Independence Day
Dir: Roland Emmerich
1996
****
Roland Emmerich's alien invasion movie of 1996 was the big
film of the year. The blockbuster had been forced to up its game somewhat since
1993's Jurassic Park and Independence
Day was really the only big competition that followed in the subsequent
years. It's pretty much what every 1950's UFO b-movie aficionado
had wanted since special effects got really good. The special effects and CGI
still hold up twenty years later but the script was already forty years past
its best. As with all good blockbusters, Independence
Day doesn't take itself too seriously, which is a
personal preference thing really, I would have liked a little
more realism but the studio stayed safe and pleased the wider
audience. Personally I thought the humour was quite
well balanced, although some jokes could and should have seen the cutting
room floor. Some of the smaller, less important characters were written
poorly and were questionably cast. It is generally the script that lets it
down. Firstly, being from outside of the USA, I didn't feel the same connection
Americans did what with American independence meaning very little to
me. The idea and dialogue that comes with the
whole Independence Day thing is about as cheesy as it gets. It's one
big American patriot love-fest really, the president kicks ass, Area 51 has the
Intel and the rest of the world waits for them to tell them what to do. Indeed,
there is a scene whereby a British Captain is standing somewhere in the far
east, a solder hands him the phone and tells him the Americans
want propose a counter-strike and in the best mumbled home-counties
voice he declares "About bloody time". It's fair enough though, it's
an American film after all and all that stuff is easily ignored. The dog is
saved in ridiculous fashion, people sacrifice themselves quite pointlessly
and stereotypes are everywhere. I think the thing that bugged me
the most were the performances that were both overacted and underacted at the
same time. For instance, the beginning sequence, where a
young technician wakes and first hears the alien's signal. He overacts
by falling all over the place with his mouth wide open but also under acts by
being completely unconvincing that he'd actually just
heard proof of extra-terrestrial life. In my version he
would have thrown up and launched into a thirty-minute monologue about
all his regrets and fears, but then that wouldn't have been very family
friendly. The way they end up defeating the invading aliens make Mars
Attacks! look like a serious drama. The special effects might have been cutting
edge but the ideas certainly were not. I loved the old 1950's UFO movies
because they were shocking, funny and full of suspense, Independence
Day is all that but with amazing special effects, is longer and never held back
due to lack of budget or technology. It could have been a hundred-times better
than it was but the scene whereby the UFO is revealed still sends shivers down
my neck.
No comments:
Post a Comment