by jellydonut25 » Tue Jun 09, 2015 2:53 am
For maybe 90 minutes, maybe a little less than that, I was watching this film, and kept thinking "I can definitely see some problems, and one fairly sizable lapse in internal logic, but this is WAY better than I'd been led to believe"
And then the third act happened.
The number of characters whose (for lack of a better word) character changes completely is frankly astounding. Characters go off the deep-end, others suddenly change who they are, a CEO of a major corporations listen to hearsay as a determining factor for making MAJOR decisions, and it feels crammed and rushed. There are some things about that I think work in its favor (specifically the rushed part, I mean, if all this stupidity is going to be happening, whisk it by me so I can at least get swept up in the moment and care less about logic and more about the urgency of the situation) but upon reflection and examination, this thing crumbles to pieces.
I enjoyed the ride, and I think I personally ENJOYED it more than Elysium (I actually like Elysium, but its message is so ham-fisted and blatantly obvious, it kinda gets in the way of letting it be a fun sci-fi romp), but it's Blomkamp's objectively weakest film to date. I think he's too good a director to make something wholly without merit, but he's losing himself. District 9 had this excellent mix of message and action and story, he's been unable to recapture that, and he's starting to just use old storytelling tropes from District 9 to try to cover up how messy the movie is. I think it's actually a shame he's signed on for something else so quickly. I think some time AWAY is what this guy needs to get his head screwed back on straight, but MAYBE with it being a pre-existing property, he'll struggle less with reigning himself in and finding focus. I hope. Because if he gives us an Alien film as much of a complete mess as the third act of Chappie, it won't just be a film that people forget even exists; it'll probably put an end to his Hollywood career.