Heres what NYTimes has to say<br /><br />Set in 1939, "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow" stars Jude Law as the daring flying ace Sky Captain, who teams up with his former flame, the intrepid reporter Polly Perkins, played by Gwyneth Paltrow, as they track down a mysterious mad scientist named Totenkopf. It is in part a nostalgic homage to the movies of the 1930's and 40's: the hammy fisticuffs and golly-inspiring proto-technology of sci-fi cliffhangers like "Flash Gordon" alongside the snappy patter (and even snappier clothes) of the era's noir thrillers. But like the old serials it emulates, "Sky Captain" is mainly preoccupied with the strange promises of the future. The astonishing things you will see in the world of tomorrow include: an immense, silvery zeppelin docking at the Empire State Building; an elephant that fits in the palm of your hand; a troop of giant robots marching down Sixth Avenue and the carpet at Radio City Music Hall. None of these things actually exist, though. Rather, they are computer images, built and animated in a virtual 3-D environment, or stitched together from photographs, which are then draped around the flesh-and-blood actors, who have been shot separately on an empty set in front of a blank "blue-screen" background, along with those few minimal props with which they actually interact (a ray gun, a robot blueprint, a bottle of milk of magnesia). — John Hodgman, The New York Times<br /><br />Many a happy saterday mornng, watching Tarzan, and Flash Gorden. <img src="/images/icons/smile.gif" /><br /><br />I will go watch it, just to see the Dirigable<br />