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District 9
Shok Xone Studios:
I attended a preview screening of the film tonight. We had free passes and they were giving out movie posters on the way in, so already we were off to a good start. Add to that the audience was full of adults who FUCKING KNOW HOW TO BEHAVE IN A MOVIE THEATER, and we're in for a fun time at the movies. Then the movie is so good the audience breaks into applause at the end credits; now that's a trip to the cinema, folks.
"District 9" strikes one of those great balances of brains and spectacle that we don't get nearly as often as we should. D9 not only presents a startlingly bleak "what if" scenario of first contact, but provides enough slam-bang visuals to put many a major blockbuster to shame.
The movie is presented at first in a mockumentary style, then dips into a straight narrative, and hops back and forth a few times as events play out. This is the style I hope the eventual "World War Z" film would take, and after seeing it put to such amazing use here, I'd recommend handing the project to Neill Blomkamp and co. Along with newsreel and documentary footage, the action has something of a Paul Greengrass feel while inserting some stylish action shots, including a "gunbarrel POV" steadicam effect that I grew quite fond of.
The action is centered on Wikus (Sharlto Copley), an agent of the MNU assigned to handle the relocation of the residents of District 9, nicknamed "prawns" by the human race (and rightfully so, as they look like distant relatives of Zoidberg). Wikus starts out as a smiling bureaucrat, happily joining in on the humiliation and oppression of the alien refugees. His turnaround starts as he's exposed to a strange chemical that turns him into an enemy of the state, forcing him back to D9 for help. The film is cast entirely with unknowns, making everything that transpires all the easier to accept, as you're focusing on the story rather than the actors, although I bet Copley will be hard-pressed to stay anonymous if this movie makes the big bucks I hope it will. He handles the character with a certain slimy charm and goofiness as the film begins, turning slowly but surely into a believable reluctant hero, while remaining imperfect person; he's first driven by company loyalty, then by selfishness to cure his new-found "condition", resulting in some realistically bad decisions on his part. Only at the very end does he become a truly noble character, and it's here the film slips precariously into cliche and sap, but with all the fireworks going off at the story's climax, you're likely to forgive a misstep or two.
Effects-wise the film also shines. The prawns' CGI is highly-detailed and surprisingly emotive; you never quite get the sense they're really there, but certainly that there's a living on-screen presence, especially in scenes in which no humans are involved. Also of note are the alien weapons, including a hulking cyber-suit that plays a central part in a thunderous shootout. Imagine an upgraded version of Ripley's power loader from "Aliens" and you'll have a good sense of the shit this thing tears up.
The aliens' hand weapons are of importance to the film's subplot, in which government researchers and black market dealers (led by a super-creepy guy in a wheelchair with ambitions of consuming the aliens' power through consumption) collect and test the machinery, though they can only be activated by prawn DNA. Once we see this stuff in action, the film earns its R rating faster than Donald Trump earns your annual salary. There are few greater joys in cinema than a theater full of people reacting in unison to something sick happening on screen, and such was the case as human bodies were literally turned to greasy red smears on the ground and walls.
I love watching shit blow up, and I love movies that can make me think; if I can get the two hand-in-hand, all the better. "District 9" reminded me a great deal of "Children of Men" in its themes and filmmaking style, and in my humble opinion can happily take a place next to it on the list of great 21st-century sci-fi flicks.
P.S. Dear Hollywood: Let Jackson and Blomkamp make "Halo" already.
scarred:
Just for the lolz. I really wanna see this.
JD:
Peter Jackson talks about District 9 and some other stuff
ehhh I probably won't be able to see it.
Professor Snuggles:
--- Quote from: scarred on 14 Aug 2009, 02:46 ---
Just for the lolz. I really wanna see this.
--- End quote ---
This movie was fucking awesome, saw it at midnight last night and was completely blown away. I am quoting this because the friend I saw it with was complaining that "the aliens weren't evil enough" after we got out, while simultaneously saying the film was too hollywood.
But really this is one of the best sci-fi films I've seen in a really long time.
axerton:
Saw it today. So good. So very good.
Go see it. really. dont wait for DVD, dont download it. Go see it. there is nothing that can mirror the thing of being in a cinima and feeling the floor vibrate with the deep noise of the engines. or the full sorround sound, with the interveiwers speaking from behind you and the person on the camera speaking from the screen.
also before the guy gets in the robot thing, when it does the thing with the bullets .... So fucking cool.
so just to reiterate. GO. SEE. THIS. MOVIE.
--- Quote from: Professor Snuggles on 14 Aug 2009, 12:26 ---But really this is one of the best sci-fi films I've seen in a really long time.
--- End quote ---
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