Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets

Status

Released

Original Languages

en

Budget

$177,200,000.00

Revenue

$225,973,340.00

Runtime

2h 17m

Rating

6.63

Keyword

future
shapeshifting
space travel
utopia
based on comic
alien
alien planet
energy
alien abduction
genocide
parallel world
political intrigue 
pacifist
space opera
military
government agent
marketplace
trapped in space
federal government
unity
cosmopolis

A universe without boundaries needs heroes without limits.

Adventure
Science Fiction
Action

Overview

In the 28th century, Valerian and Laureline are special operatives charged with keeping order throughout the human territories. On assignment from the Minister of Defense, the two undertake a mission to Alpha, an ever-expanding metropolis where species from across the universe have converged over centuries to share knowledge, intelligence, and cultures. At the center of Alpha is a mysterious dark force which threatens the peaceful existence of the City of a Thousand Planets, and Valerian and Laureline must race to identify the menace and safeguard not just Alpha, but the future of the universe.

Cast (485)

Top billed cast, displaying the actors in their respective roles.

Dane DeHaan

as Valerian

Cara Delevingne

as Laureline

Clive Owen

as Commander Arün Filitt

Rihanna

as Bubble

Ethan Hawke

as Jolly the Pimp

Media (319)

Explore photos, videos, and other media related to the movie.

Background ImagePoster Image

Comments (8)

tmdb15214618

tmdb15214618

21 July 2017, 13:06

A spectacular spectacle of a movie that faithfully adapts a French 1970s sci-fi comic book. If you think you might see it some day, you owe it to yourself to catch it in 3D on a big screen now. In a world of paint-by-numbers blockbusters, this is an invigorating slap to the eyeballs. The flick would benefit from more focus and deliberation; often, story beats are glancing blows instead of precision hits. The biggest flaws, however, are found in the dialogue, which is at best serviceable and at times painful, probably owing to its transition through times, languages, and mediums. Valerian isn't perfect, it's a bit clunky, but the sheer unusualness, whimsy, and wonder overpowers the movie's faults, making it well worth watching.

Movie Queen41

Movie Queen41

22 July 2017, 05:47

It's a fun movie, but it's not what I would call a sci fi classic. It's all spectacle, with eye popping visuals. It creates some really interesting side characters and alien worlds. The drawback is the two leads. They seem rather bland and one dimensional. Their romantic bantering is quite boring. The supporting characters are more colorful and interesting. If you are a fan of Luc Besson's The Fifth Element, you will probably enjoy this. Just don't expect anything too deep from this movie.

Gimly

Gimly

28 November 2017, 01:58

Well, the scenes start comin' and they don't stop comin'. Aaaand that's basically the whole movie. No, honestly by the end of it I was actually pretty on board. It took me a lot to get to that point though. The ham-fisted romance subplot they kept awkwardly grinding the movie to a standstill for was chief amongst the swill I felt I had to wade through to get to that point of enjoyment. The primary alien race being the most poorly animated was another. But somewhere between the Rhianna actually being bearable in this, and the Ethan Hawke character I want to see 500 more times, I did actually somewhat enjoy _Valerian_... Somewhat. _Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._