Monsters Vs. Aliens | Film Review

Blast From the Past
By
Michael C. Riedlinger
Editor-In-Chief

The state of science fiction, as I complained about in my review of Knowing, is abysmal.  Hollywood keeps churning out crap they hope seems smart or cool, while failing miserably because they keep forgetting that the best science fiction happens when it actually is smart and cool.  The subtext is usually built in, and the more overt you get, either through hyperbole or through techno-babble, the less effective science fiction really is.  Monsters vs. Aliens is a science fiction film first, and a children’s film second.

It’s weird, because even the theaters are treating it that way, and theaters are usually clueless.  Running the trailer for Star Trek ahead of this film is pure marketing genius!  There’s also the fact that the movie updates almost every 50’s genre-film cliché in the book, if that isn’t enough for you.  The characters are all sci-fi standards, including the Blob, the Mad Scientist, the Creature Frozen in Ice and Time, and of course, the 50-foot woman.  Even a kaiju-like creature has a part to play in this, and it’s about alien invasion!  Sure, it’s animated, but that only seems to have helped. 

The story itself is about a young woman named Susan (Reese Witherspoon) who is nailed by a radioactive asteroid from outer space that causes her to grow by leaps and bounds.  She is locked up in a government facility where she meets the other monsters.  When a giant alien robot attacks, the monsters are the best hope we have against it.  Pretty simple, and no one spends too much time explaining to the President (Stephen Colbert) what galaxy anyone has come from, how all the flying saucers work, or where in the heck The Missing Link fits in on the evolutionary timeline.  Remember, this is supposed to be a kid’s movie, so the filmmakers don’t dwell on anything that might put the kiddies to sleep.  Then again, those things are also the same culprits that drive normal folks away from science fiction in the first place, so it really is a win-win for the audience.



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What it also does is free up more time for both action and humor.  The folks at Dreamworks haven’t forgotten that adults are also in the audience, but instead of thinly-veiled double entendre, the jokes for us are about Star Trek, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Beverly Hills Cop.  They also poke fun at relationships, and marriage, but Monsters vs. Aliens never gets preachy.  There’s too much fun to be had!

The monsters are the best part of the film.  Hugh Laurie drops the American accent he affects on House as the crazy Dr. Cockroach, Seth Rogan loses a few brain cells for the mindless (but hysterical) B.O.B. the Blob, and Keifer Sutherland embodies every cranky Patton rip-off necessary as General Warren Monger.  They comedy bombs drop quick and often, and sometimes in the middle of action, so keep your ears open.  The action portion of this film is ultimately very satisfying, refusing to slow down without leaving any of the plot holes so often seen in its “adult” counterparts. 

Contemporary directors who are looking to make a sci-fi film should take notes on this movie.  The number of updated throwbacks is huge, and they are all used wisely.  No one leaves the theater feeling unsatisfied because we don’t know how the engines on the spacecraft worked or what precise type of radiation causes a grub to grow to the size of the Golden Gate Bridge.  Not only are these elements left unexplained, but they do not matter to the story.  If you’re looking for an allegory in the film, you’ll find plenty about accepting differences and bonding with friends, like most children’s films, but like a good science fiction film, Monsters vs. Aliens doesn’t beat you over the head with its message.

 

Final Verdict (out of 5):