âAlienâ thought: movie showdown isnât so bad
JIM ERWIN
Itâs not too surprising that Hollywood would combine two popular
R-rated movies into an action movie targeted toward young teens, and
thatâs what Twentieth Century Fox has done with âAlien Vs. Predator.â
What is surprising is that the movie isnât completely awful. This
isnât a brilliant movie by any stretch of the imagination, but it is
something you can watch with a 12-year-old without being too worried
about the content. For adults, this movie rates as solid âehâ --
should be better, could be worse. For its young target audience, itâs
pretty hot stuff.
Iâll admit that I expected this movie to stink before I walked
into the theater. Last summerâs âFreddy vs. Jasonâ was easily one of
the worst creations to hit the screen. It had painfully bad dialogue
and a story with no suspense. Itâs not saying a lot to say âAlien vs.
Predatorâ is better than âFreddy vs. Jason,â but it is a better
movie. Something nice is that unlike âFreddy,â âAlien vs. Predatorâ
is a teen movie thatâs actually made like a movie meant for teens.
Thereâs virtually no obligatory cursing or other embarrassing
nonsense thrown in just as adolescent titillation. It has a story and
it has characters, albeit a weak story and thin characters, but
thereâs enough happening to keep you from guessing whoâs life
expectancy is under 10 minutes.
The basic story revolves around the question of who would win a
fight between the extraterrestrial bug from Ridley Scottâs âAlienâ
and the extraterrestrial hunter from John McTiernanâs âPredator.â
Both creatures are pretty tough in a fight, so this concept has a lot
of potential. Dark Horse comics started a series based on this idea
back in 1989, and fans have been looking for clues linking the
creatures in movie sequels to both franchises.
To answer that question, young Predator warriors come to earth to
test their skills by killing Aliens. The Aliens need living creatures
to serve as hosts, so they can do that face-sucking thing and grow
into big monsters. A team of human scientists who discover an ancient
temple 2,000 feet below the Antarctic provide all of the necessary
faces for newly hatched Aliens to suck. Gradually, the survivors
figure out that they are in the middle of something big involving
Aztec, Egyptian and Cambodian pyramids built by creatures from space.
Yeah, itâs all pretty silly, but at least they tried. Well, sort of
tried.
Itâs a shame that director/writer Paul W.S. Anderson didnât do
more work on his story and script. If he had, this might have been a
really great movie. Instead of letting the action tell the story,
Anderson has the characters tell the story by asking each other the
same kinds of questions the Little Green Sprout asks the Jolly Green
Giant. Instead of, âWhy does Green Giant vacuum seal canned corn?â
the characters ask, âWhy do you think they wanted us to go to their
sacrificial chamber?â
And the answer is, of course, âWell ...duh!â
On the plus side, this movie generally gets the visuals right. The
fights between the Aliens and Predators offer some excitement and
suspense. This isnât a scary movie at all, but itâs fun to watch the
creatures kill each other. The Predators have nice weapons for
hand-to-hand combat and the Aliens are pretty clever at stalking
them.
This is a movie that could have and should have been a lot better,
but it also could have been much worse. Itâs nothing anyone will want
to rush out to see, unless of course your air conditioning breaks
down and you want sit in a cool theater for a couple of hours. Even
then, Iâd go with âBourne Supremacy,â which is loaded with action, or
âDe-Lovely,â which has an incredible musical soundtrack.
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
Mannâs latest a new take on a familiar path
Director Michael Mann makes movies about lonely men thrust into
life and death situations with enemies that are bigger, more powerful
and dangerous than themselves.
Although the theme of good vs. evil is a constant in Mannâs films
(and most movies in general), he changes the situations and the
personalities involved in each story, as if he is taking us on a
journey through different aspects of conflict. âThiefâ finds a cat
burglar being robbed by the mob, âThe Insiderâ has whistle blowers
ruined financially and socially by the mega-corporations they work
for, and in âHeat,â a professional thief becomes his own worse enemy
during his last heist before retiring. Mannâs latest film,
âCollateral,â targets an unsuspecting cabdriver, Max, to be the
scapegoat for a hired killerâs murder spree.
Confining Max and Vincent in a taxi for the night is like watching
a lamb being thrown in with a lion. Max is weak, which is evident
from his sloppy clothes, his soft belly and acceptance of having
people walk all over him, such as his boss and mother. Vincent is a
professional predator who dresses to gain respect, remains fit to
keep his senses sharp, taking charge of every person and situation he
encounters. Besides, Max has never been in such a predicament as the
one heâs in now. For Vincent, itâs familiar territory.
They dislike and disrespect each other from the moment Vincent
enters the cab. Max refuses to open up and talk to Vincent, even
though he opened up to a cab fare earlier in the evening. Vincent
points out the flaws in Maxâs plans to go into business for himself,
which Max never defends. From their first encounter, they act and
react from who they are: victim and predator.
Michael Mann does for the city of Los Angeles in his movies what
Woody Allen does for New York in his films. In the hands of the
directorâs cinematographer, LA looks expansive, powerful and
stunningly rich in lights that shimmer like thousands of jewels.
However, as the night grows shorter, the City of Angels comes to look
lonely, frightening and deadly.
Mann also takes his time staging every scene, even the most
ordinary ones that enhance the characters and their actions. For
example, Max is always running for the shadows or trying to get lost
in a crowd in his attempts to escape and disappear while Vincent is
always emerging from the shadows or a crowd to strike down another
victim.
Usually cast as the hero, Tom Cruise takes the villainâs role in
âCollateralâ without changing much about his actions or appearance
that has been seen before in âMission Impossibleâ and âMinority
Report,â with the one exception of adding gray to his hair. Cruise is
more movie star than movie actor. Throughout the movie, you are
always aware that itâs Tom Cruise playing a bad guy.
Jamie Foxx, however, has exerted greater effort in changing his
appearance and behavior to play the part of Max. The most
recognizable changes are the weight gain and eyeglasses. The subtle
nuances that Foxx also incorporates are personality traits, such as
avoiding eye contact with others, consistent with a character like
Max that effectively tricks the audience into thinking of Max as a
real being, instead of a fictional character. Foxx has grown as an
actor since âOn Any Given Sundayâ and Mannâs prior film, âAli.â Foxx
is a movie actor intent on surprising us all with his talents,
especially in the anticipated fall movie âRayâ about Ray Charles.
âCollateralâ is a highly charged testosterone thrill ride that
puts a new spin on Darwinâs definition of survival of the fittest.
All of Michael Mannâs previous heroes have acted from what they knew
and believed to be true and right. Max tries working from his belief
system of right and wrong. When that fails, he must go in search of
something else that will work. As Betty Davis once quipped, âFasten
your seat belts because youâre in for a bumpy ride.â
âCollateralâ is definitely worth the ride.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
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