While our host hunts for destructive computer bugs, various shorts and clips of computer animation are featured.While our host hunts for destructive computer bugs, various shorts and clips of computer animation are featured.While our host hunts for destructive computer bugs, various shorts and clips of computer animation are featured.
Jenna Elfman
- Phig
- (voice)
Matt Frewer
- Frazzled
- (voice)
Nancy Cartwright
- Bart Simpson
- (voice)
Dan Castellaneta
- Homer Simpson
- (voice)
- …
Julie Kavner
- Marge Simpson
- (voice)
- …
Cara Pifko
- Computer
- (voice)
Harry Shearer
- Ned Flanders
- (voice)
- …
Yeardley Smith
- Lisa Simpson
- (voice)
Woody Allen
- Z-4195
- (archive footage)
- (voice)
Sylvester Stallone
- Weaver
- (archive footage)
- (voice)
Sharon Stone
- Princess Bala
- (archive footage)
- (voice)
David Geldart
- Pete
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe first computer animated film presented in 3D by IMAX and Intel.
- Quotes
Homer Simpson: Holy Macaroni!
- ConnectionsFeatures The Simpsons: Treehouse of Horror VI (1995)
- SoundtracksLiberation
Written by Neil Tennant (uncredited) and Chris Lowe (uncredited)
Performed by the Pet Shop Boys
Featured review
I thought IMAX had some kind of quality control...
March 2004: I'm in Melbourne by myself, having seen the Grand Prix the day before, exploring this new museum complex in the city that had an IMAX theatre. An IMAX movie was definitely on my itinerary as I loved the IMAX films I saw back in America a decade ago on a family holiday. Thought I couldn't go wrong with whatever I chose to see, the poster for Cyberworld 3D had Antz and Simpsons characters on it, a winner no doubt I thought.
I came back an hour later when the session started, collected the well-used 3D LCD-flicker goggles and took my seat. The sequences tying the assorted 3D clips together were OK, and the clips of Antz and the bit from the Simpsons where Homer discovers the 3rd dimension behind the bookcase were great. The rest was boring, somewhat depressing filler, I thought Cyberworld 3D must have been made in the mid 90s as the rest of the clips had pretty basic and unevolved computer animation. The clip with Pet Shop Boys music was the sort of thing I would expect from a computer animation demonstration circa 1990 ("why am I seeing this up on an IMAX screen?" I was thinking to myself at this point).
Overall Cyberworld 3D is a pretty lazy effort using yesteryear's computer graphics, sucking in customers through prominently displaying Simpsons and Antz characters on their posters (when together they only make up about 10 minutes of the total runtime). Only recommended for kids age 10 and down who have never seen a 3D film before.
I came back an hour later when the session started, collected the well-used 3D LCD-flicker goggles and took my seat. The sequences tying the assorted 3D clips together were OK, and the clips of Antz and the bit from the Simpsons where Homer discovers the 3rd dimension behind the bookcase were great. The rest was boring, somewhat depressing filler, I thought Cyberworld 3D must have been made in the mid 90s as the rest of the clips had pretty basic and unevolved computer animation. The clip with Pet Shop Boys music was the sort of thing I would expect from a computer animation demonstration circa 1990 ("why am I seeing this up on an IMAX screen?" I was thinking to myself at this point).
Overall Cyberworld 3D is a pretty lazy effort using yesteryear's computer graphics, sucking in customers through prominently displaying Simpsons and Antz characters on their posters (when together they only make up about 10 minutes of the total runtime). Only recommended for kids age 10 and down who have never seen a 3D film before.
helpful•23
- stevewest-1
- Jun 16, 2004
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,253,900
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $278,199
- Oct 8, 2000
- Gross worldwide
- $16,653,900
- Runtime44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.44 : 1
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