Released in 1987, Innerspace captures the feel of films released during the mid 80’s, sharing video shop space with Teen-Wolf, Goonies, Lost Boys, Splash, Explorers and Back to the Future. This was a time when Spielberg and co were producing idea-rich, story-driven, high-quality family movies that pushed the creative envelope more than the templated popcorn-fodder of today. The chase is then on to get Tuck back to normal size, stop the bad guys and to fall conveniently into the arms of Lydia Maxwell, played by Meg Ryan (who, in my opinion, looks absolutely stunning in this film). With a great plot and some the best 80s stars gracing our screens, why does InnerSpace remain such an overlooked masterpiece? The film won an academy award in 1987 for its special effects, and the internal workings of Jack’s body are astounding, with model submarines over-laid onto a background of hemoglobin-packed arteries, resting on audio canals and having a dog fight with the bad guy’s rival submarine in the lining of the stomach. Produced by Steven Spielberg and directed by Joe Dante, InnerSpace sums up all that was good about 80s films. From the cliché of an unlikely buddy movie to the fact you can tell the bad guy is a baddy because he has a false hand with a gun in it (and pops kids’ balloons) to the ‘he isn’t dead’ scare-scene, the film is pure popcorn entertainment. The cast seem to be having a fantastic time in their roles and enjoying every minute of a film that always seems to be sunny – ‘twisting the night away’ and other feel good tunes play in the background, the hero gets the girl, and you get to ride off into the sunset in a open top sports car. Even though Dennis Quaid’s character spends most of his time locked in the cockpit of his capsule, his guidance when he is inside Martin Short’s character – as he slowly turns the neurotic Jack into an action hero – is really good stuff. However not all the cast keep a level, serious head. One stand- out character who gets to – quite literally – let it all hang out, in the form of hacker/industrial spy ‘The Cowboy’, played completely for laughs by Robert Picardo in an over the top, scene-stealing turn . Whether trying to sweep Lydia off her feet on the dance floor or having his face-profile stolen by Jack (thanks to some facial muscle manipulation by Tuck’s improbably versatile submarine), the Cowboy really is a larger-than-life character and Picardo’s chest hair is nearly as impressive as his wig. Innerspace really is an overlooked classic and – in a world where any scenario or landscape can be created artificially in a computer – the fact that we are taken on a guided tour of the internal organs by the use of lights, filters and models alone represents a truly fantastic voyage into special effects and pure 80s entertainment.