Joe (Joel Courtney), a troubled boy living in a small town is spending the summer holidays helping his best friend (Riley Griffiths) make a zombie short on the titular film stock. One night while filming with major crush Alice (Elle Fanning), the gang witnesses a horrific accident which is a lot more sinister than it first seems. As the military takes over the town and people begin to disappear, it is up to the friends to piece together the mystery and save the day.
Like Stand By Me, the film is set around 30 years before present. While this journey into the past is unnecessary, 1979 is obviously a year dripping with nostalgia for writer/director J.J. Abrams just as 1956 was for Stephen King. The main character is also recently bereaved and is distant from his father, like Gordie before him.
If the set up isn’t unique, the execution mostly makes up for it. By combining Abram’s knack for giant creatures (see Cloverfield) and characterisation (see Star Trek, but not Lost, which was dire) we get a, dare I say it, rollercoaster ride as the children come to the rescue. The performances are also great, particularly from Fanning who is just luminous on screen.
Sweet, funny and exciting, Super 8 is a well-told adventure that just falls short of amazing.
2 comments:
You're full of surprises Laura my girl. You've given favourable reviews to films I'd have assumed you disliked.
But please, pretty please leave off the characterisation in 'Lost'. At its height the show was streets ahead in this department. How could you not be inspired by the complexities of Sawyer ;-)? It lost its way (no pun intended) when it took its focus of the characters to tangle itself in knots plot-wise.
Anyway glad to see you back posting after a bit of a break.
Shalom, Miss T x
I don't think I ever saw it at its height. I watched the first series and hated it and found the characters very boring (apart from Charlie and Locke). As far as I can remember, Sawyer was just a rugged man! I'm probably missing something, but there you go.
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