Tripoffy
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Spielberg
and Cruise: Reign of the Smugs. by
Jon Dunmore © 18 Apr 2007.
One good thing can be said about the alien attack in War of the Worlds
- at least it achieved the mission impossible of wiping that insufferable smirk
off Tom Cruise's face. Steven
Spielberg wields this remake of H.G. Wells' 1898 classic tale like Mel Gibson
wielded his recounting of the peacenik crucified guy's passion back in 2004: everyone
in the world knows the story, so Spielberg - like Gibson - neglects to put any
"story" into the movie. He doesn't even need junkets to tell the tale
prior to the movie (as George Lucas wielded his Star Wars catastrophes)
- he's got a century's legacy of societal inculcation holding up his plotholes
with Atlas shoulders and tripod-girded loins. From
H.G. Wells' original 1898 book (with its rank scientific inaccuracies), to Orson
Welles' 1938 radio broadcast (which caused nationwide panic), to George Byron's
1953 film (as melodramatic and goofy as any 1950s B-sci-fi thriller), to Jeff
Wayne's 1978 concept album (whose opening chords were so powerfully reminiscent
of Beethoven's Fifth that I used them on an intro tape for a live rock band),
War of the Worlds is embedded in what might be called our memetic consciousness
(a chunk of societal inculcation, passed down generations). So Spielberg smugly
rolls film and lets people Run and Scream until he runs out of budget. The End. Though
Wells' story of Martians arriving in tripods and using death rays worked gangbusters
during a more unsophisticated time (when delusional astronomer Percival Lowell
(1855-1916) was feverishly sketching canali on Mars and speculating on
its intelligent life), our current technology definitively shows there is no "life
as we know it" on the red planet, let alone a dying super civilization which
might usurp Earth for their next home. To
circumvent the fact that Mars is such an open book today, Spielberg and writers
Josh Friedman and David Koepp opt to BURY this movie's alien invaders under the
Earth, presumably for millennia, and presumably so deep that our modern equipment
nor our extensive sinking of foundations would detect them. Also, there is never
specific mention of "Martians," that term being out of fad since humans
have explored so much deeper into space and envisioned so much more exotic extra-terrestrials
in Independence Day and Men in Black. (Maybe they're from the even
scarier planet of L-Ron-Hubbard?) Cruise is Ray Ferrier (which is irrelevant,
as you'll see), a divorcee who cannot connect with his teenage son (Justin Chatwin)
and whose daughter (Dakota Fanning) is precocious enough to be either a Hollywood
Brat or possessed by the devil. (Where did this convention originate of ten-year-olds
smarter than their 40-year-old parents?) After smugly smirking his way through
twenty-five minutes of filmstock, Ray witnesses a giant metal monster rise from
under Chicago's concrete and start vaporizing people and buildings with its "death
ray" (sounds kooky, but there it is), effectively wiping aforementioned smirk
off aforementioned huge-salaried, delusional movie star's self-satisfied mug. Cue
Running and Screaming. Shortly after this, there is some Running and Screaming,
with a cameo by the World's Ugliest Man (Lenny Venito), who is thankfully vaporized
before the nausea starts. Oh, and did I forget to mention the Running and Screaming? Then
it gets interesting. There is some shouting... then Running and Screaming.
Through it all, Our Heroes never seem to Get A Clue, taking the obligatory unnecessary
risks at every turn (running 200 feet to bushes to take a pee; teen son constantly
rebelling against Ray, for the sake of being the rebellious teen son; driving
slowly through a pack of crazy people, just asking for their car to be stolen).
A plane crashes, Tim Robbins cameos as someone crazier than Tom Cruise, the American
military once again get bitch-slapped by foreigners (hey - I wasn't even thinking
about mentioning Dubya); there is the perfunctory "tension-filled" scene
where an alien recon arm sniffs around a basement that Ray is hiding in (same
old Spielberg - it could have been an axe-murderer or a velociraptor - the conventions
are there, let's use 'em) and there are lots of big orange explosions; Ray's son
gets killed, then is alive at the end, and Tom Cruise does a lot of driving with
his daughter born of Satan. There
is an opening narrative, not a patch on Richard Burton's Shakespearean locution
on Wayne's concept album: "No one would have believed, in the last years
of the nineteenth century, that human affairs were being watched from the timeless
worlds of space
and yet, across the gulf of space, minds immeasurably superior
to ours regarded this Earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely, they drew
their plans against us." Over
20 years ago, Spielberg gave us a message of hope - a Sagan-esque paean that there
was intelligent life somewhere else in the galaxy, yearning communication with
our idiot species (in fact, these WOTW "tripods" sound suspiciously
like the Close Encounters aliens with their musical air blasts) - and now
he delivers this overblown ode to the guttural nature of that idiot species, showing
us formicating, selfish humanity in all its gory. Is
it a sign of the times that one of the greatest filmmakers of our era is so adversely
affected by the real-world politics of mass destruction? Using
the same kind of filtering technique he used in 2002's Minority Report
(that overbright, noisy - as in "grainy" - filmstock), Spielberg knows
that even if people don't know WOTW, his money-is-no-object effects can
stand on their own in lieu of story cogency. When
Ray is captured by the tripods, he is carted about in a cage under the machine's
belly. No one looks twice when an extra is sucked into the underbelly of the tripod
to fuel the machine with human flesh. But when it grabs Ray, suddenly EVERYONE
in the cage piles onto Ray to pull him from the maw. Why? Because he's TOM CRUISE,
dummies! The
opening shots of the film portends the aliens' downfall, as we see a shot of space,
which transforms into microscopic bacteria, which transforms into the Earth as
a drop of water on a leaf; after the aliens die of Earth viruses, the closing
shot bookends the film by reverting back to the bacteria, which morph into the
starry blackness of space. If only this creativity was employed in the rest of
the movie
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