#24
District 9 (2009)
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Directed by … Neill Blomkamp
Written by … Terri Tatchell and Neill Blomkamp
Executive Produced by … Bill Block, Ken Kamins and Elliot Ferwerda
Produced by … Peter Jackson, Philippa Boyens and Michael S. Murphey
Cinematography by … Trent Opaloch
Production Design by … Philip Ivey
Costume Design by … Diana Cilliers
Art Direction by … Emilia Roux
Visual Effects by … The Embassy, Goldtooth Creative, Image Engine, Weta Digital, Wingnut Films and Zoic Studios
Editing by … Julian Clarke
Original Motion Picture Score composed by … Clinton Shorter
Sharlto Copley … Wikus Van De Merwe
Jason Cope … Christopher Johnson
Vanessa Haywood … Tania Van De Merwe
David James … Koobus Venter
William Allen Young … Dirk Michaels
Mandla Gaduka … Fundiswa Mhlanga
Kenneth Nkosi … Thomas
Eugene Khumbanyiwa … Obesandjo 7
Louis Minnaar … Piet Smit
Hlengiwe Madlala … Sangoma
Nick Boraine … Craig Weldon
Robert Hobbs … Ross Pienaar
Sylvaine Strike … Dr. Katrina McKenzie
Nathalie Boltt … Sarah Livingstone – Sociologist
An extraterrestrial race forced to live in slum-like conditions on Earth suddenly find a kindred spirit in a government agent that is exposed to their biotechnology.
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You are not welcome here.
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For every decade, a film comes along that not only raises the stakes of its given genre…but alters our perceptions of that genre. In the past we’ve been met with “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” in the 1950s, “2001: A Space Odyssey” in the 1960s and “Star Wars” in the 1970s…films that have redefined our expectations of the ‘Science Fiction’ film and have set the foundations for further advancements in both technical achievement and storytelling merit.
Of course only time will tell of Neill Blomkamp’s bombastic hyper-overtoned thriller “District 9” will be our contemporary answer to the aforementioned, but it’s a fairly safe bet I’d say.
“District 9” sets an all too familiar stage of civil unrest, social diversity and political flair before an adulterated view of a fantastic backdrop we know so well, where the classic motif of ‘strange alien visitors’ is turned on its head.
Based off of Blomkamp’s 2005 short film “Alive in Joburg,” (more of a feature length extension on the concept, really) the film takes us to Johannesburg, South Africa…where for the past 20 years, a mammoth extra-terrestrial vessel has hovered in ominous silence. Deciding to cut their way into the hull, humanity discovers a nest of 1.8 million creatures…whom are dubbed ‘Prawn’s for their scavenger tendencies and hostile nature of stealing, rummaging and instinctual killing. As it turns out, the ship was nothing more than a glorified cattle drive, stockpiled with common workers whose intelligence, despite seemingly being superior to humans, isn’t all its cracked up to be.
As a result, the Prawns are rounded up by the local government and placed into a giant internment camp dubbed ‘District 9,’ which quickly diminishes into a trash-littered slum that falls prey to a giant inter-species black market between the aliens and a bloodthirsty Nigerian gang led by a maniacal warlord known simply as Mumbo.
Overcrowding, militarization, crime and rioting has made the situation a hot-bed for widespread panic and chaos throughout the city as the human population calls for the aliens to either depart or be executed in mass genocide…as a result the government of Johannesburg turns ‘District 9’ and her inhabitants over to a private conglomerate called Multi-National United (MNU), whose been contracted to police the Prawns until a plan can be formulated.
At the onset of the film, MNU decides that the time has come to evict the Prawns and clean out ‘District 9.’ Leading the charge is lowly yet gullible MNU field operative Wikus Van Der Merwe (Sharlto Copley) who must relocate the 1.8 million population to the ‘District 10’ camp 240 km outside of Johannesburg.
During the course of this daunting and deadly task, Wikus is exposed to a strange fluid cultivated from the alien weaponry that was stocked in an enormous cache aboard the ship…and soon enough he’s caught up in MNU’s scheme to proverbially open Pandora’s Box, as all men with power seem destined to attempt.
Now the single best thing going for ‘District 9’ is its bold leaps to be original, a feat that only gets more impossible as time goes on…especially in Science Fiction. But I think they pulled it off splendidly.
To set the film in South Africa, as opposed to the cliché and bloated Manhattan or Washington D.C. (loved that this was even commented on in the film!), we’re already given a location that, visually, is different for this kind of story…but more importantly, works to make the film frighteningly relevant to the civil disputes that are not only currently plaguing our planet…but have done so for centuries.
