Lost Treasure (2003) Poster

(2003)

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4/10
Another downturn in Stephen Baldwin's career
NxNWRocks12 July 2004
It's gotta be fascinating to find out how movies like this get made. The budget and ambition of the film-makers appear to be large enough for pyrotechnics and CGI effects, with perhaps stock-footage accounting for some big-ticket items such as a fairly unnecessary scene inside a naval ship.

But let's start with that title. "Lost Treasure." Sure, that's what the movie is about, but could you have a more mundane title? That's like, say, calling "Independence Day" "Attack By Aliens." As noted by other reviewers, almost everything about this film is subpar, and yet it is still somewhat watchable. About the only reason for this is Mark Christopher Lawrence adding some much-needed comic relief as a disgruntled tourist. Otherwise, the only entertainment is derived from seeing how ridiculously bad the parts of the stereotypical bad guys are written. You could blame the actors, but why when they're given nothing to work with that you haven't already seen in countless other movies?

Meanwhile, on the good guy side, Coby Ryan McLaughlin tries gamely in his role of kidnapped cop, but his acting ability is the epitome of the entire movie in its averageness. Top billing goes to Stephen Baldwin, who does little more than reprise his role in the equally-awful "Shelter Island" as a brooding, moody type. About the only depth he's added to his character here is a beard.

Basically, pile some explosions, car chases and scenes of people being chased round an island in a storm on top of wooden acting and stilted dialogue and you have a very run-of-the-mill play-it-by-the-numbers movie that might not be the biggest travesty committed to celluloid, but doesn't add anything to the world of cinema either.
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3/10
Footage from Backdraft?
martin-wink-112 April 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I haven't checked my copy of Backdraft (need to reconnect my LaserDisc player) but while watching Lost Treasure I was certain I'd seen the footage before. In the museum fire there were burning clothes racks which I'm sure featured in the Backdraft fire where I think another Baldwin brother "rescued" a dummy. The exploding gas drums and staircase and gantry were also from that film. There was also a shot of rolling flames which looked just like Backdraft's love of the living flame.

Alternatively, maybe they filmed it on the Backdraft Experience on the Universal Studios tour! Or maybe they're just unimaginative filmmakers who just recreated shots they'd already seen.
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3/10
How many more?
shanfloyd27 March 2006
I have no idea why these films are still made. "Lost Treasure" -- the over-simplified title says it all. I had no plans to see it at all... I just bumped upon it (however lame that sounds, it's true). William Baldwin with a beard is the 'star' of this film. But what can actors do when they are to play such stereotypical and two-dimensional characters? The film used archive or shelf footages for CGI effects etc. That confirms that it's a low-budget venture after all.

It has a story you have heard/seen million times before. It has actors at their worsts. It has dialogues that encourage fourth-graders to write a screenplay. Nothing in it shows any trace of innovation or originality. How many films such as these are awaiting us in the future?
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Please Append To My Review
TomDugan212 September 2004
I just found out that "Lost Treasure" was contracted and produced as an "HBO Original Feature" and that is why it looks like and ends like a Made-For-TV Movie. It is! Since there is no indication anywhere that this is not what most people would call a "film" (theatrical release) but rather a hasty "teleplay," it is clear the distributors are screwing with the buying and/or renting public. This should no more be on the same shelf with a major studio release than my home movies. Maybe the Home Entertainment industry should do a little self-regulation on entertainment classifications. I have no problems with presentations like "Lost Treasure" as long as I know what I am buying or renting or watching. Other then that, let the viewer beware...
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1/10
No stars unbelievably horribly bad
joannejerome10 October 2020
This movie was sooooo bad that we had to finish it. Isla is mispronounced throughout the movie. All pronounce it differently. Couldn't producers even look up proper pronunciation? Cell phones miraculously work anywhere. Two idiotic passengers could not stop yammering nonsense about getting their share of treasure. THEIR share! One of the worst movies we subjected ourselves to due to stay at home virus concerns.
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1/10
one of the worst movies i have seen
erika-Dubai28 January 2004
ok beginning but quickly loosing any shred of credibility, unbelievable and really bad, bad acting by ALL. It must have taken a real effort to make this movie as bad as it is. But the 2nd 2nd Assistant Director is credited......no joke! Stay clear, you have been warned ;-)
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1/10
It's better being "lost" !
elshikh429 June 2007
They wanted to deliver an entertaining movie. Ok, nothing wrong with that. The wrong though was the movie itself!

I thought that "screenplay by" on the opening credits was a cheap deception, since this is a "teleplay" kind of movie. But actually these very poor TV movies-like are being made as cinematic, or straight to video or DVD, which's one of the universe unsolved mysteries!

The screenplay got maybe some good points, but the idiot work of director Jim Wynorski detonated it all. Let alone the no budget condition. So if you think that the first scene is a rip-off from (Backdraft - 1991), then you're so right!

However, that cast pulled off making it worse. Stephen Baldwin as a lead??, please Mr. Baldwin, stay at home, it'll be good for you, and for us too! And as for the bad guys, Hannes Jaenicke and Jerry Doyle, take this tip: get any work but acting! Coby Ryan McLaughin, as the sly detective, was awful, and in one shot, he looked like Ben Affleck, which is even more awful! Mark Christopher Lawrence, as the windbag, is nice but without any charisma. Nicollette Sheridan did honest efforts. Sure without her, this is unwatchable!

