Watch Atomica Full Movie

Dominic Monaghan, Tom Sizemore and Sarah Habel star in 'Atomica,' a sci-fi thriller about the mysterious goings-on at a remote nuclear power plant. Directed by Alfonso Albacete, David Menkes. With Cayetana Guillén Cuervo, Bibiana Fernández, Nathalie Seseña, José Manuel Cervino.

Watch Atomica Full Movie

Watch your favorite movies online free without downloading and without registration in HD quality at Tmoviesnow.com. Culture Crypt houses an extensive resource of movie review archives featuring independent, genre, and classic horror films. Atomica movie reviews & Metacritic score: In the near future, when communications go offline at a remote nuclear power plant isolated in the desert, a young.

Watch Atomica Full Movie

Atomica Reviews - Metacritic. Continue with Facebook. Summary: In the near future, when communications go offline at a remote nuclear power plant isolated in the desert, a young safety inspector, Abby Dixon, is forced to fly out to bring them back online. Once inside the facility, mysterious clues and strange behaviors cause Abby to have doubts about the sanity, and perhaps identities, of the two. In the near future, when communications go offline at a remote nuclear power plant isolated in the desert, a young safety inspector, Abby Dixon, is forced to fly out to bring them back online. Once inside the facility, mysterious clues and strange behaviors cause Abby to have doubts about the sanity, and perhaps identities, of the two employees onsite.…Expand.

Genre(s): Sci- Fi, Thriller.

Atomica' Review Hollywood Reporter. Watch Taken 2 Online Idigitaltimes more. The original title for the second theatrical release from cable channel Syfy was Deep Burial, and that would have been an appropriate fate for this low- budget, sci- fi thriller. While there’s nothing particularly wrong about minimalistic science fiction — some of the genre’s best offerings have been of that variety — Atomica is a lifeless, tedious affair that won’t play any better on the small screens for which it was obviously intended. The film is set in that familiar time frame known as the near future, in which a nuclear disaster has resulted in the dwindling use of such power. Only one operating nuclear plant remains — in a remote desert region, naturally — and as the story begins it has ceased communicating with its corporate owner, a mock commercial for which appears in the film’s opening minutes. Dispatched to investigate the situation is Abby (Sarah Habel, The CW’s Riverdale) who, as engineers are likely to be, is really, really hot. Upon arriving at the facility, she discovers that it’s manned by only two people: the overall- wearing caretaker, Robinson Scott (Dominic Monaghan), who suspiciously greets her wielding a golf club; and the wonderfully named Dr.

Zek (Tom Sizemore), who has gone missing since heading out on his own into the radioactive desert region. Robinson proves himself a decidedly eccentric character, one prone to long, self- confessional monologues that seem mainly designed to pad out the thin story to a full- length running time. Watch Bruno Mojoboxoffice more. He’s also creepy enough to barely apologize after openly watching Abby in the shower, an incident which strangely barely seems to ruffle her. Eventually Dr. Zek does reappear, but by then Abby has come to the sensible conclusion that there’s something seriously wrong with the two men.

The audience, of course, has been way ahead of her in that department. Monaghan’s quirkily charismatic performance is the only thing making the proceedings remotely bearable, with the actor delivering the same sort of arresting, off- kilter turn here that he did in the recent thriller Pet. Habel does what’s required, including sporting a sexy, skintight outfit and what looks like a motorcycle helmet, while Sizemore, who doesn’t appear until midway through the film, spends much of his screen time either lying in bed (nice work if you can get it), or, in one of the film’s many bizarre sequences, receiving an uncomfortably close shave from Monaghan. The mostly subterranean setting, bathed in the sort of blue tint that seems di rigueur for science films, proves as claustrophobic for viewers as for the characters, with director Dagen Merrill (Broken Hill, Beneath) failing to make the proceedings any more interesting visually than narratively.

Production company: Lifeboat Productions. Distributor: Syfy Films. Cast: Dominic Monaghan, Tom Sizemore, Sarah Habel. Director: Dagen Merrill.

Screenwriters: Kevin Buke, Fred Fernandez- Arnesto, Adam Gyngell. Producers: Jaime Burke, Vahan Paretchan. Executive producers: Kieth Merrill, Dominic Monaghan, Shawn Sackman, Barry Walker. Director of photography: Timothy A. Burton. Production designer: Ben Blankenship. Editors: Joseph Ettinger, Eric Frith. Costume designer: Ronald Leamon.

Composer: Christian Davis. Casting: Monica Kelly, Jennifer Treadwell.