The 5th Wave (1916)
Caught this on TV the other night. I'd seen the trailer while at some
other movie, and had been interested in the idea of (at least) 5 waves
of attack by aliens against Earth. Not enough to buy a ticket, though.
Turns out I would have been disappointed if I had paid to watch it.
They fairly quickly run through the first 4 waves: an EMP takes out
most of our electrical equipment, an earthquake sends tsunamis across
the coastal cities, (I guess a number of earthquakes, in each major
body of water, which solves the head-scratcher of every city in the
world being at the same time of day)(our viewpoint is in Ohio, which, I
guess means we have a wave coming out of Lake Erie, making me question
how small a major body of water the aliens targeted) a bird flu that
spreads to humans, and... almost forgetting already... I guess it's
being hunted down by things that assume our appearance, which we are
told about, but which our main character does not experience until we
are worrying about the 5th wave. Well, that's quite a collection, goes
from fairly quick and easy, if brute force, to something still using
simple force, but needing a lot more setup, to something that needs a
lot more information and work (one character tells us that the aliens
have visited before) to essentially one at a time -- well, I guess each
wave will be to diminishing returns.
It all felt fairly superficial. as if just a background for the YA
story, which itself wasn't that engrossing. Well, wait, what are we comparing it to? It came out early in 2016, "The Walking Dead" was in
the middle of season 6, in Alexandria, with a giant zombie herd bearing
down on them. (while they were filming they had to know about the
prison/the Governor arcs, yeah, the book came out in 2013, 3rd or 4th season,) Spielberg's "Falling Skies" had come and gone, and syfy"s
"Defiance" had given it a go. One example of the "standard apocalypse background" that I'm complaining about is a highway scene: lanes of
dead cars for miles, with the occasional body or suitcase/cooler
scavenged through and discarded. But this was a slow-motion
apocalypse: the cars weren't evacuating, it was a normal day when the
cars died, and there was still enough government in place for the
quarantine, would they not have noticeably cleared a lane for the still-running vehicles we see later? As for the quarantine, I have no
real post-2020 critiques, I just hope no one has posted clips of it
tagged with my least favorite word of the decade, "prescient."
It came from a book, part of a trilogy. The movie does a good job of
being self-contained in its story, although when they do their
equivalent of blowing up the Death Star, they do their equivalent of explicitly evacuating all the command staff. It was not a good
advertisement for the books for me. Do the aliens eventually make
sense, or is it like the joke about dungeon monsters in between
adventuring parties? I can believe it if I was told the movie dumbed
down the story; there's room to have lost a lot from even an old '70s 180-page paperback, let alone a modern 500-pager. And yet, 500 more
pages of this is not what I'm looking for.
On 2023-10-07 20:59:52 +0000, Jack Bohn said:
The 5th Wave (1916)
1916 ... wow, Chloe Grace Moretz looks really good considering she
wasn't even born for another 81 years!! ;-)
That is a typo which should have said 2016. :-)
The movie was rumoured to be the first in a series. Basically jumping
on the bandwagon of other young adult movies series like "The Hunger
Games" and "Divergent". The other movies in the series were never made though due to this first one being somewhat of a bomb at the box office.
Your Name wrote:
On 2023-10-07 20:59:52 +0000, Jack Bohn said:
The 5th Wave (1916)
1916 ... wow, Chloe Grace Moretz looks really good considering she
wasn't even born for another 81 years!! ;-)
That is a typo which should have said 2016. :-)
Heh. Must be too used to typing "19" before the date of the movies I watch! Well, replace my references to the 2020 pandemic with the 1918 one, and references to "The Walking Dead" with... um, I guess there's disaster
porn between Wells' _War of the Worlds_ and Wylie's _When Worlds
Collide_, but the first two decades of the 20th Cent are a bit of a
blind spot for me.
The movie was rumoured to be the first in a series. Basically jumping>
on the bandwagon of other young adult movies series like "The Hunger>
Games" and "Divergent". The other movies in the series were never made>
though due to this first one being somewhat of a bomb at the box office.
It strikes me that there is probably a list by now of series
adaptations started but failed, Narnia and Golden Compass come to mind.
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