Monsters: Movie Review
Monsters
Rating: 5/10
Cast: Whitney Able, Scoot McNairy
Director: Gareth Edwards
With a film about aliens landing in the USA six years ago and being
quarantined in one area, it's obvious you'll recall to mind one of the best
films of 2009, the Peter Jackson produced District 9.
But this similar premise comprises Monsters which is more relationship drama
than alien societal integration.
Set in the not too distant future, opening titles explain that a spacecraft
sent to bring back alien samples broke up over Mexico in re-entry. The result of
that is a series of alien life forms (which look uncannily like squid on stalks)
have taken up residence throughout parts of central America and Mexico - and are
spreading.
Rather than nuke them, the government's decided that they will let them be -
and simply declare zones of the country in quarantine and infected areas.
Enter into this photographer Andrew (McNairy) - he's desperate to make his
name in the media with a picture of a live creature - but is tasked with
returning his boss' errant daughter Sam (Able) back home safe.
Through a series of mishaps, the pair find the only way they can get back to
home is via the infected zone - and so their journey into danger begins&
Monsters is not what you'd expect at all - initially you're introduced to the
squid creatures early on and so you're never waiting for a big alien reveal,
which robs the premise of some of its tension.
Director Gareth Edwards is also a little heavy on the direction - opening
shot after shot are simply about the infected zone signs or military fighter
jets heading past in the skies. It's a pummeling to set up the world they
inhabit rather than subtlety to get the message across. Even on a low budget, it
could have achieved more.
With a lack of real script (most of this is improvised) it's left to McNairy
and Able to make it believable and to have you care. The pair are both relative
newcomers both have stunning chemistry together (and are now married in real
life) - so while there are dips in the film and dialogue which is simply about
asking where they are while navigating the grim reality of it all, it's thanks
to these two and their tender relationship that you make it through to the
end.
It doesn't live up to its premise and the attack which inevitably comes in
the infected zone lacks any real tension. It's a disappointment which doesn't
live upto its premise and you may feel a little cheated when the lights go up at
the end.
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
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