Releasing Studio: Paramount/Bad Robot
Disc/Transfer Specifications: Anamorphic Widescreen 2.35:1; Region 1 (U.S.) Release
Tested Audio Track: English Dolby Digital 5.1
Rating: PG-13
Director: J.J. Abrams
Starring Cast: Elle Fanning, Amanda MIchalka, Kyle Chandler, Joel Courtney, Ron Eldard
PEARLCORDER'S PLOT ANALYSIS:
From the moment I saw the
Super 8 teasers I was admittedly intrigued, but for the life of me couldn’t figure out what this film was about…it looked like the gang from
Stand By Me got together with…well…what’s the difference. I missed it in theaters and going into it at home last night as a rental, I had absolutely no idea that this was about aliens – or an alien, to be more specific – but you wanna know something? After the creature that acts as the headliner in
Super 8 shows itself, I had the strangest intuition that this was a
Cloverfield spin, or rip off…lo and behold, Mr. J.J. Abrams’ name was attached to the director’s chair here. You can feel his influence all over this film.
Further, in the way the marketing department for Paramount – G-d bless their rotten souls – advertised
Super 8, it was easy to believe Steven Spielberg was behind the camera here as director…I sure did. His name was splashed all over every clip, banner, teaser and poster during the promotion period, and I went into this actually thinking Spielberg directed. Alas, he was wearing the producing pants here – nevertheless, you can definitely feel the
War of the Worlds-meets-
Cloverfield vibe even when watching
Super 8 on a smaller screen in your home theater/media room.
Abrams – whom I don’t necessarily care for as a filmmaker especially after the disaster, in my own opinion, that was the
Star Trek reboot – melds a story that mixes a classic science fiction monster angle a la
Cloverfield with a narrative revolving around a group of middle school graduates in what ultimately does feel, in the end, like a direct-to-cable production in many ways; add to that the fact that the cast encompasses a group of nobody’s, for the most part, save for Ron Eldard (
Ghost Ship) and
Super 8 becomes a strange film in that it doesn’t really know what it wants to be. The angle of the plot concentrating on the middle school kids, in particular, gives it that aforementioned
Stand By Me feel that would be more at home as an after-school special or something produced by the Lifetime network instead of their usual “rape of the week” film…if it weren’t for the mild violence injected by the sequences involving the monster.
To be fair,
Super 8 had some standout moments of suspense – Abrams builds the tension nicely, allowing us to wonder exactly what is going on with the plot and what this group of boys and one girl have to do with the events about to unfold around them, and it’s not until a good depth into the plot that the science fiction/alien angle is revealed. The time period in which
Super 8 takes place is circa 1979, and the costume designers did a good job conveying the era through the polyester clothes, music and language; from the very beginning, you wonder if the clothes the kids are wearing are merely decisions by their own brains to throw on polyester flowered shirts and flared trousers or shorts that barely cover their wing dings and that have that awful 80s-like thick trim around them (although a couple of the girls look real sexy in their crop tops and ridiculously short denim Daisy Dukes)….but, eventually, you make out that they’re definitely in the late 1970s. A pack of kids that have just graduated middle school, as I mentioned, in the peaceful town of Lillian, Ohio, have a peculiar fascination for making their own film – one heavy set, specifically annoying one in particular who appears to be the leader of this group of misfits. But this kid is no joke – almost like a Scorsese in training, he sets up lights, cameras, sound and makeup artists to accompany the little “films” he does with his friends, most of which are of the horror genre dealing with zombies. Who this kid is going to market these films to if they ever see the light of day is anyone’s guess, as in the end, it’s just a bunch of whining middle school wussies wearing amateurish makeup jobs to simulate zombie infestations and the like, but as fatso and his group of servants go to what appears to be an abandoned train station to film a scene one evening, their lives change forever.
As a train approaches in the distance while the group is practicing acting out a scene before filming, the gang scurries to set up the cameras and sound so they can film the scene as the train passes for what fatso calls “production value.” But as the train wooshes by at a rapid pace, one of the kids – the son of the sheriff’s deputy of the town – witnesses in the distance a white pickup truck drive wildly onto the tracks and ultimately into the train itself, causing a massive explosion and corresponding derailment of the entire cargo train. What follows is one of the most violent, nail-biting and eye-widening train crash sequences ever put on film, as every container of the train rips off the rails and is thrown wildly into the air and around the group of kids trying desperately to run away from the disaster unfolding before them. When the fireballs and explosions finally end, the kids discover someone they know behind the wheel of the pickup truck that ran into the train – it’s their black science teacher from school, now bloodied and brandishing a gun. Mumbling something to the kids about never mentioning what they saw and if they did their parents would be in danger, the kids run off in total fear of being shot by this nut who used to teach in their school. But eventually, a group of U.S. Air Force soldiers arrive on the scene and chase down the kids – of course, we have ourselves a good old fashioned government alien/monster/whathaveyou conspiracy going on here…and the people must be silenced, as usual. Makes you wonder exactly what our useless government (the U.S. government that is, for those of you out of the Americas) has been hiding from us all this time and what they know exactly….doesn’t it? And, oh yes, we also witness something very powerful but unseen smash through one of the fiery containers and escape into the night…
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