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For an R-rated independent film produced by Peter Jackson? Smart move.Good movie, but not for the kiddies. Someone brought some kids with him (maybe 7 years old) to the theater and they were not happy, and left after a little bit.
Good movie, but not for the kiddies. Someone brought some kids with him (maybe 7 years old) to the theater and they were not happy, and left after a little bit.
Good movie, but not for the kiddies. Someone brought some kids with him (maybe 7 years old) to the theater and they were not happy, and left after a little bit.
Another part of the movie that bothered me was when
Wikus hit Christopher and knocked him out. What did he plan to do? Learn how to cure himself in the mothership?
Another part of the movie that bothered me was when
Wikus hit Christopher and knocked him out. What did he plan to do? Learn how to cure himself in the mothership?
Personally I thought that was a great moment. It made Wikus' character much more 3-dimensional. I got pissed off at him, of course, but what it's meant to show is how incredibly desperate he was. He wasn't an action hero, and being told that Christopher would be back in 3 years just made him flip out and do something irrational, like some people would in that situation. It was annoying, but in a good, cohesive way.
I really disagree with him about D-9 being a paper-thin metaphor for apartheid. While it's basically the same thing that once happened to the blacks, there's a whole other level to this conflict where these beings are not even human and are far from this world. We may have come very far in our fight against racism and discrimination, but how would we realistically react if aliens like that landed on our planet, completely malnourished and completely dependent on our aid for survival. Blomkamp isn't saying, "SEE! THIS IS APARTHEID!" He is challenging our tolerance and the future of what may be. How would we actually handle contact with intelligent, struggling aliens that look grotesque and otherworldly? This is about xenophobia on a galactic level, and it's very different than on a level between members of the same species.
Just saw it.
It was just so well done and I actually thought it was really original.
Epic/10
Well said. It is not about racism, it is about speciesism. Throughout the film you will note that we are also bombarded with violent imagery of meat being hacked apart and bodies being experimented on. That these clearly sentient beings who feel pain and have their own interests are treated so abhorrently by humans who are bloodthirsty for power and profit directly correlates to humanity's other speciesism against farm animals and laboratory animals reared for the profit of big agriculture, big pharmaceutical, and big military. Everything awful that happens to the aliens in the film is happening currently (and much worse) to farm animals and lab animals around the world and yet more sympathy is paid toward dogs from Michael Vick's "kennel" than the 10 billion animals reared in intensely cruel conditions and killed every year for food in the US alone. The indictment of humanity as a whole is extremely well represented in this film and I applaud Blomkamp for his courage and skill in creating one of the best movies of the year.Blomkamp isn't saying, "SEE! THIS IS APARTHEID!" He is challenging our tolerance and the future of what may be. This is about xenophobia on a galactic level, and it's very different than on a level between members of the same species.
Well said. It is not about racism, it is about speciesism. Throughout the film you will note that we are also bombarded with violent imagery of meat being hacked apart and bodies being experimented on. That these clearly sentient beings who feel pain and have their own interests are treated so abhorrently by humans who are bloodthirsty for power and profit directly correlates to humanity's other speciesism against farm animals and laboratory animals reared for the profit of big agriculture, big pharmaceutical, and big military. Everything awful that happens to the aliens in the film is happening currently (and much worse) to farm animals and lab animals around the world and yet more sympathy is paid toward dogs from Michael Vick's "kennel" than the 10 billion animals reared in intensely cruel conditions and killed every year for food in the US alone. The indictment of humanity as a whole is extremely well represented in this film and I applaud Blomkamp for his courage and skill in creating one of the best movies of the year.
There were also the scenes where the aliens have torn cattle apart to create a sort of "nest" to breed their young in, and where the African warlords were just as racist towards the aliens as white people are/were to black Africans. Nobody seems to have any real consideration for any species but their own, no matter how much or how long they've learned what it's like to be discriminated against.
Alien Nation & The Fly. That's all I have to say.
I very firmly do not want a sequel. I see how they opened it up to one, but I really hope it's not their intention. All that needed to be said was done in D-9, and pushing it any further would be milking the message too much,I honestly would love to see a sequel, and it's rumored that there is one in the works. I feel there were more than enough things left unexplained to call for one:
Wikus being promised a cure in 3 years, Christopher's journey home and what will happen to the inhabitants of District 10 following it. Hopefully one sequel is all that's needed, because they have a really good thing going and I don't want it to feel tired through too many sequels.
Alien Nation & The Fly. That's all I have to say.
I think a sequel could work, but I wouldn't want a direct continuation of the storyline probably. There could certainly be more stories in the world Blomkamp sets up in the film though. Also, the vibe I get from the interviews with him that I've read, he doesn't rule out the idea of a sequel but I doubt he wouldn't try something else first. District 9 is his first feature-length film, I'm sure he's got more ideas that he'd like to do.I very firmly do not want a sequel. I see how they opened it up to one, but I really hope it's not their intention. All that needed to be said was done in D-9, and pushing it any further would be milking the message too much,
and I don't think it's necessary to resolve the story of Wikus and Christopher, because while I became attached to both characters; they weren't the centerpiece of the film; it was the ideas behind them that mattered.
I saw it again and a bit of an observation:
Wikus' transformation does appear to accelerate whenever he's most injured, leading me to believe that the 'fluid' is a multi-purpose nanotech that's trying to repair him back to (alien) health.
I think a sequel could work, but I wouldn't want a direct continuation of the storyline probably. There could certainly be more stories in the world Blomkamp sets up in the film though. Also, the vibe I get from the interviews with him that I've read, he doesn't rule out the idea of a sequel but I doubt he wouldn't try something else first. District 9 is his first feature-length film, I'm sure he's got more ideas that he'd like to do.
Yeah, I suppose, and if it was as well-done, I certainly wouldn't oppose. I'M JUST SO TIRED OF SEQUELS! I CAN'T HELP IT! :frown:I think a sequel could work, but I wouldn't want a direct continuation of the storyline probably. There could certainly be more stories in the world Blomkamp sets up in the film though. Also, the vibe I get from the interviews with him that I've read, he doesn't rule out the idea of a sequel but I doubt he wouldn't try something else first. District 9 is his first feature-length film, I'm sure he's got more ideas that he'd like to do.
Yeah, I suppose, and if it was as well-done, I certainly wouldn't oppose. I'M JUST SO TIRED OF SEQUELS! I CAN'T HELP IT! :frown:
Your mother mates out of season.
Really? cus' last I check she died 6 years ago.
And that's what happens when she mates out of season.
He's a desperate man in a desperate situationAnother thing that just made no sense to me:
During the shootout with him in the mech. He picked up a pig that wasnt even on screen with, I guess, a gravity gun, and shot it. WTF. He picked up and shot a pig with a gravity gun. Why would anybody think that made sense and choose to include it in the movie?