Mars Attacks! Movie Review
Mars Attacks! Review

"Mars Attacks!" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Tim BurtonProducer : Tim Burton,Larry Franco
Screenwiter : Jonathan Gems
Starring Jack Nicholson, Glenn Close, Annette Bening, Pierce Brosnan, Danny Devito, Martin Short, Sarah Jessica Parker, Michael J Fox, Rod Steiger, Tom Jones, Lukas Haas, Natalie Portman, Jim Brown, Lisa Marie, Sylvia Sidney
We've already had three movies based on TV shows this year, plus a film based
on a TV commercial, but I think it's a really bad omen when a film is based on
a series of trading cards.
The film is Mars Attacks!, and with it Tim Burton serves up the worst
production of his once-blossoming career, a movie wherein he indulges every
excess of his demented psyche, pays no attention to entertaining the audience,
and recycles every joke he can get his hands on.
The joke recycling would be okay, even appropriate, given Burton's predilection
for shtick, if only the jokes were funny! But they're not. Nothing much is
funny in Mars Attacks!, whose mildly amusing War of the Worlds story can best
be described as... Mars attacks.
Burton obviously started this production in the casting -- Jack Nicholson as
the president, Glenn Close as his uppity wife, Annette Bening as a New Age
freak, Pierce Brosnan as a sophisticated science advisor. You get the idea. I
guess Burton figured that throwing Tom Jones (as himself) into the mix would
make it all better.
And maybe it would have, except the performances look like they're cobbled
together from the days off that the cast of some 15 "name" actors happened to
have. Bits and pieces of what should be on the editing room floor have somehow
made their way into the final print instead, and in no particular order,
either. Only one running joke stands out as worthy -- a flirtation between two
disembodied heads (I won't say who).
I realize that Mars Attacks! was supposed to be a tongue-in-cheek homage to the
cheesy, old sci-fi flicks (but Tim, you already made Ed Wood), but Mars
Attacks! isn't even any good as a farce. The movie just plain looks bad -- too
bad to be taken seriously, but not bad enough to look bad on purpose. And
Burton's use of ultra-campy stars like Lisa Marie and Pam Grier? Puh-leeze.
Where's Richard Roundtree, Tim?
Got the point yet? Because I'm tired of writing about this dead film. I
wonder if we'll ever know what Burton had in mind when he put together this
giant waste of time, but then again, who cares?
Nice 'do, Lisa.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





