Hah! That guy is awesome.
First negative review...and oh gee, look who it is: Armond White. This movie still has a 100% as far as I'm concerned. Look at this guys review history if you don't believe me.
This Star Trek sells cuteness, sentimentality and explosive F/X as if Starship Troopers, Minority Report, Mission to Mars or even Blade Runner or The Matrix (all visionary standard-setters) never happened. Abrams directs action where you can’t see anything— just blur, like in Cloverfield.The overture cuts from a woman giving birth to a space battle (mawkishness and sensationalism) with no aesthetic tension or rhythm. Instead of satirizing sci-fi clichés, Abrams yearns for TV simplicity. Still selling soap, his flimsy imagery zaps substance from the drama of Kirk and Spock fighting to control their emotions while combating mankind’s enemies.
I don't like the idea of half and half. If they want to film certain portions of the movie in verite/documentary and mix and mash it so it flows well, that's cool. But I think anything else would make it feel uneven and like two films.
If it's a possibility, please don't! I seriously want to stay unspoiled for this movie! In fact, I'm going to bow out of this thread until I see it I think.
For decades — at least since Orson Welles scared the daylights out of radio listeners with “War of the Worlds” back in 1938 — the public has embraced the terrifying prospect of alien invasion. But what if, notwithstanding the occasional humanist fable like “E.T.,” all those movies and television programs have been inculcating a potentially toxic form of interplanetary prejudice?
“District 9,” a smart, swift new film from the South African director Neill Blomkamp (who now lives in Canada and who wrote the screenplay with Terri Tatchell), raises such a possibility in part by inverting an axiomatic question of the U.F.O. genre. In place of the usual mystery — what are they going to do to us? — this movie poses a different kind of hypothetical puzzle. What would we do to them? The answer, derived from intimate knowledge of how we have treated one another for centuries, is not pretty
I’ll be interested to see if general audiences go for these aliens. I said they’re loathsome and disgusting, and I don’t think that’s just me. The movie mentions Nigerian prostitutes servicing the aliens, but wisely refrains from entertaining us with this spectacle.
The movie mentions Nigerian prostitutes servicing the aliens, but wisely refrains from entertaining us with this spectacle.![]()
Roger Ebert gave it fresh and said this
I’ll be interested to see if general audiences go for these aliens. I said they’re loathsome and disgusting, and I don’t think that’s just me. The movie mentions Nigerian prostitutes servicing the aliens, but wisely refrains from entertaining us with this spectacle.![]()
I have to admit Im a bit worried about the supposed gore. I can usually take gore when its sci-fi/fantasy stuff(except for slasher/horror & torture porn), but this is supposed to be a realistic take on the situation & well, I heard there's some nasty stuff in this film.
Also most of the times Ive seen gore has been on a small tv, not on the big screen in the dark. I dont know if that will have a totally different effect on me...
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