The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) Movie Review
The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) Review
"The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Scott DerricksonProducer : Erwin Stoff,Paul Harris Boardman
Screenwiter : David Scarpa
Starring : Keanu Reeves,Jennifer Connelly,Jaden Smith,Kathy Bates,John Cleese,John Hamm
Remakes are the bane of many a film fan's existence. Some are strident in their
wholesale hatred, while others take a "wait and see" stance before eventually
dismissing the attempted upgrade. Of course, by doing so, they have ignored
quite a few quality films (Cronenberg's The Fly, Jackson's King Kong,
Scorsese's The Departed). Yet in general, when a modern filmmaker takes on a
considered classic, they run the risk of embarrassing themselves and the
material being remade. A true masterwork from the '50s, Robert Wise's The Day
the Earth Stood Still is considered "verboten" by purists. An update stands as
a disaster waiting to happen, right? Actually, no.
When a huge spherical object lands in New York's Central Park, a first response
team led by members of the military and scientific community set out to explore
its purpose. Dr. Helen Benson (Jennifer Connelly) makes contact with a strange
being exiting the orb, but said creature is accidentally shot by a soldier,
mandating immediate medical care. Eventually, the humanoid-looking alien named
Klaatu (Keanu Reeves) explains his purpose. Mankind's lack of environmental
concern and overall violent nature has led other civilized planets to mandate
the destruction of the entire population. While the Secretary of Defense (Kathy
Bates) plans an armed solution, Helen helps Klaatu escape, and along with her
stepson Jacob (Jaden Smith), she tries to convince the extraterrestrial
emissary that humanity is worth saving.
Divorced of its now archetypal precursor, and bucking the post-modern trend
towards avoiding "serious" science fiction, The Day the Earth Stood Still is
actually a very fine film. It contains a role perfectly suited for Reeves'
detached iconography, proves that Connelly doesn't have to be morose and
virtually comatose in every adult role, and reinvents enough of the Wise
original to avoid a sense of derivative déjà-vu. This is a movie about ideas,
debates, and the really tough questions of a 21st century civilization.
Certainly, at the end of the day it's still an alien invasion movie (with the
help of an oversized robot) bathed in "go green" pronouncements, but its
success as entertainment overrides any of its Buck Rogers cheesiness.
The first 45 minutes concentrates almost exclusively on the panic that the
appearance of an extraterrestrial orb has on the current world order. In
between scenes of looting and mass hysteria, high-minded scientists struggle to
keep the government (the U.S., specifically), from using its arrival as a War
on Terror talking point. There's even a reference to the effect such a calamity
in the making would have on the fragile psyche of a 9/11-weary New York. Yet
once Reeves arrives in his full human form, the movie grows intimate. Many of
the scenes stay centered between our space messenger, the intellectual driven
to protect him, and an angry urchin of a stepchild who keeps interfering with
the pair's mutual self-discovery.
Unlike other recent examples of the genre, which trade ideas for indulgent CG
special effects and interstellar shoot-'em-up antics, The Day the Earth Stood
Still remains somber and serious in its approach. Director Scott Derrickson
does a fine job of maintaining a sense of suspense without going overboard in
the eye candy department, and his cast is uniformly excellent, even in what
amount to minor cameos roles (John Cleese, James Hong). There will be some who
still crave action and adventure, who want the world to go out with a bang, not
a well-considered cinematic sigh. If you're devoted to the original, nothing
here will lift your veiled contempt. But if you're willing to go in with an
open mind and some filmmaking forgiveness, you'll find this a Day well spent.
I know robot kung fu.
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





