Sunday, December 21

The day that earth stood still


Sambata seara = film. Ora 21.30.
Dupa o insiruire de nume de filme, se auzi: "The day that earth stood still".
D: Hai sa mergem la cinema, sa-l vedem!
A: hai! dar unde la ora asta?
D: Hai la Movieplex, sigur ruleaza.
Un search mic pe net si intr-adevar, rula ... la 22.15.
La 21.55 am plecat din Baneasa, si la 22.10 eram in Militari la movieplex.
A fost un fel de "Veni, vedi, vici!". The day that earth stood still, un film excelent, un remake dupa The day that earth stood still din 1951, cu tema un pic schimbata, mai bine zis adaptata, pentru ca in cel din '51 extraterestrul care dadea ultimatumul rasei umane, blama rasa umana pentru distrugerea planetei cu ajutorul bombei nucleare (dat fiind ca in anii aceia era si Razboi rece). Ei bine acum oamenii distrug si mai eficient Pamantul, prin poluare, sau mai bine zis asa cum zicea si Klaatu (Keanu Reeves - photo) "You treat the world, as you treat each other." (Va purtati cu pamantul, intocmai cum va purtati intre voi.) Acest film este un semnal de alarma, care din pacate cred ca va fi ignorat ca si alte semnale trase pana acum, pentru ca, nu-i asa, ne place sa ne autodistrugem. Acestea fiind zise va doresc autodistrugere cat mai placuta, vedeti filmul acesta, eu unul ma duc sa imi iau brad acum!


Keanu Reeves, with his great stone face, lands on Earth in the enjoyable remake. This time, the film's chief concern is the environment, not nuclear weapons.

Keanu meets Klaatu. It could be a match made in heaven, or at least in a galaxy far, far away. Which is just what "The Day the Earth Stood Still" wants us to think.

This contemporary remake of the science-fiction classic knew what it was doing when it cast Keanu Reeves, the movies' greatest stone face since Buster Keaton, as a perplexed alien whose first words on Earth are, "This body will take some getting used to." When you want distant and disconnected, Reeves is your man.

The 1951 original offered the more genial Michael Rennie as the intergalactic visitor, a being arrived on Earth accompanied by giant robot companion Gort. Rennie's alien was a courtly individual with the charm of vintage James Bond, but Klaatu's temperament is not the only thing that has been changed in this enjoyable updating.


For one thing, Helen Benson (Jennifer Connelly), the widow who is Klaatu's main human contact, has been elevated from mom to mom and astrobiologist. And imperturbable robot Gort has gone from a clunky 8 feet to a lithe and bulked-up 28 feet tall. Take it easy on those steroids, big guy!

The biggest change of all is the reason Klaatu and Gort are on Earth in the first place. No, it's not to take advantage of our weakened economic condition; it is, as it was the first time around, to warn us to mend our ways as a planet or face the consequences.


Coming as it did during the Cold War era, the 1951 "Day" was deeply concerned about the arms race, with Klaatu warning anyone who would listen that if the big powers threatened to extend nuclear arms to outer space, "Earth will be burnt to a cinder." Ouch.


Though nuclear weapons are hardly a settled issue even today, screenwriter David Scarpa and director Scott Derrickson have moved on to trendier issues. What Klaatu is irked at this time around is the way our bad ecological habits are killing the planet. "You treat the world," he says, not without reason, "as you treat each other." Ouch again.

Aside from Klaatu and Gort, the "Day" team claims to have retained the original's snappy catchphrase, "Klaatu barada nikto," but it's so hard to hear that viewers will be forgiven if they miss it. Also still around is the charming blackboard scene, in which Klaatu solves an equation for Professor Barnhardt (John Cleese), a man smart enough to have won the nonexistent but indisputably high-minded Nobel Prize for biological altruism.


"Day" has also retained the B-picture feeling of the original, down to the U.S. Army's bellicose decision to fire on both Klaatu and Gort as soon as they set foot on American soil, a decision that has the same ruinous consequences today as it did in 1951. Doesn't anyone in the Pentagon go to the movies?

In charge of the military, and an advocate of the super-tough send-the-aliens-to-Guantanamo policy, is Secretary of Defense Regina Jackson (Kathy Bates doing Hillary Rodham Clinton). Heading up the touchy-feely contingent, which includes "Mad Men's" Jon Hamm, is the always effective Connelly, who also has to contend with a stepson (Jaden Smith) who considers the aliens, well, alien.


It's hard to think of another actor, not even the David Bowie of "The Man Who Fell to Earth," who could convey as well as Reeves the stranger-in-a-strange-land aura of Klaatu. When he refuses to tell Helen Benson what his nonhuman form would be because "it would only frighten you," he chills the blood in the most pleasant way.

By KENNETH TURAN, Movie Critic
December 12, 2008




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