Much in the vain of Marvel Comics’ ‘X-Men,’ the ‘Prawns’ are a faceless outlet where you can put what you will…be it the refugees in Darfur or the Gay Community right on our doorstep. The fact that they’re ‘Aliens’ even comments on the illegal ‘Aliens’ that currently reside within our borders. They may be the stuff of fantasy, but the social plight of the Prawns and the light Blomkamp sheds on them is hauntingly real. The film bashes us over the head with the fact that intolerance and racism, despite the major leaps we’ve made over the past few decades, are issues we still face today…perhaps it does so for that very reason.
But for all our efforts, the evils of ignorance will never be completely laid to waste…which, despite how topical ‘District 9’ can seem, actually in turn makes the film somewhat timeless.
Much like ‘Cloverfield,’ the genius of the film is that it’s not a remake or based on an existing property. What I mean is, aside from the viral marketing, the general audiences went into both films without any prior knowledge of the film or its characters…which makes both projects refreshingly exciting upon that first theatrical viewing.
Going hand in hand with the political innuendo, ‘District 9’ feeds it to us in an even bolder move with the film being book-ended with a ‘documentary’ style telling of the ‘event’ which the film is based on…complete with a laundry list of interviews with no-name ‘experts’ and constant news coverage (they even have that dreaded ‘text crawl’ that Lewis Black hates so much, haha)…again, this might date the film, but the ever-growing rapidity of how we hunger for and receive instant communication would say otherwise.
The cast, also like ‘Cloverfield,’ is graciously not made up of known stars… which gives the film that veil of realism that the story calls for. These aren’t actors, but real and authentic people who are going through this scenario and that’s what makes it work.
Nods and Kudos go to the beautiful Vanessa Haywood, who gives a genuine turn as Wikus’ wife Tania…and the awesomely twisted Mumbo, right down to his belief that eating mutilated alien limbs will grant him powers. How great is that!?
Of course the highlights of the cast come from the respective focal points the story takes…on the sides of both the humans and the Prawns. Sharlto Copley’s every-man Wikus is so deliciously underplayed that the idea of him kicking ass by the film’s end seems more plausible…simultaneous with his descent into overwhelming depression and borderline madness upon the alterations to his biological make-up (without giving anything away). Then even more so, there’s the shocking turn of Jason Cope as our ‘hero Prawn’ Christopher. Not since Andy Serkis’ Gollum has a CG Character truly had such a riveting presence in a modern visual effects-based film. These two performances feed off of one another with such a tangible sense of passion and emotion that it’s just incredible to think one of them isn’t even physically on set…in a sense; you know what I mean. It’s a true testament to both of them that the relationship between the two manages to work without any suspension of disbelief.
This can also be said about the films visual effects, which I feel strongly that an Oscar nomination is in order.
I love that the ‘Creatures’ of this ‘Creature Feature’ aren’t given any sort of visual special treatment. The VFX shots of the ‘Prawns,’ the Battlesuit or the Ship aren’t glorified and pristine. To see these fantastic subjects be given a tangible weight is marvelous. Prawns aren’t brilliantly lit all the time to be shown off…the ship is usually always out of focus and of no consequence save a small handful of hero shots. It all adds up to a very authentic and natural approach to telling this story that I find interestingly unique.
When the Prawns are featured, they look pretty damn good. Maybe not as much as the now iconic Xenomorphs, but they get the job done for me.
The action and violence is hard-hitting, to be honest…downright nitty gritty, which I personally love. I always enjoy a well done dismemberment, and ‘District 9’ doesn’t disappoint. The carnage that ensues from the alien weaponry is raw and jaw dropping, initially…thought I’ll admit after the first handful of exploding bodies, it can get a bit redundant. Thankfully, just when you think the film will fall victim to that fact…out comes Wikus in the alien walker battle suit! Like the birth child of the ‘Aliens’ Power-Loader and the subjects of the ‘Robotech’ cartoon, the thing is pure indulgent awesomeness!
Clinton Shorter’s score is not piece of the mosaic that works rather efficiently. Setting up Johannesburg with the tribal beats and chilling chorus, the music of the film establishes the bleak outlook…both of the film and of the future as far as the film is concerned.
When all is said and done, ‘District 9’ has all the potential in the cosmos to become yet another outlandish and exasperated franchise. I will gladly pray that that DOESN’T happen, but we’ll see. As a Science Fiction action thriller, the film works…and, aside from ‘Star Trek’ and, more arguably ‘Watchmen,’ it’s easily one of my favorites for the Summer Season.
In the end, ‘District 9’ may not be a fully developed ‘thinking man’s film…but it still manages to depict the dilemmas that face us as a society. With it’s final shot, it might even be asking us to reflect on how we treat those who are different…when in truth it’s only us whom we ridicule with hate and prejudice…
And perhaps, when the right individual or group is faced with the message and tones of the film, it’ll help to push us just that much closer to a community undivided.
That might never happen in spades, of course…but every little bit is welcome.
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