BOTTOM
LINE:
It's
the Blair-Witch version of Godzilla - ridiculous in many parts but
very cool and unlike 'Blair Witch', this film actually pays off
on its premise.
THE GOOD:
Hollywood finally gets to do their
own 'Blair Witch' and surprisingly, 'Cloverfield' is superior to
the film it draws so heavily from, at least in style. 'Blair Witch'
didn't really have a pay-off (ie the threat was always suggested,
never revealed). 'Cloverfield' doesn't show the monsters much but
at the right moments, it shows the monsters in dramatic style. The
main monster itself is ridiculous but because the camera work is
so shaky you don't really notice and is actually quite nasty and
scary in some moments. The story is by and large irrelevant - this
film is all about mayhem and destruction and the film doesn't disappoint.
After getting an introduction to the characters, the first attack
scene comes out of nowhere and is one of the coolest you're likely
to see, with the head of the Statue of Liberty smashing through
buildings before rolling down the street and coming to a stop at
the base of the apartment building the characters inhabit. At this
point, you hardly see the monster at all. This is especially borne
out in the next attack sequence where in a flash of a second, the
monster's tail comes crashing down on the Brooklyn Bridge, killing
lots of people and making a terrifying sequence as people scramble
to safety. The filmmakers very cleverly defy conventions by keeping
you guessing about who will survive. Characters are built up to
seem important but then end up as monster-fodder. Some that don't
appear important at all become the central characters. But the smartest
move of all was to explain nothing about the monster, how it attacks
or why it seems to have nasty offspring that roll off its back.
One very creepy scene revolves around one of the girls who was bitten
by one of the smaller monsters (in another separate, clever scene
in a dark subway), she starts to become dizzy and begins bleeding
through her eyes. The army soldiers grab her and take her away from
everyone else where she proceeds to spontaneously combust, with
blood exploding in every direction. It's not over the top in execution
but it is surprising and nasty. I think what I enjoyed the most
is that the monster was used in just the right way and provided
some genuinely thrilling sequences. 'Cloverfield' is a lot of fun.