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They say the best science fiction is only limited by the
imagination. Hard S/F writers tend to elide
the human element, focusing instead on the brutal objectivity of mans cosmic
inconsequence. Populists like Steven
Spielberg, on the other hand, have tried to envision a peaceful meeting between
extra-terrestrials and mankind. So it is
almost with an air of apology that Spielberg has now adapted H.G. Wells classic
novel War of the Worlds, wherein a sleepy America
awakes to find its been tagged for hostile takeover by immensely powerful beings
from another planet.
Faced with the difficult task of exploring the limits of human-alien
contact in a plausible manner, alien invasion movies like Signs and Independence Day often resort to hokey
Americana when they run out of credibility. Whatever
else one can say about this new adaptation, Spielberg at least gets the war
part right, even if the out of this world part at times seem out of his reach. For this apocalyptic battle, he pulls out all the stops,
committing to celluloid one of the most gripping and suspenseful movies in a career that
has already seen its share of memorable suspense scenes.
Like Signs, War of the Worlds centers on a single father
struggling to keep his family together under mounting duress. Tom Cruise plays Ray
Farrier, an everyday-Joe kind of guy who works the New York container docks, and whose
idea of interplanetary war is defined by seeing his teenage son don a Red Sox baseball cap
to match his own Yankees cap. He doesnt
eat health food, cant keep a girlfriend, and is everybodys best friend in the
neighborhood. Its not convincing in the
least, but it doesnt have to be. Before
long, the sky clouds over in a lightning storm that will far outrank his deadbeat-dad
shortcomings in terms of daughter Dakota Fannings future trauma.
What follows is quite simply some of the best filmmaking Spielberg has
undertaken in two decades. Massive tripodal alien
ships that ride the lightning burst forth from the urban city-level, and wipe
that self-loving bad-boy grin off Cruises face in no time. Spielbergs camera is always exactly where it
needs to be as the cement splits open or buildings topple; its tough to imagine the
inevitable War of the Worlds-Six Flags ride
having anywhere near as much visceral energy as these initial invasion scenes. The CGI is inventively used, and Spielberg
opts for some disturbing widescreen long shots that convey the helplessness of the
situation. Nowhere is this felt more
instinctively than in the films most harrowing sequence, when Rays
minivanthe only working automobile around for milesis mobbed by a bloodthirsty
group of survivors.
If theres cause for concern at all, its that, unlike the
summers other invasion film, Land of the Dead, Spielberg and Cruise are
hell-bent for teaching the audience something. Spielbergs
life lessons still come swaddled in humanist concern:
9/11 references pop up everywhere, most disturbingly in Rays returning
home covered in the dust of vaporized humans. As
for Cruise, the fact that the aliens had been planning this attack for billions of years
indicates a script re-write on his part to make this his Battlefield
Earth. Whether or not Cruise is gearing up
for that battle remains to be seen. As for
this one, its spectacle filmmaking of the highest order.
- Jesse Paddock