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The Invasion

Posted : 6 years, 6 months ago on 30 October 2017 04:26

Ah, The Invasion a movie compromised by committee interference and the last minute decision to bring in not only the Wachowskis to rewrite the script but James McTeigue to handle the reshoots. This leaves The Invasion as a film in search of an identity. Well, that and a core idea, any idea will do after a while. These additions stick out for how improbable and tonally different they are from everything else going on around them, and the long-standing tradition of adaptations of Jack Finney’s novel reflecting the main paranoia hovering in the zeitgeist of their time crumbles with a gentle breeze.  

 

You see, The Invasion is the fourth in a series of these things, and the clear winner for Worst in Show. They come out roughly every fifteen to twenty years (1956, 1978, 1993, 2007, so we’re due for another in a few years), and tend to keep the basic pieces in place but shift around what exactly they’re an extended allusion for by swallowing whole major political and cultural concerns of their eras. The Invasion makes vague posturing towards the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the war on terror as a concept, and other such things that kept us all paranoid and awake in fright during the Dubya-era, but it does nothing with them. They merely exist as window dressing for a psychological thriller that dissipates quicker than cotton candy in water.

 

While it’s impossible to know what exactly the original vision was from Oliver Hirschbiegel, it was clearly not this. A climatic car chase is everything that’s wrong with modern blockbuster film-making in its visual incoherence and flagrant disregard for the laws of physics, and a tacked on happy ending is just a slap in the face to the audience. No, it might be worse than that, it might even cross the line into straight-up contempt for the intelligence of the audience at large. All of this leads to a pile-up of problems where the film feels simultaneously unfinished, overly indulgent, and completely underwhelming in its chaos.

 

Even worse is how it wastes such a killer group of talent in front of the camera with thankless tasks and incoherent performances. Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig seem completely lost here, with Kidman on paper a brilliant choice for a human trying to masquerade as a frigid alien in order to survive. She’s best when dealing with darker material and impulses so she’s fine in the first half, but The Invasion asks her to suddenly become an action-heroine in its final moments and she’s ill-equipped for this. And poor character actors like Josef Sommer, Celia Weston, Veronica Cartwright, and Jeffrey Wright are left with half-sketched out characters that they try valiantly to make work. It’s a sight to behold, especially Cartwright as a woman who knows something is wrong because her husband no longer abuses her, and one only feels for their herculean task.

 

If only The Invasion had risen to the level of a good bad movie instead of just being an impotent bore. It just lays there spinning along making 99 minutes feel like interminable hours upon hours of flaccid paranoia and empty spectacle. This can’t even arise to the level of cult or camp enjoyment, and that’s the real sin. If you can’t be good, at least be enjoyably terrible.



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The Invasion review

Posted : 12 years, 10 months ago on 29 June 2011 02:06

The repeated-to-death fallacy of the human nature being evil is getting really old. That, being the underlaying message of the film, destroys any fun I could have watching it (because in spite of that, it was an entertaining thriller).


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An average movie

Posted : 13 years, 3 months ago on 27 January 2011 01:53

After hearing so many bad things about this flick, I wasn’t expecting much but since there was a decent cast, I thought I might as well check it out. Indeed, I thought it would be really terrible but, honestly, it wasn't so bad in my opinion. In fact, I liked it more than Ferrara's "Body Snatchers". Indeed, the directing and the perfomances were not bad at all but, unfortunately, the story was not really interesting or original enough. It is too bad because the whole thing really had some potential. Indeed, there was a pretty cool cast (Nicole Kidman, Daniel Craig, Jeremy Northam, Jeffrey Wright). Above all, who would have expected that Oliver Hirschbiegel, the director of the amazing 'Der Untergang' and ‘Das Experiment’, would make such a disappointing English language debut? Basically, it was pretty notorious that the production didn't go very well and eventually the film underwent massive reshooting in 2007. Indeed, the studio didn't liked the cut director Oliver Hirschbiegel delivered and, to change that, the Wachowski brothers were brought in for rewrites and James McTeigue to direct some new scenes. Still, in my opinion, even though it was rather disappointing, it was actually a decent flick and I think it is worth a look.



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pretty well done

Posted : 16 years, 8 months ago on 24 August 2007 05:00

Considering the fact that this movie was a production nightmare and had to be re-shot for 3.5 weeks(were not talking half the movie either) and that the star (Nicole Kidman)was injured. the invasion is an intense fast paced thrill ride. Kidman's performance is nothing short of Nicole Kidman being Nicole Kidman with the fact that she doesn't notice that the people around her are starting to act different(robots to be exact)around her. Daniel Craig is as always excellent. the movie keeps you guessing but not for long I predicted the end 30 minutes through the feature (which is only 90 minutes) but still found that it was worth the money by the end of the movie. The Invasion co-stars Jeffrey Wright who also played Felix Lieter in the recent bond flick Casino Royale


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