Well, maybe this movie was made to enjoy kids, but it shows like it's made by kids!
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1/10
Very, very bad **spoilers ahead**
artzau6 January 2004
Warning: Spoilers
I mean, look. The IMDB doesn't even give the entire cast. Does that tell you something? Films like this make you wonder: why would anyone have the guts to make a dog of a film like this. A hairbrained story with no acting, dummy props, unbelievable characters and a ridiculous plot line-- and that's the good news. I mean, Stephen Baldwin and Nicolette Sheridan (who?) are the "names" in the cast and who has heard of them? Well, after seeing this film, no one likely will want to. And, please note that at this writing, they're not even listed here. I don't like to shred or dice any reasonable effort but this one is so bad, it couldn't even make it as a comedy. It is at best a parody of a shoot'em-up thriller and not a very good one at that. If you rented the DVD, as I did, see if you can get your money back.
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4/10
Comic booky island adventure with Stephen Baldwin and Nicollette Sheridan
Wuchakk1 November 2016
Released to cable in 2003 and directed by Jim Wynorski, "Lost Treasure" is an action/adventure flick about two estranged brothers (Coby Ryan McLaughlin and Stephen Baldwin) who team-up after finding a map to Columbus' lost treasure on a remote island in Panama. Nicollette Sheridan plays the bush pilot they hire while Scott L. Schwartz & Tami-Adrian George play an entertaining tourist couple for comic relief. Hannes Jaenicke and Jerry Doyle are on hand as heavies.

I'm giving this a relatively low grade because it's TV-budget comic book escapism with a story that's sometimes eye-rolling and not that compelling. But the protagonists are likable, there are a lot of thrills (with numerous explosions, if that's your thang), the locations are good and the story moves right along.

The film runs 90 minutes and was shot in Charlotte, NC, and the Los Angeles Arboretum.

GRADE: C-
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3/10
Woof
jimtheflyer24 October 2020
The writing was puerile and run of the mill, the director should have flogged. But Steven Baldwin was understated and came across very naturally - there's that.
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10/10
It was good, it was funny, and I want it on DVD
lt_colonelmagee4 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I had not planned on seeing this movie, but then again there are a lot of movies I had planned on seeing in the first place. Well if you are wondering why I saw well I taped it not knowing what it was going to be about and I am glad I did because the movie was good. I especially liked the relationship between the two brothers It reminded me of my relationship with my own brother. From the name of the title you would think it is just a search for treasure but there is more to it than just that it is the reconnection of two brothers, the older one getting the younger one out of trouble. When the movie first started I had no idea what to expect, what I saw was a fire and then a Police chase, after that point I couldn't stop I had to see how the movie was going to end, and what an ending, by the way I am not going to tell you how it ends, you are going to have to find that out for yourself. It is a good movie one of the best I have seen with Stephen Baldwin in.
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Made For TV?
TomDugan212 September 2004
I am fascinated by this film. It has Made-For-TV all over it, but there is way too much money on the screen for that. Others here have flat-out panned this film as a waste of time and questioned how films like this get made. I would like to ask what was the context of this film's production? It certainly could not have been done for a US theatrical release with the cast used, yet the money spent on production places this WAY out of the range of an Indie filmmaker. So, this means it was either contracted for a major cable release and foreign sales. But I can't find evidence of either. If anyone knows, I would love to hear the details. There are some valuable lessons in film distribution embedded here - if only someone will take us behind the scenes!

BTW - many ripped the effects as being out of character with the story and second rate. I agree with out-of-character but there was a ton of money in some of those effects. It is almost like someone bought the negative of a major but obscure foreign production and mapped a story around some of the major scenes in the "other" film. That would explain why an art museum would have drums of gas in the basement. It would also explain how the "big stuff" got into a film with such a low budget look and cast.
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Entertainment Value
dacaria-18 February 2004
Get off your moral high horse, it's a movie meant for entertainment purposes and not meant to reflect the values of a society. Don't take it or yourself so seriously and accept the movie in the context it was initially created for, a 90 minute exercise in escapism.
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Avarice found.
Cipher-J3 February 2004
Evidently, a good place to hide a fifteenth century treasure map is behind a not very interesting painting, which will eventually end up in an art gallery. How would anyone know that it was hidden behind a painting? Well that, and most of the other details of this film, is never explained. For example, why would an art museum be loaded up with 55-gallon drums of gasoline, so that when it is torched as a diversion to stealing the painting, they could explode like rockets? And for that matter, with all the exploding and flames everywhere, the painting should have been burnt to a crisp before anyone had a chance to swipe it. But this is supposed to be a thriller, so all the absurd pyrotechnics of the beginning were evidently thought necessary to startle the twelve-year-olds in the audience.

After that as an introduction, the basic idea is that there are no good guys, just varying degrees of bad guys and bystanders, who end up chasing after a lost treasure. Never mind that one is a cop and another a government agent, sworn to an oath to serve the public, and hence any treasure they might discover as a result of doing their jobs would more correctly belong to the people they serve. In other words, the basic message of this film is that serving the public might be fine in theory, but when the potential for feathering one's nest with a vast fortune gets involved, best to take the money and run. No wonder the current generation has so little faith in public servants. When they go to the movies, they see them portrayed as only marginally less greedy than the crooks.

This is a shameful story, which promotes the view that no matter how you end up with the loot, it is yours to keep and enjoy. The bad guys, who want to keep it all for themselves, must first be knocked out of course, after which the `good' guys get to divide the hoard. And the reason why they are `different' from the crooks is because they are less `violently' motivated by greed. In other words, if avarice is pursued less violently, perhaps more humanely, then it's okay. In any case, what matters is that you end up with the prize. Having the money is more important that how you got it. That, unfortunately, is the message of this story, and it is as harmful to the fabric of society as it could possibly be. It makes greed seem romantic and exciting, while acting as though social responsibility was not even worth considering.
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