The Mad American Wrote:I saw a review that said the book originally was a reaction to industrialism (which I really don't see...and not sure where that came from )
Dave Wrote:My interpretation is that the book was a reaction to colonialism. The British Empire had just spent the last two hundred years swanning into places and completely decimating them for their own purpose, the indiginous people be damned. It was a 'How would you like it?' fable.
Dave
Maggers Wrote:I'm one of the few adults I know who enjoyed this movie. Don't know what that means, except that I can throw myself into a film and watch it like a 12 year old, totally suspending all belief and taking what's on the screen as real. I immerse myself in a movie in a way that ... well, that no one else I know does. It leaves me with a very visceral experience, and I like that.
However, as I said, none of my other adult friends liked it, and it seems few on this board have either. But I thought it was good enough for a second viewing, and I liked it the second time around, too.
It does have its flaws, though.
The Mad American Wrote:... Batman Begins and WoTW ... The two movies aren't even close to being in the same league. IMHO.
Blake Wrote:*** MINOR SPOILERS FOLLOW ***
*****************************
My verdict: Spielberg's weakest effort since 1941. After seeing several good reviews, I was expecting something much more suspenseful than I got. Instead, I often found myself bored, just waiting for the movie to finally conclude. It wasn't unbelievably terrible, but I think Ebert may have been a bit generous to give it two stars. My fiancée and I were both disappointed.
And what's up with the whole "human drama" thing? Dakota Fanning's very talented, but she screams so much in this movie that it makes her annoying (to us anyway). And she's the only character with any real appeal. The son is an annoying whiner. Cruise's character is just... well, it's just Cruise. Then you have the mob scenes where humans are being despicable to each other, which made me think, "Wiping them out is bad because... why?" Even Independence Day, which I personally think was an overrated B movie, did a much better job of creating sympathetic human characters that I actually wanted to see win. War of the Worlds, instead, seems to be more about one family surviving rather than the human race "winning", and that's a valid course to take... if it works. I just didn't think it did here because I didn't care much whether the family survived or not.
The bad: Sappy ending, annoying characters, unsympathetic and stupid humans. Showing the aliens was a bad idea, too. They would've been much more intimidating without seeing that they're a mutated version of "Gremlins".
The good: The mystery involved in showing the "invasion" from the perspective of only one family was interesting. You basically learn things as they do. Tim Robbins had one of the more interesting characters, and the resolution of his interaction with Cruise's character was fairly well done. There were also some individual shots here and there that kept my interest, most notably the plane wreckage scene.
All in all, not enough good and too much bad for my money. Your mileage may vary.
Blake