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Senin, 01 Agustus 2011

Movie Reviews - The Day After Tomorrow


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Movie reviews this week looks at the ecological suspense thriller The Day Immediately after Tomorrow with Dennis Quaid (Inner Space) as a climatologist Jack Hall, who for years has been warning the U.S. government and the globe in common that its' reliance on fossil fuels is causing a awesome deal of harm to the planet (a couple of years just before Al Gore's Oscar winning An inconvenient truth).

His estimations of a global disaster from global warming which would usher in a further ice age, which he predicts as a most beneficial guess estimate definitely not in his lifetime that polar melting would disrupt the North Atlantic current, suddenly escalates to the present, with an ice age hitting the vast majority of America, and Jack in a desperate rush against time to save his son, Sam Hall played by Jake Gyllenhaal (Donnie Darko), who is trapped in New York, which unfortunately is at the epicentre of this ice age.

This is 1 of the very first movies to highlight the environment impact of our reliance on fossil fuels, with a number of scenes to ponder the possible disaster on our hands, one of these is a helicopter going over Scotland that suddenly just freezes at minus 150 degrees Fahrenheit and there is a amazing scene, exactly where Jack has been telling the scientific community would occur albeit with some scoffing, that the sun would accelerate the rapid decline in temperature to beyond freezing point, immediately freezing structures, and something that takes place to pass inside the rays of the sun at that specific time, unfortunately he gets to witness this phenomenon first hand in a desperate race against time to discover shelter while every little thing about him freezes as the sun comes up.

There is also an unforgettable scene as the Tower of Liberty freezes solid.

Not only does he have to breach the bitter cold, he also has to fend off dogs that have gone insane from hunger, searching for something warm blooded to eat, ergo any humans they can find.

We discover out that Jack feels he has let down his son a small, and this journey to get him is something he has to do to make up for their relationship, there is a brilliant conversation at the beginning, where Jack finds out Sam has failed Calculus, and Sam replies he got each question ideal, and the only reason the lecturer failed him was given that he did not write out the solutions but did it instead in his head, Jack asks him if he told the lecturer, he told him he did, but the lecturer mentioned if he couldn't do it in his head neither could Sam.

Movie Review For District 9


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This is a pretty surreal futuristic suspense thriller produced by Peter Jackson (Lord of the Rings Trilogy).

It stars an just about all South African cast, with Sharlto Copley in the lead role as Wikus Van De Merwe, an NMU (Multinational United) employee who is in charge of relocating approximately 1 million aliens, whose spaceship has hovered to rest above Johannesburg, the aliens on very first contact were all identified to be malnourished, sick, and needing shelter.

The trouble of course is housing over a million aliens, when the nearby populace are frightened by their looks, demeanour, and mannerisms as a local indigen paraphrased says "if there had been from this planet we would realize but they are not even from this planet", they also have a penchant for cat food, as nicely as some sudden bursts of anger.

NMU has appointed the happy go lucky Wikus to for see the mass evacuation of these aliens, who the humans have termed "prawns" given that they appear like prawns.

The story is told in flashback, with several interviews from people who knew Wikus and the mass evacuation operation, you commence to wonder what happened to Wikus as they all speak of some ominous event.

It turns out during the mass evacuations NMU had to serve each of the aliens with an evacuation order, where they had to sign, of course most of the aliens do not know what an evacuation indicates, and there are violent scuffles, as Wikus accompanied with the mandatory NMU military personnel try to get the aliens to sign the evacuation order, in some cases according to Wikus, the aliens hitting the piece of paper away is counted as an agreement. The real reason of course for the evacuation according to the flashback interviews was to discover alien weapons, it turns out the advanced weapons of the aliens are biologically engineered to be operated by them only.

Wikus also takes the chance during these evacuation notices to ransack the houses of the aliens looking for anything illegal, for the duration of the method he finds an object, he thinks is some kind of gas canister that could be a weapon, so he confiscates it, not before attempting to uncover out how it works, and receiving sprayed in the face by a dark fluid. It turns out the alien who had that object was a small smarter than most of the "prawns" and the canister was necessary to operate his shuttle hidden underground, back to the mother ship.

Inevitably Wikus gets involved with a violent "prawn", and wants a cast on his left arm, but you notice soon right after he is not looking nicely at all, culminating to him passing out puking black blood at a party, he is rushed to the hospital, and he wakes up alarmingly to find his left arm has adopted the features of a "prawn". NMU military whisk him away to their medical facilities, where despite his protestations he is produced to operate a series of alien weapons. He is regarded as the quite 1st human and alien hybrid and the military arm of NMU are eager to harvest his organs for bioengineering. Still Wikus just desires the alien arm removed, and desires to get back to his wife. He manages to escape, but chances of him going back home are made virtually impossible with all the media reporting malicious rumors about him and the whole NMU military arm looking for him.

He is left with no option but to go back to the "prawns" he despises, in a desperate bid for help prior to the metamorphosis is complete.

It is mesmerising viewing, and Wikus captures the desperation of a man about to shed everything to the point of his humanity brilliantly.

It is rare science-fiction film, as it is set in South Africa, but you realise soon following the reasons why, as it parallels victimisation of the "prawns" with apartheid.