23 June 2016

Independence Day, the sequel

The BBC has a review by Peter Bowes about the sequel to Independence Day:

“What I miss is original movies,” says director Roland Emmerich. “It always has to be a franchise, it has to have a superhero name in front of it. It can be discouraging to make big movies today.”
That may seem a surprising statement from the director of Independence Day: Resurgence, the sequel to the 1996 blockbuster about humanity’s valiant struggle against an alien invasion. But Emmerich and 20th Century Fox did wait twenty years before releasing a sequel, a staggeringly long time in Hollywood, considering that the original film grossed over eight hundred million dollars worldwide. They waited because Emmerich wanted to tell a different kind of story.
The original film showed how an extinction-level threat to all of humanity, such as an invasion of bloodthirsty extra-terrestrials, might cause people to put aside their national, ethnic, racial, and religious differences to work together for survival. But it was rooted in the real world.
Resurgence imagines an alternate reality, in which The War of ’96 caused history to diverge dramatically from our own. That unity of humanity against a shared threat has lasted and resulted in technological advances surpassing those of our world. Humanity suspects the aliens may return and, this time, they’re ready.
Blockbuster film-making has changed drastically in the twenty years since the original film, which relied on practical effects and model work for some of its most dazzling moments. Now, nearly all blockbusters, including Independence Day: Resurgence, are drenched in computer-generated images.
The idea of an iconic landmark such as the Empire State Building being destroyed, as it was in the first film, is fraught with a greater sense of tragedy following the attacks of 11 September 2001. Ordinary sequels are no longer good enough; today, movie studios try to build long series of interconnected films, or ‘cinematic universes’, usually involving people with superpowers.
Independence Day: Resurgence may appear the odd film out in such an environment. But it also arrives at a moment when nostalgia for the 1990s, a time when Jeff Goldblum could be a go-to blockbuster leading man, is at an all-time high.
Can a film from 1996 reinvent itself for 2016? In the video, the BBC’s Peter Bowes visited the set of the new movie in New Mexico to find out and spoke to Emmerich and stars Goldblum, Judd Hirsch, Liam Hemsworth, Vivica A Fox, and Maika Monroe.
Rico says he'll see it, regardless...

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