for. He plays the role with such sincerity that even the most ridiculous situations somehow feel believable. Opposite him, Alicia Silverstone provides the modern perspective, and the contrast between their worlds creates most of the film's comedy. Watching someone navigate contemporary society with decades-old expectations turns out to be surprisingly entertaining. Like many romantic comedies of the era, you know exactly where the story is heading long before the characters do. There are no major surprises here. But honestly, that's not a weakness. The pleasure comes from the journey rather than the destination. This is comfort-food cinema. Warm, easy-going, and effortlessly watchable. Whether you're sitting down with the family or putting it on as a solo guilty pleasure, it's the sort of movie that asks very little of its audience while giving back plenty of smiles. Not every film needs to reinvent the wheel. Sometimes it's enough to spend a couple of hours in the company of genuinely likeable characters. 🥤 A vanilla milkshake served in a classic diner — sweet, comforting, and guaranteed to leave you feeling a little happier than before.
  • Sheila RoseMarch 2, 2026
    What a gem! Loved every minute! Quite unique and absolutely hilarious! The 90s sure had the best rom-coms!

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