Aug. 21st, 2009

orangerful: (it got weird // orangerful)
We are big fans of Alexis Bledel in this house. LOVE Gilmore Girls, watched both of the 'Sisterhood' movies. And we were really excited that she finally had a new movie coming out with her in the starring role - Post Grad! It opens tomorrow!

And it has a whopping 6% on Rotten Tomatoes.

If you do just the top critics, that goes up to 10%, and the only critic that liked it was Roger Ebert - the man who hates every other movie I like.

So, I'm sorry Alexis, but I think we're going to have to pass on this one. We're saving our $20 for a movie with 65+ on RT - like District 9!
orangerful: (face rank // orangerful)
When you take a close look at the story at the very core of 'District 9', there is really nothing new there - xenophobia has been a part of our world since the dawn of time.  'District 9' does what any quality science fiction film would do; it takes issues in the real world, issues we have trouble dealing with face to face, and turning it into a story we can handle and process. 

The aliens never landed.  Their ship just hovered.  When humans finally made contact, the creatures inside the ship were ill and trapped.  In an effort to help them, the aliens were transported to the ground to give them a chance to recover.  But what was supposed to be a short-term operation has now lasted 20 years, and the compound has transformed into a slum.  Tensions between the aliens and the humans have reached an all time high, and the government has decided to move them.  Wikus Van De Merwe is in charge of a taskforce to get the "signatures" of the aliens living in District 9, a legal technicality that Multi-National United (MNU) needs to get by to move the aliens to District 10.  Like most humans, he likes to think he is treating the "Prawns" the way they deserved to be treated, but once he is inside the slums and sucked into their world, he slowly begins to rethink the way he has seen this creatures.

This is an intense movie.  I know I spent the last half-hour, maybe even more, sitting on the edge of my seat, ready to cringe/hide/cry/scream/emote at the screen.  The effects were seamless and you never doubt that the aliens are living among these people. 

It's very smart storytelling too; there is very little handholding from the writer or director.  Either you're able to keep up with their technique, or you'll have to watch it again on DVD - they have no time to wait for you.  It's this great mix of "archival footage", documentary footage, surveillance footage, and then the movie stuff mixed in.  But I never felt confused by it at all. 

Very well done and worth seeing on the big screen.  

Originally posted on orangerful.vox.com

March 2023

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