Posted on 06/29/2005 6:02:40 PM PDT by zook
Alien Reality It takes you there, and makes you feel it.
I didnt think it was possible to make movies like this any more. War of the Worlds is an almost perfectly realized movie of the classic aliens-attack type: satisfying, believable, and very, very scary. It comes so close to perfection that a long list of accolades are going to have to be cleared out of the way before we get around to that almost.
Ray Ferrier, a dockworker, has just gotten charge of his kids for the weekend, as his ex-wife and her new husband head off for a weekend at her moms. The teenaged son, Robbie (Justin Chatwin), is resentful and rude; the ten-year-old daughter, Rachel (Dakota Fanning), is a bit too world-weary for someone still carrying plastic ponies around. (After Ray blows up at Robbie she informs her dad, Youre never going to get through to him that way.)
We get a couple of hints from an overheard news broadcast that somewhere in the Ukraine (didnt they drop the the years ago?) there have been solar flares and power outages. But then a curious thing starts to happen in the local neighborhood. Ray is exhilarated to watch a gusty whirl of gray in the sky, which pulls the wind toward it and sends all the backyard laundry flapping. Its like the Fourth of July! he tells Rachel; she, quite sensibly scared, replies, No, it isnt.
Thats the last time anything in this movie is remotely normal. As the extent of the alien attack becomes increasingly apparent, the situation shoots to the level of hopeless and stays there. Rays goal becomes simply to get his children safely back to their mother. Rather than unfolding a storyline, it is a series of harrowing experiences, one after another. Which is, truthfully, what living something like this would be like.
Thats most impressive thing about what director Steven Spielberg has done here: This crazy story about space aliens destroying the earth is so realistic. We never know anything more than what Ray knows, and he doesnt know much. Decisions are as agonizing and unclear to us as they are to him. He trudges day after day, exhausted and filthy, and we too feel the interminable and hopeless nature of his quest. In its own way, War of the Worlds is like the harrowing first 20 minutes of Saving Private Ryan (of which Spielberg was producer). It takes you there, and makes you feel it.
When Ray walks past a wall adorned, as Manhattan was after September 11, with notices begging for help in locating lost relatives, we think, Yes, thats what it would be like. When Rachel and her dad argue over her need to have privacy for a roadside potty break, and his need to have her never out of his sight, we know thats just the kind of thing that would happen. When they encounter people along the way who are kind, or who are suddenly and alarmingly vicious, or who are something strangely in-between (a great performance by Tim Robbins), we know we would meet that range of characters too.
Steven Spielberg has wisely located the power of this story, not in the size of the aliens or their destructive powers, but in how such threats would make us feel. Other directors trust the effects to be big and noisy enough to elicit these emotions, but Spielberg has set his sights on the subjective, experiential feel of the story itself. Its a terrible temptation that now, with computer images, there are no limits to special effects; you can make an explosion 30-feet high, or 300, or more, so why not go for the biggest bang you can get for the buck? But a super-size wowzer like that becomes a distraction, breaking the bounds of the story and taking on separate existence as a mere object of gawking. Spielberg tames the effects and makes them serve the story. By exercising restraint he manages to make even a movie about invading aliens, in some sense, realistic.
Only almost perfect? The ending is a little sweeter than it needed to be, and a little clunky for that, but its not a serious flaw. If anything, Spielbergs pursuit of you are there realism is too relentless. He wisely forgoes scenes that would constitute comic relief, but also gives us little in the way of character development, and nothing truly develops in the plot. The misery and anxiety-saturated atmosphere is so endless that we never get a break no moments of hope or beauty, that would give us a breather. Halfway through the movie I scribbled this note: Along about here I got tired of being scared. I was tired of being at this pitch of tension for so long, tired of worrying about these people, and not knowing what horrific thing would happen next. But real life wouldnt give us a break, and Spielberg doesnt either. Few movies about flying saucers and bug-eyed aliens tell us such true things about human nature. War of the Worlds sets a new standard for space-age classics; its in a universe of its own.
Frederica Mathewes-Green writes regularly for NPR's Morning Edition, Beliefnet.com, Christianity Today, and other publications. She is the author of Gender: Men, Women, Sex and Feminism, among other books.
For me, that was the neat thing--no story line, just sheer terror. Exactly what a "real invasion" would be like.
I don't really care who Steven Spielberg votes for. If he makes great movies, and isn't an a**hole, I'll go see them.
tim robbins will NEVER see another penny of mine... EVER!!!
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/clinton/stories/starr082298.htm
Further details about Clinton's testimony emerged on the same day that the president's legal defense fund announced it has raised $2.2 million in the last six months, more than was collected during the previous four years of his presidency combined. The newly reconstituted defense fund, operating with looser rules about who can give and how much they can offer, tapped into resentment against Starr as more than 17,000 Clinton supporters sent money.
Hollywood was quick to come to the president's aid. Among the 62 donors giving the maximum $10,000 were performers and directors such as Tom Hanks, Barbra Streisand, Michael Douglas, Ron Howard, Norman Lear, Steven Spielberg and Kate Capshaw-Spielberg as well as studio executives Jeffrey Katzenberg, David Geffen, Harvey Weinstein and Bud Yorkin.
"We believe that no first family should face such a horrendous financial burden while trying to carry out the work which the American people elected him to do," said David Pryor, the former Democratic senator and Clinton friend from Arkansas who founded the legal fund.
This review is closer to my experience with past Tom Cruise movies: "How Tom Cruise would react if..."
Anyway, America has been "invaded, full on" by Tom Cruise for the last month, so I may pass on this one.
Someone should ask Tom Cruise about his "encounter" with Matchbox 20's Rob Thomas that everyone in LA is talking about...
I'll check out the movie soon enough. A friend of mine just called me from Houston to comment on his take of the movie. He didn't care for the film, noting it was quite possibly the worst he has seen in a while (and he sees a lot of movies). I got the impression that he was caught up on the logical aspects of what happened and that really ruined the film for him. I wasn't sure I followed him, but he noted something to the effect that he didn't understand why an advance civilization with the means to conquer other worlds would chose to take over ours using tripods that have been buried beneath the Earth for a million years. Again, I'll see them movie anyway. And perhaps, having read your take, with a different mindset.
I didn't see any political messages in the movie. Xenophobia maybe. <grin>
Don't leave us hanging....
My pardner is going to see it tonight, my only question will be does Tom Cruise ever stop grinning?
The Tom Cruise & Rob Thomas story:
http://www.thesuperficial.com/archives/001038.html
...which IS in the public domain now. (Oy! Mama: come and look! Such a deal I got - not having to pay for a writer for something new!)
Go, read the book:
http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/gutenberg/3/36/36-h/36-h.htm
Metro-sexual and looney Scientologist Cruise portraying a blue-collar dockworker? Reason enough for me to avoid this movie like the plague...
little in the way of character development, and nothing truly develops in the plot.
That doesn't sound very promising to me.
Yeah, same here. Nothing I've heard about it makes me want to see it. Sounds like an episode of survivor.
Yuck...that kind of encounter.
More on the Tom-Rob story here. Gossip website "Independent Sources" was forced to pull the story from their website shortly after posting but not before the story was reposted in other places:
http://newyork.craigslist.org/mnh/rnr/81449881.html
I hate to show my lack of pop-culture knowledge, but what is AI?
Well, once a leftist, always a leftist. I was impressed with "Saving Private Ryan", even though its plot reminded me of a bunch of kids playing "war".
Now that's a nice touch...
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