Print Story Cloverfield: A Brief Review
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By CheeseburgerBrown (Wed Jan 23, 2008 at 09:16:30 PM EST) (all tags)
There are no spoilers in the body copy.


Very Brief Review

Cloverfield is a decent movie. If you go see it, you probably won't regret the money spent.


A Slightly Less Brief Review

I really couldn't care less about a genre than the "monster attacks!" genre, except possibly for the "this year our underdog sports concern is gonna take the championship!" genre or the "third tier superhero freshened with cutting edge CGI" genre.

I don't think Godzilla is neat-o mosquit-o in any iteration, and I never have.

I think the only monster movie on my DVD shelf is Ridley Scott's Alien from 1979. After seeing Cloverfield I'm pretty sure that DVD is on J. J. Abram's shelf, too, because the picture if rife with nods both subtle and overt. Scott was one of the first science-fiction directors to follow in the footsteps of Kubrick by attempting to dramatically heighten the credibility of the setting and the relatability of the characters in scifi. These motives seem to have been shared by the Cloverfield creators.

The idea, in case you haven't heard it, is to make the audience feel immersed by convincing them that the media they're watching is an authentic artifact, presented as recorded without professional dressing, capturing events in the midst of a remarkable situation. (A similar conceit was used in The Blair Witch Project but any further comparison between the films would be a stretch.)

The technique is effective to a point. The monster movie, which can at this point in history can contain few surprises, is given vivid new life and becomes enjoyable in a way that it probably hasn't been since it was brand new. The narrative style is the movie, to a great extent, so the tired old monster formula doesn't actually have to shoulder too much weight. It's really just there as scaffolding.

I say "up to a point" because, as much as I found the technique did indeed function as intended by putting me into the shoes of the characters, I didn't find the experience as emotionally stenuous as my first viewing of the Spielberg version of War of the Worlds (which employed similar narrative mechanisms while retaining the traditional omniscient camera, though shot in a loose, pseudo-actual camera style). I think I was somewhat detached because of the credibility of the conceit -- part of me could reason that if I was watching an anthentic recording, that must mean the events seen happened in the past: in other words, the survival of the characters was clearly not connected to my personal survival, as I was a voyeur of their existing document. In contrast, in War of the Worlds I was asked, in the more traditional way, to suspend my disbelief about where these images were coming from and just get caught up in the depicted events as if they were taking place in the present -- not a documentary, in other words, but a portal into some magic cinema space where unbelievable things are unfolding as we watch...a virtual present tense.

So, no matter what happens on screen in Cloverfield I know I didn't get my ass handed to me in New York. Fait accompli. A virtual past tense created, ironically, by a technique that reinforces the immediacy of the action and the reality of the people it's happening to.

That being said, it was a very fun movie to watch. When the lights came up Littlestar and I both had mild headaches, but we chased them away with drinks. I felt much dizzier coming out of The Blair Witch Project, and mildly ill. Cloverfield is much easier to watch, but at points the hand-held smears of nothingness can be trying to even the most MTV-jaded media input processing engine.

I'm glad they didn't overplay their hand with the monster. It's a nice design, but we don't ever get to see it very clearly. I think they struck a good balance there.

The exposition is extremely minimal. I mean, not like Darren Aronofsky minimal, but still pretty fucking minimal. That also plays to my tastes, so I really enjoyed being left largely in the dark. The audience only knows what the man on the street in an exploding New York knows, and it's only bits and pieces. There is no gay information-explanation payoff, and that's a very good thing even if it does make the mouth-breathers crinkle their witto brows in confusion.

"So, like, where'd the monster come from?"

We're never told. Who cares? That kind of pre-production navel-gazing is entirely beside the point. The creators keep the backstory out of the movie, I believe in an effort to keep our suspension of disbelief focused on the elements important in the moment: it's enough that we're scared shitless because a monster is smashing the city. That's the only improbable thing we're really asked to entertain. We're not taxed by having to hear mumbo-jumbo about a secret deep sea ecosystem or hostile oxygen-breathers from beyond the Moon.

The street-level visual effects (smashing, glimpses of monster, fallen infrastructure) are absolutely seamless. I was never torn out of the movie space by stunt CGI models who look like dolls or debris that smacks of simulated particle behaviour. The compositing is bang on -- motion matching, lighting integration, optical effects -- really, really invisible. Nice.

The roiling clouds of debris and shredded office papers at one point really took me back to watching the live coverage of the World Trade Center collapse. I'm pretty sure that if I had been in Manhattan on that day I would give Cloverfield a pass. The screaming crowds, the unbelievable scale of the devastation, the uncertainty and powerlessness -- it's all got to put you right back there on September 11th.

It's not a heavy movie. It's a piece of fluff, but it's one of the most well executed pieces of fluff I've seen in a very long time.

I give it four out of five cheeseburgers.


