Saturday, August 30, 2008

Event Horizon

Perhaps one of the best, and my favorite, space survival movies is Event Horizon. This movie undoubtedly follows in the footsteps of Alien, but that's just what it wants you to believe. I wouldn't call it a ripoff. It has a similar feel and it shares the same genre but it goes in a completely different direction. One movie critic said The Descent (2006) was a ripoff of Alien (wow!), so i'm sure some would easily consider Event Horizon a ripoff as well.

Synopsis: The year is 2047. Years earlier, the pioneering research vessel Event Horizon vanished without a trace orbiting near Neptune. Now a signal from it has been detected, and the US Aerospace Command responds. Hurtling toward the signal's source is a rescue crew including the lost ship's designer. Their mission: find and salvage the state-of-the-art spacecraft. What they find is a state-of-the-art interstellar terror. What they must salvage are their own lives, because someone or something is ready to ensnare them in a new dimension of unimaginable fear.

When I first saw this movie about 10 years ago, I thought it was the scariest movie I had ever seen. That might have been so, but now rewatching it years later I disagree with my first impression. It's dark, it's jumpy, it's suspenseful, it's bloody -yes, but overall it's more freaky than truly horrifying . On the plus side, it's one of those Survivor Movies where nobody is safe! There is no corny hero who falls in love and HAS to make it out alive so as not to upset the audience. I like that about hardcore Sci-Fi movies; they don't have to play by the rules.

Without totally spoiling the movie, but reader beware, I'll explain more of the plot. Aboard the lost Event Horizon ship was this powerful core generator thing that harnessed the ability to create black holes. They mention it would take a thousand years to travel to the closest star, but through a black hole it would only take a day. It turns out that the Event Horizon traveled through a black hole it created and returned with all of its crew mysteriously dead. The movie doesn't completely confirm this, but it's said that they literally traveled to Hell in some other dimension and back. Something spooky was brought back aboard the ship from "Hell" which made the crew and now the rescuers lose their minds.

Cast:

Miller (Laurence Fishburne) the fearless captain of the Lewis and Clark- the search and rescue ship. In a previous mission we learn that he had to leave one man behind in order to more likely save himself and others.


Dr Weir (Sam Neill) the designer of the Event Horizon. He's the guy who created the black hole generating thing and he likes to confuse everyone with scientific mumbo jumbo. His wife, Clare, is dead and she haunts his dreams.


Peters (Kathleen Quinlan) is the medical technician. At the last minute she was ordered to accompany this mission and had to leave her son, Danny, with her ex.



Cooper (Richard T. Jones) is the search and rescue technician. The crew jokes that he's useless but he serves the movie by being the stereotypical comic relief.



Mr. Justin (Jack Noseworthy) looks like the youngest aboard the crew and he's in charge of engineering. He's nicknamed "baby bear."



Lt. Starck (Joely Richardson) is the executive officer aboard the Lewis and Clark.



Smith (Sean Pertwee) is the pilot of the Lewis and Clark.




D.J. (Jason Isaacs) is the head of trauma. He's labeled as the strange, loner guy.




Movie Scene:


Click here for Spoilers

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Jurassic Park III

Jurassic Park 3 is by far the least popular of the series. I'm not going to bother defending it against its predecessors, but I will say that it's still a fun, jungle adventure movie that fits right in here.

Synopsis: Adventure runs wild when renowned paleontologist Dr. Alan Grant agrees to accompany a wealthy adventurer and his wife on an aerial tour of Isla Sorna, InGen's former breeding ground for prehistoric creatures. But when they're terrifyingly stranded, Dr. Grant discovers that his hosts are not what they seem, and the island's native inhabitants are smarter, faster, fiercer and more brutal than he ever imagined...

Yea, there's not much to this movie. This plot could have been 1/4 of the storyline if this movie were to be as good as the first two. JP3 is just a bunch of people running away from dinosaurs in the jungle. Nothing else, nothing more, and there's really nothing wrong with that!

I'm actually not a huge fan of the Jurassic Park movies. I love them as good movies in general, but as Survivor Movies they're weak. They are way too predictable as to who dies and who survives. I would assume this is because they are geared towards older children and families as a whole. Which means they can't get away with killing a family man, a woman, or even a good-looking guy for that matter. With Jurassic Park 3 that's pretty much the entire cast.

Cast:

Erik (Trevor Morgan) and his step-father Ben go para sailing around "Jurassic Park" island (ok, the islands are named Isla Sorna or Isla Nublar but who cares?). When their pilots mysteriously vanish they cut themselves loose and land on the island.




Paul (William H. Macy) and Amanda Kirby (Tea Leoni) are not wealthy adventurers. They're an average, middle class divorced couple with a son who's now lost in Jurassic Park. They pretend to be rich to get the help they need, and seek Alan Grant in particular.



After surviving the first Jurassic Park adventure, Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill) has returned to his work as a paleontologist digging up bones. He's bribed into returning to Jurassic Park by the Kirbys with his assistant, Billy (Alessando Nivola).



Cooper, Nash and Udesky, AKA dino-Breakfast, dino-Lunch and dino-Dinner. These guys are hired for protection against the dinosaurs.





