The Invasion: Movie Review
"The Invasion"
Directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel, written by David Kajganich, 96 minutes, rated PG-13.
(Originally published Aug. 17, 2007)
The new Oliver Hirschbiegel's thriller "The Invasion" is the latest movie based on Jack Finney's sci-fi novel "The Body Snatchers," which first was serialized in Colliers Magazine in 1954 before being made into four films--1956's "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," the 1978 remake of the same name, 1993's "Body Snatchers," and now this.
Though this version has nothing on the films that came before it, what it does have is a dark slice of humor tucked within its inspired casting.
The film stars Nicole Kidman as Dr. Carol Bennell, a pill-pushing, pill-popping psychiatrist whose creepy ex-husband, Tucker (Jeremy Northam), is overcome by aliens and who, in turn, turns those close to him into disconnected, dehumanized shells of their former selves, just as he himself has become. Though it's doubtful that Kidman took the role to poke fun at her ex-husband Tom Cruise, it's no secret he's no fan of psychiatry and a quick Google tells us that neither he nor Xenu was at the film's premiere.
The movie opens with a space shuttle crashing to Earth and spreading alien spores across a vast terrain. Quickly, those curious enough to touch the debris become infected, which leads to a mass outbreak of sameness.
Everyone starts to behave as if they're on a morphine drip. Personalities are eradicated, though violence nevertheless thrives even as worldwide peace is achieved. These people, all reborn from the film's updated version of a pod, are willing to attack if it means spreading those spores. The idea is that once we're all infected, we'll essentially be a large nest of worker ants drained of our souls and the need to kill.
But at what cost? Our individuality, of course, which Carol and others are willing to fight to protect. Motivating her--and driving the film's action--is that her son, Oliver (Jackson Bond), has been kidnapped by Tucker in an effort to convert him. Since Carol isn't about to let that happen, in spite of the fact that she's become infected by Tucker herself, the gloves are off, with an underused Daniel Craig joining Carol in her effort to save him and, by extension, the rest of the world.
From David Kajganich's script, "The Invasion" opened to a rush of negative press, all stemming from the fact that for over a year, the movie sat unreleased by Warner Brothers, which eventually (and quietly) brought in the Wachowski brothers to tweak the script, and director James McTeigue to reshoot several scenes.
The result isn't the train wreck of styles you might expect, but a tightly paced, involving movie that underscores the timeless appeal of Finney's tale. This isn't the best recent remake of a modern-day horror classic--that would go to Zack Snyder's "Dawn of the Dead"--but it does tap into the fear that Earth and its inhabitants are just one microbe or spore away from ruin.
Some, of course, might say that in this era of the iPod, technology already has brought us there, neatly turning us into zombies whose lives are increasingly disconnected, isolated and internal. "Invasion" oddly misses that angle, but what it finds in the heat of its biological angle proves stirring enough.
Grade: B-
January 22, 2009 at 8:50 AM
This sound good