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Cloverfield: A Brief Review | 7 comments (7 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
monster! by duxup (4.00 / 1) #1 Wed Jan 23, 2008 at 09:57:09 PM EST
I'm not a fan of monster movies myself and while it might be unfair the fact that they so often seem to reference the good films makes me roll my eyes a bit.  I probably miss the subtle stuff but when I do notice it I can't help but think yeah like that other movie, the better one
____


I'll probably wait for the DVD by nebbish (4.00 / 1) #2 Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 05:53:11 AM EST
To me there just hasn't been that much point to this kind of monster movie since the original Godzilla (in its original Japanese cut, not the US cut), which beats them all. But yeah, they can be a lot of fun.

--------
It's political correctness gone mad!


Sequel in Development: Mothra vs. Cloverfield: by wiredog (4.00 / 1) #3 Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 08:05:04 AM EST
From TMQ
New York City gets destroyed in "Cloverfield," ... New York was destroyed in "Independence Day," in "Escape from New York," in "I Am Legend," in "The Day After Tomorrow," in "Planet of the Apes," in "A.I.," in "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow," in the 1998 "Godzilla" remake, in all three King Kong movies, in the Tom Cruise movie version of "War of the Worlds," in the radio version of "War of the Worlds"... How about a disaster movie that destroys Wichita or Saskatoon? [Or Toronto. Get on that CBB!] The original Godzilla was caused by radiation, and rather than merely call it a silly monster movie, critics declared that the flick reflected postwar Japan's fear of the atomic bomb. Internet chatter says the monster in Cloverfield is caused when a sinister corporation discovers a growth substance that gets out of control;... My guess is the movie will represent a searing social commentary on derivative plot elements, product placement and viral marketing.

... No matter what strange substance you swallowed or what radiation you were exposed to, you could not grow to the size of a skyscraper unless you consumed fantastic amounts of food. Mass doesn't materialize out of the air. The Empire State Building weighs 365,000 tons. Let's assume a biological monster of that building's magnitude, with some sort of bone structure rather than steel, could weigh less. A skyscraper-height monster would need to weigh say 100,000 tons, meaning the Cloverfield creature would need to consume at least 100,000 tons of nutrients to reach its size, then more for energy. That's a lot of Whoppers or plankton or whatever. ...

Also

TMQ noted that movie monsters become incredibly huge without eating anything.... Timothy Enge, a science teacher in Horsham, Pa., added, "In ecology, the generally accepted rule is that of the food an organism eats, 10 percent goes to the body and 90 percent gets used up by the body. If the Cloverfield monster weighs 100,00 tons, it would have to eat 1,000,000 tons of nutrients just to keep 10 percent of that. That's more than a heck of a lot of Whoppers." TMQ's estimate of 100,000 tons for the Cloverfield monster was based on the Empire State Building weighing 340,000 tons; TMQ assumed a biological object the size of that building might weigh less, containing no steel. Kendal Stitzel of Fort Collins, Colo.,, countered, "Therein lies the rub, for there is no known bony material that could support the weight of something that large without collapsing under the creature's own mass. This is the famous square-cube problem: when a creature gets larger, its weight (which increases in proportion to volume) increases as the cube of the increased dimensions. The animal's strength, however, can only increase in proportion to the square of the increase in dimension. Just as the Empire State is not supported by its masonry but by the steel and concrete structures inside, you would need some kind of similarly strong biological material to support any giant "


Earth First!
(We can strip mine the rest later.)



Physically Impossible Scale by CheeseburgerBrown (2.00 / 0) #6 Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 11:06:15 AM EST
Yeah, the Bad Astronomy review made some similar points: a monster of that scale and strength would have a very hard time evolving in any ecosystem we're familiar with, even extreme ones.

This is one reaosn why I'm glad they don't try to "sell" us a backstory on the thing: it would only provide more cracks for our credulity juice to run out through.


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

Sequencing. by nightflameblue (4.00 / 2) #4 Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 09:35:36 AM EST
Cloverfield is much easier to watch, but at points the hand-held smears of nothingness can be trying to even the most MTV-jaded media input processing engine.

Tell me one thing. Did they overplay the constant motion-blurred messes, or did they use them to set mood and then pull back enough you could actually make things out every once in a while? I'm starting to get tired of watching movies where you never have any clue what the hell is going on on-screen because the director thinks he's being arty by having every second of action be a great big colored blur. I'm interested in Cloverfield, but I'm not going if there's never a moment where you get some concept of what you're looking at.



Breaks in the Smear by CheeseburgerBrown (2.00 / 0) #5 Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 11:03:56 AM EST
The hand-heldiness never stops, but for my money I found the action easier to follow than in Transformers where all the dirty, grey-on-grey, semi-reflective monsters pounding each other among blooms of tan dust quickly started to resemble one another.


I am from a small, unknown country in the north called Ca-na-da.
[ Parent ]

Easier to follow than a Bay film? by nightflameblue (2.00 / 0) #7 Thu Jan 24, 2008 at 11:59:50 AM EST
Wow, that's damning with faint praise if I've ever read it.

[ Parent ]

Cloverfield: A Brief Review | 7 comments (7 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback