UNLIMITED STREAMING
WITH PRIME VIDEO
TRY 30-DAY TRIAL
Home > Thriller >

Threshold

Threshold (2003)

April. 01,2003
|
4.2
| Thriller Science Fiction TV Movie

Alien seeds hitch a ride to earth in a space shuttle crew and begin to grow. When their numbers reach the Threshold amount they will be an unstoppable swarm.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Hellen
2003/04/01

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

More
BootDigest
2003/04/02

Such a frustrating disappointment

More
Mathilde the Guild
2003/04/03

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

More
Philippa
2003/04/04

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

More
Scott LeBrun
2003/04/05

During a space mission, an astronaut gets enveloped by some sort of cloud that is carrying alien insect DNA. He is infected, brought back to Earth, and soon gives birth to a multitude of moth-like beings that are intent on taking over the world. The two moronic humans who are supposed to help solve the problem through their research are military doctor "Geronimo" Horne (Nicholas Lea, who made his name playing Agent Krycek on 'The X-Files') and entomologist Savannah Bailey ('Melrose Place' / 'Just the Ten of Us' hottie Jamie Luner).'Threshold' is standard-issue made-for-television genre fare. Granted, the premise of intelligent alien moths on a "take over the world" mission should make for reasonably engaging cheese, and the movie is surprisingly absorbing in the early going, with the filmmakers taking themselves fairly seriously. The story is watchable for a while, until the amount of ridiculous characters (and performances) and ridiculous moments in the script start to weigh too heavy.Lea, who doesn't look like he gives much of a damn, is an uninspired hero. Luner, ordinarily fine eye candy, seems to have been made to look as dowdy as possible, presumably to make her at least somewhat passable in the role of a scientist. But the plot becomes less and less interesting as it goes on, it's treated with precious little enthusiasm, and it doesn't end with very much of a bang.At least it has a few priceless moments when infected humans "bug out" and attack others, and some "ewww" inducing moments that are effective. The CGI, overall, is not the worst you'll ever see.Five out of 10.

More
xredgarnetx
2003/04/06

Try to stay with this TV movie and you may drive yourself crazy. THRESHOLD stars Nicolas "X-Files" Lea as a scientist trying to stop an alien infestation from taking over the world. If he doesn't stop the moth-like aliens in 48 hours, the city he is rushing around in will be nuked to stop the plague from spreading. Lea is not believable as any kind of scientist, and the cast otherwise is unmemorable and generic. The only thing that saves this thing from being a "1" are some yucky scenes of alien transference that strongly resemble similar scenes in the much-beloved THE HIDDEN. The creatures have interesting claws, too, that pop out at regular intervals.

More
Phillemos
2003/04/07

Spaceman gets infected with alien virus that kills him. Post-mortem, alien moths hatch from his body and fly into a suburban Houston neighborhood, where they make a pit stop onto the hand of a wussy husband during a cookout. This guy (Frank Hansen) gets enough grief from his bitchy wife Sheila and her sister (forgot her name), that being infected with the moth virus is probably a blessing in disguise. He turns into some sort of insectoid (though he maintains his human form except for some insect pincers that come out of his chest when it's convenient), kills his sister-in-law and, after about 45 minutes of panic in the streets of Houston, kills his wife too. Meanwhile, Nicholas Lea and Jamie Luner are an astronaut and entomologist, respectively, trying to figure out just what is the deal with the space moths. When they're not preparing for the end of the world, they are shamelessly acting like fifth-graders who pretend to hate each other even though it's painfully obvious they want to bang each other. Some X-Files, Homeland Defense-type guy named Quidd mysteriously appears halfway through the movie, lectures Lea and Luner about how badly they screwed everything up and sheds some insight into the situation. The movie does kind of leave you wanting more. The plot, even for a horror movie, is just a little too far-fetched. It starts off as a "insects-run-amok" movie and the plot just gets sillier and sillier as it goes along. As bad as this movie sounds, though, it has some sort of appeal on a very base level; I have to admit I watched the movie through the end. And Jamie Luner is still pretty hot. I give it a 4.

More
Aussie Stud
2003/04/08

I realize there was a limited budget for this "straight-to-cable" movie, but for crying out loud, NOTHING in this embarrassing laugh-fest looked even remotely real!The paper-thin plot involves some sort of "moth nebula" that infects an astronaut docked in outer-space while fixing a spacecraft just outside of Earth's atmosphere. The astronaut is hospitalized, and then starts producing 'cocoon-like' objects on his fingers that breed 'alien moths'. Next thing you know, the moths fly out the hospital window and start infecting (biting) innocent citizens all over the city who happen to share the same blood type.TV FOX fixtures, Jamie Luner ("Melrose Place") and Nicholas Lea ("The X Files") headline this atrocious 'movie' as a bug scientist and astronaut scientist who come together to try and stop the moths from infecting people. Luner is absolutely embarrassing as the bug scientist whose big discovery towards the ending of the film is pinpointing the location of the 'bug hideout shelter' simply by coincidental means. Her brother happens to take a photo of his girlfriend while a suspicious looking character just happens to be walking by in the background (LOL), therefore giving Luner's character a big clue as to where the moth people may be hiding.The biggest laughs of all come from the low budgeted 'special effects'. One 'infected' woman is held captive in an interrogation room. She does her best 'scared/freaking out' impression when all of a sudden, 'computer-generated' arms lash out from her sides and quickly disappear again. Considering she is fully dressed, did the producers not even care about how the arms suddenly appear, then disappear without even tearing her clothes? And the fact that the arms resembled that of a papier mache model makes the whole situation even more laughable.Another laughable scene involves the 'thing' that is being guarded by all of the infected people. Some sort of big balloon sac with a 'human-like' being inside of it. We of course, never get to see this, because it gets blown up on a tug boat at the end of the film. This thing is supposedly the film's central object of 'horror', something that we never get to see, yet are supposed to be very scared of. I can't stop thinking about how bad this movie was!What a stupid movie! It's not even worthy as a 'straight-to-Sci Fi Channel' film. To top it off, they even throw in the usual megalomaniacal military officer who insists on 'blowing up' the whole city to try and stop the outbreak, including all the other innocent civilians who haven't been infected. Maybe this movie should have been on Comedy Central instead?I say, skip this trash and rent "Dog Soldiers" instead. This movie was a total joke.My Grade - 1 out of 10

More