District 9 - Review

How do you keep a good alien down?

Fly into his mothership with a virus?  Strangle him with your slave chain?

…Take away his Reese’s Pieces?   

Wrong, according to ”District 9”.  The correct reply would be to round them all up and place them into a refugee camp under horrible conditions.

The film chronicles, documentary style, the efforts of the MNU (Multi-National Unit) to relocate 1.5 million aliens (nicknamed “prawns” for their appearance) to a new refugee camp.

Two decades ago a huge mothership descended over a major world city.  Any guesses where?  New York?  Washington?  London?  Paris?  Nope.

Johannesburg, South Africa.  After cutting into the ship, authorities find hundreds of thousands of aliens, diseased and starving.  What to do with them all?  The whole world’s watching.

Enter the refugee camp.  Prawns are forced into ramshackle huts and corrugated tin shacks, forced to eke out the lifestyle of beggars, petty thieves, and the like.

As a result, South African citizens grow tired of their presence and pressure the government to move them farther away from the city.  Enter the MNU, an international humanitarian company (among other things).  They have a plan (sound frakking familiar?).

Leading the relocation is Wikus Van der Merwe (perfectly played by newcomer actor Sharlto Copley), an MNU middle manager suddenly thrust into the spotlight as the man chosen to direct the Prawn relocation.  Things are not all they seem in the District, and Wikus is suddenly confronted with something no one ever thought was possible.  As a result, Wikus is forced to make choices that test his very humanity, from the small decisions (cat food, anyone?) to the global.

This film is rife with political and social commentary.  How do you deal with a race (human or otherwise) that so many of your people deem “undesiarable”.  Can you use such a race to foster your own goals?

Well, I don’t want to delve into the movie too much, as it’s hard to do without giving away significant plot.

The great thing about “D9” is that it doesn’t go the way you think it should, the twists are quite clever.

“District 9” is a must-see for any sci-fi genre fan.  More mainstream movie goers may find the pacing a bit slow in spots, but both audiences will find the acting superb and the look and feel of the movie compelling.  This movie feels real.  It’s akin to the feeling I got while watching “Cloverfield”.  The characters are very simply outlined, but you find a depth in them as you apply your own sense of reality to what they’re going through.  In that way, these two films create their own subset of the sci-fi genre, call it “reality sci-fi” if you will.

I liked the fact that they set the movie in a “third world” country.  It gives the film a sense of naivete and innocence, and contributes to that realistic tension and sensitivity.

Bottom Line - “District 9” is a fantastic sci-fi genre film that has something that should appeal to everyone.

Rating out of 10:   9 (no mathematical pun intended)

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District 9 - Preview

What do you know about “District 9”?  You may have seen some trailers recently, advertising the film, which opens this weekend.

Here’s a quick synopsis (from the studio):

“Over twenty years ago, aliens made first contact with Earth. Humans waited for the hostile attack, or the giant advances in technology. Neither came. Instead, the aliens were refugees, the last survivors of their home world. The creatures were set up in a makeshift home in South Africa’s District 9 as the world’s nations argued over what to do with them.

Now, patience over the alien situation has run out. Control over the aliens has been contracted out to Multi-National United (MNU), a private company uninterested in the aliens’ welfare - they will receive tremendous profits if they can make the aliens’ awesome weaponry work. So far, they have failed; activation of the weaponry requires alien DNA.

The tension between the aliens and the humans comes to a head when an MNU field operative, Wikus van der Merwe (Sharlto Copley), contracts a mysterious virus that begins changing his DNA. Wikus quickly becomes the most hunted man in the world, as well as the most valuable - he is the key to unlocking the secrets of alien technology. Ostracized and friendless, there is only one place left for him to hide: District 9.”

Next, I’ve got a trailer for you:

I am very intrigued by this film.  It’s akin to the buzz I felt with “Cloverfield”, and that was a fine buzz, indeed.

I’ll be seeing “District 9” this weekend, followed by Media Viewer’s first ever Movie Review!!!

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“Halo” has been one of the most beloved video game franchises ever.  And if you’re an XBOX 360 owner, you’re well versed in the tales of the Master Chief.

Following the release of Halo 3, talk was rife about a feature film.  Initial word was that Peter Jackson wanted to produce and/or direct the adaptation.  Geeks went all a-flutter.  But, rumors turned out to be just that, and Jackson moved on to other things.  Talk about a Halo movie cooled.

However, talk has suddenly spiked about someone else interested in the property.  That somebody has sent a shock through the moviemaking community and we geeks once again have our senses heightened.

That producer is one Steven Spielberg.  Word has it that he is interested in the Eric Nylund “Fall of Reach” Halo origin story.

I read “Reach” while on a Hawaiian vacation, and I must say…it’s not a bad book.  There’s a lot there to work with.

Spielberg reportedly wants Neill Blomkamp to direct, on word that Blomkamp’s upcoming “District 9” movie was a thing of beauty.  In fact, Blomkamp even made a Halo “proof of concept” film, a kind of teaser about the vision he might have for the film.

Watch it right here on Media Viewer!

I’m just a wee bit excited….

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