Topic: [Slightly OT] War of the Worlds (spoilers?)
Soo... if you need the spoiler warning, then I pity you. Go read the durn book!
Personally, I thought it was the best movie treatment of an H.G. Wells novel... ever.
But that might be due to my devotion to the source material; I will be the first to acknowledge that I may be blinded by this. The fact that this version pretty much stuck directly to the book was a Good Thing in my mind. (Don't get me started on the recent travesty of "The Time Machine" or Val Kilmer's "Island of Dr. Moreau".) We didn't see the equivalent of HMS Thunderchild's battle with a tripod -- the only omission of consequence...
What I can't understand is why some critics (and many in the theater) thought the ending "lame".
I mean, let's face it: you can't spend two hours showing just how dominating the aliens (Martians? Spielberg didn't say...) are, how overpowering their technology is, how impotent Humans are against them, and then suddenly have a guy with an Apple notebook upload a computer virus to the mothership...
Oh, wait...
Seriously. If that's what the critics (and the audience) wanted, then I say they deserve all the crap that Hollywood feeds them.
In my mind, there are only two ways "out" of this story:
1) The Humans lose. Game over.
2) Deus ex machina, in this case in the guise of microorganisms.
The book still scares the crap out of me... so did this movie. And I'm not the only one; if the basic plot is so lame, why did it spawn three motion pictures and start a national panic in 1938? Why is a book over 100 years old still selling like hotcakes?
The point of the story is not to show yet again how Human know-how can save the day and get the girl in some contrived yet focus-group-tested manner. The point of the story was to instruct Victorians on the horrors of colonialism from the point of view of the vanquished. In a more modern setting, the point is to show our insignificance, our vulnerability (I loved it when Dakota Fanning kept asking "Is it the terrorists?"), and, dare I say it, the debt we owe to even the tiniest part of our ecosystem.
It may not have been a great movie (heck, I can't say if it was even good -- although it sure as heck entertained me). But it was an excellent treatment of a classic story.
Why can't that be enough?
Majestic Twelve Games
cricket@mj12games.com