I finally got around to seeing this (yes, catching up this week on many films from 2009.)
I wish I would have went to see G-Force instead.
I have to disagree, I saw G-Force and wish I'd seen this instead.
But the fact that it was done by Peter Jackson is the fact that it damn well should do good.
I think he must have been some kind of executive producer. It didn't have anything like his budget.
Directors: No one, I mean no one, likes crazy-realistic-super-shaky camera work. Knock it off.
I was more than a little worried about both that, and also the Docu-Drama style at first, but I think it worked well, and it almost stopped after the first 45 minutes. After that it became a normal story.
It was definitely not a Hollywood type movie and was so well done.
You could never get something so original made in Hollywood, so long may there be more films like this.
It's always nice to have a protagonist who goes through an actual personal journey as part of the story as opposed to the usual popcorn guff where the hero starts off perfect and the story just churns from there onwards.
Quite a journey from pushed-around coward and office fool, to single handed killing-machine and possible saviour of Prawns. However, the ending was left open. Is he a Prawn? Is he dead? Is he a captor of MNU, being secretly experimented upon.
Also, mech suit catches rocket-propelled grenade.What's not to love?
Is that what they are called? It is exactly what I imagined a
Soldier Boy from Joe Haldane's
Forever Peace would look like.
I don't know the real situation in South Africa, but I wonder if aliens is the best way to convey the message.
I would say it was inspired by that situation, rather than an allegory.
Everyone does realize that this film takes place in South-Africa, right? I'm reading a lot of reactions that link apartheid to American and Western situations, but I don't think that is what the film wants to portray.
The relocation of people living in this kind of squalor, as if they are an inconvenience without any rights, is happening in India, is happening in Brazil, is happening in China, and most likely happening in other places. (On a lesser scale it is also happening in East London around the Olympic Village site!)
Even though I'm familiar with the bad rep Nigerians have here (all Nigerians are unfairly tarred with the same brush), I was uncomfortable with the way they were demonised. It was one of the jarring notes in the film.
I see now why Nigerians got so worked up about this now.
Re: Sour Milk.
I know you are talking about Alien Nation here, but in South Africa, where District 9 is set, many do drink sour milk to become intoxicated.
They did have the Prawns eating rubber tyres, and the Cat Food thing was funny. This was much funnier than I expected it to be. I laughed a few times.
Quite honestly, I never got around to feeling for Christopher, possibly because the writers never really developed the character.
He only became a main character half-way into the film, but there was a strong
Alien Mine relationship developed with Wikus. I really believe that he will return to save his people, though whether he can reverse Wikus who knows.
Why did he get a human name - Christopher Johnson on the News broadcasts - when none of the other Prawns did? Do you think he was from a leader/drone/queen class of Prawn and the others were worker class? Or did he just have an education? Or did he come down from the mothership in the control section and have access to the equipment? His friend (that got shot) and him were certainly different to the others. And no other Prawns were shown any caring for their children like him.
The other thing that jarred was the relationship between Wikus and his wife. An English and an Afrikaans speaking white South African getting married isn't unusual but the kind of Afrikaaner Wikus is, and the kind of English SA his wife is...I don't know. It seemed unlikely to me.
Before I read your comments, I also wondered how someone so obviously unsophisticated would be allowed to marry a Daddies girl like her. I then wondered if the father could be so scheming that he would have her marry Wikus, just so that he could have someone working for the government's Alien office working for him. Why else would he promote him?
I was also puzzled about why a white middle-class South African couple would go to what looked like a rather down-at-heel state hospital. Her father is a high-ranking executive at MNU. She'd have money even if Wikus maybe didn't. They'd have a good medical aid that would allow them to check into a private hospital.
I think we need to bear in mind that the mother-ship has been there for 20 years. Unless this is an alternative reality, then I don't see one in the sky at the moment, this is set in the future. The Aliens have obviously been a huge drain on South African finances. Who can say what the knock-on effect of that on the Health Care system would be after 20 years? That would be a part of the reason why there was such intolerance of them remaining.