If you were one of the 37 million who caught the much-anticipated Sci-fi flick District 9 over the weekend, you either loved it or hated it. There is no in between.
I count myself among the movie goers who hated it. I was not impressed at all. In fact, I thought the film was garbage considering the hype leading up to the movie’s opening.
I expected more from producer Peter Jackson (The Lord Of The Rings, King Kong). But District 9 was a failed takeoff on Independence Day, The Predator and The Fly all rolled into one. The Fly was a better movie, in my opinion.
District 9‘s special effects were decent, the blood and gore was prolific (brain matter splattered on the screen every 15 minutes), and the jerky camera work was nauseating.
District 9 was filmed documentary style with agents from international government agencies providing history on an extraterrestrial race that found it’s way into Johannesburg airspace 20 years ago.
After months without any contact from the beings inside the spaceship, the military cut through the hull only to find the ship overcrowded with sickly, alien “workers” that look like giant cockroaches wearing predator suits. The aliens are rounded up and forced to live in slum-like conditions in a government-run settlement in Johannesburg called District 9, while the spaceship they rode in on hovers over Johannesburg like a junked clunker for 20 years.
District 9 is named after an area in New Orleans that was hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina. It’s supposed to be an allegory for the apartheid-like treatment of Katrina victims who were uprooted from their homes, but that message is lost amidst the illogical storyline and racial cliches.
The South Africans are stereotypically cast as thugs, gang members, predators and scammers in a culture so steeped in voodoo that they believe eating the aliens (now called “prawns”) will bring them super powers. The natives take advantage of the prawns by scamming them into trading their biological weapons for cat food (the prawns’ favorite snack). The only problem is the guns don’t work unless alien DNA is detected on the trigger.
The prawns breed amongst themselves and with human females (species interbreeding) and before you know it, there are over 1.8 million of the buggers overrunning District 9. So the decision is made to evict the prawns from their Johannesburg slum to a District 10 tent settlement on the outskirts of Johannesburg.
The eviction process is a massive undertaking involving a small multi-national agency (MNU) and complicated by the fact that, after 20 years, the aliens still haven’t learned to speak English. But oddly enough, the humans have all learned to communicate with the prawns by deciphering their strange clicking language (go figure).
During the eviction process, a French field agent named Wikus van der Merwe is contaminated when a canister of biological jet fuel (that was 20 years in the making) accidentally sprays in his face. Wikus slowly begins the transformation from man to prawn reminiscent of Jeff goldblum’s metamorphosis into The Fly in the 1986 horror classic.
Wikus is hunted down by the MNU and South African gangs who seek to harvest his body parts (and DNA) once they realize his part-prawn DNA can operate the alien weaponry. Wikus finds an ally in Christopher, seemingly the only intelligent prawn in District 9, who flew the massive alien ship to earth and now wants to fly it back home with his son.
Christopher promises to “fix” Wikus by making him human again (when he returns to earth in 3 years), and the two embark on a suicide mission to MNU headquarters to retrieve the biological jet fuel.
As I noted before, what is missing from this film is any semblance of logic. For instance, how does inhaling biological jet fuel make Wikus transform from man to prawn? If it takes Christopher 3 years to come back and “fix” Wikus, and it took 20 years to make the biological jet fuel, how many years did it take the aliens to build that massive spacecraft in the first place?
Instead of the prawns trading their biological weapons for cat food, why didn’t they use the weapons to blast their way out of District 9? How was Christopher able to hide his hovercraft underneath his shack in the slums with the entire world watching on CNN?
If you’re planning on going to see District 9, leave all logical reasoning at the door. Or rent The Fly and watch that instead.
g.i. joe was just as bad. bad acting, bad directing and baaad storyline
I don’t typically do movies on the weekend…so when i woke up and heard what everyone was saying……i guess i won’t be seeing it
As a horror flick chick, a movie lover…
Why have I never even heard of thie movie? I guess dvr’ing everything is catching up to me. I don’t watch commericals anymore.
Anybody know who if any black ppl r on dancing with the stars this season? The line up came out this am but I can’t find it online wonder if somebody saw it on GMA this am
Hey Daisy,
This is what I found..
Reality TV star and singer Kelly Osbourne, singers Macy Gray and Donny Osmond and ‘Sabrina the Teenage Witch’ star Melissa Joan Hart will be trying to impress judges Len Goodman, Carrie Ann Inaba and Bruno Tonioli in the new series.
They will be joined by singers Mya and Aaron Carter; actors Ashley Hamilton (‘Sunset Beach’) and Debi Mazar (‘Entourage’) and models Joanna Krupa and Kathy Ireland.
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And we both know that Mya is going to kill it. Maybe she’ll be the first black person to win.
@Icecream
Not that I don’t want Mya to win, but you know they’re going to be saying it’s not fair because she has years training in professional dancing she even taught it for a while.
I havent seen any previews for this movies on tv, i just heard about it on twitter. not my type of movie though
thanks for the update @iscream i love dancing with the stars. cant wait to see mya
zzzzzzzzz!!!!!
I’ll watch DWTS just to see Macy Gray tell of the judges. LOL
I went to see District 9 because I thought it was going to be a great metaphor for how we treat other people, etc… But, about a half-hour into it, I had to go! The camera angles/shooting were making me queasy! I felt ill, stepped out to sip on a Sprite, felt better, came back in and felt sick again. I had to get a refund.
I’ll still watch it, but at home, like I did Cloverfield. The last time I got queasy in a movie was when the second Speed came out – the one on the boat. lol
I spent my $7.25 on this movie, only to leave before it was halway over.
Not sure if I was more offended by the rights violations, the “for human use only” signs in Johannesburg, the “Project Roach” behavior of the aliens (killing people for their designer sunglasses – according to one resident), or the fact that the govt. was experimenting on Wikus.
I just know I felt sick inside after the 40 minutes.
Not my type of movie but it made $37 mill this weekend.
I loved this movie. although it was a bit off in the beginning the overall tone of the movie came across well and the ending was great.