JamesG
08-15-2009, 07:06 PM
Movie Reviews: District 9
Extraterrestrials have landed in movie theaters again, and they're being welcomed by critics -- most of them, anyway.
"This is the most imaginative science-fiction movie to come along in years," writes Claudia Puig in USA Today.
Joe Neumaier in the New York Daily News praises it as "a memorable, monstrous fable that's consistently gripping."
Rafer Guzmán in Newsday describes it as "a refreshing blast of original filmmaking."
A.O. Scott writes in the New York Times that the movie does not use a heavy hand in drawing similarities between the plight of the aliens who have landed in South Africa and the natives who once lived there under apartheid rule.
"Instead, in the best B-movie tradition, they embed their ideas in an ingenious, propulsive and suspenseful genre entertainment, one that respects your intelligence even as it makes your eyes pop (and, once in a while, your stomach turn)."
Lisa Kennedy in the Denver Post calls it an instant sci-fi "classic."
The Chicago Sun-Times's Roger Ebert gives the movie three stars, apparently because he likes two-thirds of the movie.
"But the third act is disappointing," he writes, "involving standard shoot-out action. ... Despite its creativity, the movie remains space opera and avoids the higher realms of science-fiction."
Likewise Steven Rea in the Philadelphia Inquirer expresses disappointment that the movie "devolves into just another video-game shoot 'em up."
And Kyle Smith in the New York Post writes off the entire second half, noting that in the end what you have is a movie that is "too tongue-in-cheek to be thrilling, not funny enough to be a comedy."
-IMDB News
Extraterrestrials have landed in movie theaters again, and they're being welcomed by critics -- most of them, anyway.
"This is the most imaginative science-fiction movie to come along in years," writes Claudia Puig in USA Today.
Joe Neumaier in the New York Daily News praises it as "a memorable, monstrous fable that's consistently gripping."
Rafer Guzmán in Newsday describes it as "a refreshing blast of original filmmaking."
A.O. Scott writes in the New York Times that the movie does not use a heavy hand in drawing similarities between the plight of the aliens who have landed in South Africa and the natives who once lived there under apartheid rule.
"Instead, in the best B-movie tradition, they embed their ideas in an ingenious, propulsive and suspenseful genre entertainment, one that respects your intelligence even as it makes your eyes pop (and, once in a while, your stomach turn)."
Lisa Kennedy in the Denver Post calls it an instant sci-fi "classic."
The Chicago Sun-Times's Roger Ebert gives the movie three stars, apparently because he likes two-thirds of the movie.
"But the third act is disappointing," he writes, "involving standard shoot-out action. ... Despite its creativity, the movie remains space opera and avoids the higher realms of science-fiction."
Likewise Steven Rea in the Philadelphia Inquirer expresses disappointment that the movie "devolves into just another video-game shoot 'em up."
And Kyle Smith in the New York Post writes off the entire second half, noting that in the end what you have is a movie that is "too tongue-in-cheek to be thrilling, not funny enough to be a comedy."
-IMDB News