Mostrando postagens com marcador Movie Review. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Movie Review. Mostrar todas as postagens

sexta-feira, 14 de setembro de 2012

District 9 Review



Of Neill Blomkamp's direction, known for contributions for Smallville, Stargate SG-1, and several others TV's series, District 9 is a tale of an extraterrestrial spaceship that landed on Earth in 1982, more precisely in Johannesburg, South Africa. After three months, a team decides to investigate the ship and found out a million of sick extraterrestrials, just waiting there for the rescue. And, after 28 years, nothing has happened, any attack from the E.T's, any development on Earth's technology. So the aliens started to being treated as refugees, as a group of sick things, that don't deserve any type of respect from humans.
Instead of thinking about the welfare of aliens the government only cares about the use of weapons which are within the alien ship, and for that they need to find a way to remove all the beings from that place, allowing the free exploration of the ship. But there's a problem. All the weapons can only be trigged with the presence of alien DNA in the user. When the MNU (Multi-Nacional United), a company created to deal with the aliens, decides do send Wikus van de Merwe (Sharlito Copley) to help the process of removal, the agent is exposed to a strange biotechnology, which changes van de Merwe's DNA, and the tension between aliens and humans just escalates.
The MNU finds out that Mikus is the key to activate the alien technology, and then he becomes the most wanted man in the planet, only having as option hiding into the District 9.
Dealing with a lot of complicated issues, just like racism, prejudice and social segregation in the South Africa, the country where the Apartheid happened, District 9 is a really good movie. The director, Neill Blomkamp, manages to excite the viewer from beginning to end, not revealing details of his work before the crucial moment. The work that was made with he soundtrack and the picture was spectacular, capable of improving the quality of the movie.
Blomkamp wrote down this movie with the help of his old friend, Peter Jackson, a well-known director of Hollywood's movies, based on a short film, named Alive in Joburg, directed by himself and Sharlito Copley, actor in District 9. The movie's ideas, just like humanity, xenophobia and social segregation were present in this short-story movie, and the full movie's name came from a place called District Six, one of those sites where the Apartheid happened. Such a whole climate was brought by Blomkamp, bringing to the screen a realistic, gritty and fantastic of science fiction in this District 9. Perhaps not since Alien, of James Cameron's direction, or Blade Runner, Ridley Scott's creation, or even more recently, the masterpiece of Wachovski's brothers, Matrix, we haven't a movie with this perfection. It have become clear to everyone that Peter Jackson's view and support to Neil Blomkamp was right, and the youngest have a long way forward.