Movie Scene:



Click here for Spoilers

Monday, August 25, 2008

CUBE

Synopsis: Six ordinary strangers awaken to find themselves in a seemingly endless maze of interlocking cubical chambers armed with lethal booby traps. Without food or water, they have only a few days to live. None of them knows how or why they've been imprisoned, but soon discover that each possesses a skill that could contribute to their escape. As they work together to extricate themselves from their claustrophobic cell, one thing becomes painfully clear - unless they learn to cooperate to solve the secrets of this deadly trap, none of them has very long to live.

Wow. After reading that blurb from the back of the DVD case I was hooked. Nothing could stop me from watching this movie. It's what I call a movie that has amazing potential for my tastes. But I still had to cross my fingers that it would work and not totally suck. Not every movie with great potential turns out well- especially ones with low budgets like CUBE. However, I was delighted that the movie was pretty darn good. Bare in mind, it's a very low budget movie. The entire thing was shot in 1 room. Literally. But the characters, the acting, and my enthusiasm for survival suspense held the movie together quite well in my opinion.

Lurking around each corner of the CUBE is a booby trap waiting to kill off another one of the hamsters. Who will die first? Who will be next? Will anyone make it out alive?

I love that as the movie progresses the turn of events shifts away from what you'd expect. I also love that each player has a story and a reason for being included. The group needs everyones skills to survive; for some it takes the entire movie to learn what that skill may be, and of course, some don't make it far enough to lend much help. That's the greatness of the CUBE.

Cast:

Leaven (Nicole de Boer) is a student still in college. She's a math whiz and a sweetheart.



Holloway (Nicky Guadagni) is a divorced doctor. She's caring and compassionate for others.



Worth (David Hewlet) is an architect. He's single and does not fully appreciate life. He may have had a hand in building the CUBE.



Kazan (Andrew Miller) has autism. The others view him as more of a liability than any help. But little do they know, his skill may be the most important of all.


Rennes (Wayne Robson) is an escape artist currently running from the law. He knows a lot about the trap mechanisms used within the CUBE.



Quentin (Maurice Dean Wint) is a police officer. He's a take charge man with little concern for hurting anyones feelings.



Movie Scene:



Click here for Spoilers

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Anaconda

It's only fitting that I kick this off with my favorite survivor movie of all time: Anaconda. Anaconda is a fun, campy and underrated creature feature that has everything I enjoy in a good adventure. I love the colorful cast of characters and the believable plot (a hard thing to come by in monster movies). I love the mix of scares where sometimes it looks someone's about to die - but then they don't. I love the Amazon setting and the fact that they actually filmed it on location! I'm always a fan of animatronics over crappy CGI when it comes to bringing the monsters to life. Anaconda does a mix of both with varying believabilities, but overrall it's not too bad. And of course, Anaconda wouldn't even contend as my favorite movie if the elite band of characters weren't picked off...one by one.

Synopsis: A documentary film crew ventures into the world's most isolated jungle - the Amazon - in search of a lost and forgotten civilization. Early in their journey they come to the aid of a stranded Paraguayan guide, Paul Sarone, who joins their expedition. But Sarone is actually a poacher on the trail of a legendary snake. Sarone hijacks the boat and steers the crew right into the path of a deadly anaconda.

Cast:

Terri Flores (Jennifer Lopez) is the documentary film's producer and director. It's her job to lead the production.


Dr. Steven Cale (Eric Stoltz) is the expert on the mysterious Shiri Shama Amazonian tribe; the subject of the documentary. He's hired to locate the tribe.



Mateo (Vincent Castellanos) is the scruffy boat captain. He and Paul Sarone aren't exactly strangers. It's a bit more than a coincidence that the crew and Sarone cross paths.


Warren Westeridge (Jonathan Hyde) is an actor. He's hired to narrate and be the on-camera personality for the documentary. He's a bit British and doesn't like roughing it in the jungle.


Danny Rich (Ice Cube) is the camera man. He's a city boy and good friends with Terri.



Gary Dixon (Owen Wilson) is the sound engineer. He'd rather film the documentary on Sarone capturing a giant snake.





Denise Kalberg (Kari Wuhrer) is the production manager. It's her job to basically just look hot in the jungle. Gary is her boyfriend.


Paul Sarone (Jon Voight) is the snake poacher who stumbles upon the film crew when they save his life. He's after a very large anaconda and a large paycheck to go with it. He convinces the film crew to help him hunt the snake. The only problem for them is that he wants the snake alive.


Movie Scene:

Click here for Spoilers

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

About Survivor Movies

Welcome to Survivor Movies! I've made this blog to catalog, review and even spoil all of my favorite Survivor Movies - good or bad. A Survivor Movie is a movie that consists of a group of people who are put in some sort of situation where they must survive. More than likely they don't all survive. Screw any "plot" - we are entertained by watching them get picked off...one by one.

Survivor Movies tend to fit one these categories:

1) Creature Features

2) Killer Thrillers

3) Disaster Movies


Survivor Movies mostly fall across 4 actual movie genres: Action, Sci-Fi, Horror and Drama.