While certainly not for everyone (clearly, as I do know some folks who would not watch this film), I found it engaging, exciting, thought-provoking, funny in places, and enjoyable. My only real criticism is for the shameless plugging of the sequel opportunity, with the repeated promise of a three year return. The heretofore unknown lead actor, Sharlto Copley, was brilliant - a great mix of bumbling bureaucrat turned reluctant rebel, pathos for his lost love and shattered ideology. He moves so quickly from "us" to "them" that the destruction of his world is hard for him and the audience to absorb, and yet he must if he is to survive the experiments and his new reality.
There are really no other human characters in the story, other than the horrible chieftain and his gang of miscreant followers living amongst the aliens. These creeps serve primarily to show that, like the drug dealers and pimps, gang leaders and warlords of our current world, the lowest of society will move to exploit any situation, no matter how depraved - in the midst of the squalor of District 9, some group of humans has already moved in to exploit the aliens and declare themselves kings of that pathetic hill. The fact that they are Nigerian has been commented on in the news, but I don't think it matters where they are purportedly from - it makes sense geographically and historically. They are cretins, regardless of their nationality.
I would like to see this one again eventually, as I'm sure there are elements of the story and dialogue that I missed in the action.
No comments:
Post a Comment