|
The Arrival taps into the theme of alien infiltration and the atmosphere of paranoia and conspiracy that was popularised around the time by tvs The X Files (1993-2002). It is almost certainly a desire to exploit the success of The X Files that led to The Arrival being greenlighted. The problem that The Arrival faced when it came out was that after three seasons of The X Files, the alien takeovers, the sinister heavies come to eliminate people/evidence and the perpetual atmosphere of paranoia and distrust had started to become an overly familiar cliche. That aside, The Arrival is better less when it is delving into paranoia and conspiracy than for the genuinely weird surprises that David Twohy keeps pulling out of the hat. There is a remarkable opening shot that pulls back from a sunny day in a field of poppies to reveal the field sitting in the midst of a snowy North Pole ice-cap and then keeps on pulling back right out into orbit around the Earth. Twohy packs the film with these wild disorienting spins the moment the Mexican man that Charlie Sheen is pursuing bends his legs forward and leaps up onto a roof; the shot where the taxi driver passes through the scanner, which momentarily lights up showing his face to be other than human; the bomb left in Sheens house, which creates a vortex that sucks everything in the house into it; the scene where Sheen finds a double of Ron Silver as one of the security guards at the power station; the edgy scene where Lindsay Crouse propositions Sheen, while on the other side of the door deadly scorpions gather; the almost surrealistic scene where Sheen makes a phone call in the bath before another bath suddenly explodes through from the floor above. The film is marred by the need to have a big, upbeat climax Charlie Sheens broadcasting the videotape is seen as triumphant but in light of the vague allusions it contains, it seems unlikely that it would be received by the rest of the world as anything other than conspiratorial nuttiness. David Twohy has certainly done his homework about radio astronomy, for one, and The Arrival emerges as a smart, suspenseful and fascinatingly weird view of alien invasion. Everything in fact that Independence Day (1996) that came out the same year was not. Independence Day of course had colossal-size special effects as the sole thing going for it, while The Arrivals effects are only modest and by no means show stopping. As a result, The Arrival did only modest business, while Independence Day went on to become the No. 1 Box-Office success of the year. The Second Arrival/The Arrival II (1998) was a bland sequel. The film should not be confused with the B-budget alien vampire film The Arrival (1991).
(Winner in this sites Top 10 Films of 1996 list. Nominee for Best Director (David Twohy) and Best Original Screenplay at this sites Best of 1996 Awards).
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||