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DVD
REVIEW:
THE INVASION
01/26/08
Do not trust
anyone. Do not show emotion. Do not fall asleep. Would you
be able to do that to maintain your humanity? This picture
demonstrates just how hard that could be. The desperation,
the paranoia, the helplessness and the endless persecution
gives an edge to this story but overall it falls a little
short. It is an interesting combination of drama, horror,
and sci-fi, but it’s not very strong in any of these. What
makes the movie worthwhile is Nicole Kidman’s performance.
The horror was somewhat tame and the sci-fi was a bit
“matter-of-fact” leaving only Nicole’s drama to give life to
the movie.
This is the fourth motion picture depiction of Jack Finney’s
novel, “Invasion of the Body Snatchers”. In this version the
alien form comes to Earth attached to a space shuttle that
falls apart during re-entry thus spreading the “invaders”.
They exist in the form of an advanced virus that is easily
spread and is activated when humans sleep. When they wake
up, they are still who they are but they are now possessed
by this emotionless alien influence whose main mission is to
possess all humans and dispose of those who resist. Carol
Bennell (Nicole Kidman) is inevitably dragged into this
conflict and struggles to keep her humanity intact and that
of her son, Oliver (Jackson Bond). She relies on her good
friend Ben Driscoll (Daniel Craig) to help put the pieces of
this puzzle together to understand what’s going on before
it’s too late.
Ah, the Australian phenom who can do no wrong graces us with
a stirring performance in this film. There are a few moments
in the movie where she must act emotionless so as not to
blow her cover to the already converted people. What makes
it impressive is that she is ready to burst with emotion due
to the nature of her situation and the viewer can tell how
hard she tries to contain herself and just barely get under
the alien radar . . . riveting. You’ve got to give Daniel
Craig some credit for not letting James Bond keep him in the
shadows. Sure this isn’t exactly a huge role and sure his
performance wasn’t exactly breathtaking, as he was in Casino
Royale, but he did a decent job nonetheless. Little boy
Jackson Bond was impressive though. He kept up in relatively
good pace with Nicole. Where do they get these talented kids
from? These three actors gave us the only characters with
which there was any kind of connection even though they were
not well developed.
The concept of Finney’s story is imaginative and
interesting. This film’s interpretation was a good attempt
at modernizing it, but it somehow took away from the
intensity of its horror. The price you pay for keeping it
PG-13 I guess. You can’t blame the cinematography though.
There was a constant gloom while watching this film as if it
were as emotionless as the alien beings themselves. This is
Director Oliver Hirschbiegel’s first English language work,
having done several in German. Not bad for his first
crossover. You can tell he knows what he is doing it’s just
that he took on a remake of a challenging story.
Fortunately, there is more to this movie in that it touches
on certain social issues and the human condition. Are we
losing touch of our individuality? Are we becoming more and
more emotionless? Is everything resolved with pills that are
supposed to bring us back to “normal”? Are we becoming less
human?
Film
Review By Cine Marcos
cinemarcos@smartcine.com
The bonus features in this
DVD are very weak. An 18 minutes documentary about impact of
this type of movies in society and 3 short featurettes
talking about the making of the film. Overall there is
nothing interesting that can be recommend
VIDEO:
Widescreen Enhanced for 16x9 TVs
AUDIO:
English
BONUS FEATURES:
We've Been Snatched Before:
Invasion in Media History Documentary. Experts talk about
how Snatched impacted the public (18:06)
The Invasion: A New Story - How
do you make an old story new (2:54)
The Invasion: On the Set - We reveal the challenges
and advantages to shooting in Washington DC (3:21)
The Invasion: Snatched - How do
you invade without ships, planes or bombs? (3:13)
RATING BREAK DOWN:
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Director: Oliver Hirschbiegel
Writer: David Kajganich (Screenplay)
Jack Finney(Novel)
Genre: Sci-fi Action Thriller
Fantasy
Duration: 1hr 39mins
Staring:
Nicole Kidman
Daniel Craig
Jeremy Northam
Producer:
Joel Silver
Distributor: Warner
HOME
Rating: 
PG-13 for violence,
disturbing
images, and terror.
Release Date: January 29, 2008
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