Tuesday, December 22, 2009

District 9 DVD



DVD Review by Kam Williams

Headline: South African Monster Mockumentary Makes Its Way to DVD

This harrowing tale of man versus alien marks the auspicious directorial debut of South African Neill Blomkamp. He sets his sci-fi thriller in Johannesburg in 2010, a few decades after the arrival of a race of extraterrestrial refugees from a dying planet.
With their mothership hovering in the air just above the city’s skyline, the creatures have been kept cooped up in District 9, a “temporary” concentration camp which over the intervening years has degenerated into a blighted ghetto. The locals refer to the aliens by the slur “Prawns” and have no problem with the impending government plans for a forcible relocation of the social nuisance to a site 200 miles away by a private company called Multi-National United (MNU).
The film unfolds principally from the perspective of Wilkus Van De Merwe (Sharlto Copley), a nerdy bureaucrat enjoying a plum position at MNU due to nepotism because his boss is his father-in-law (Louis Minnaar). The plot thickens when Wilkus is asked to oversee the exodus from District 9 only to end up accidentally infected by a DNA-altering substance which starts changing him into an alien.
He is subsequently hospitalized but bolts from his bed after overhearing that the doctors have decided to euthanize him in order to study his morphing organs for medical science. Meanwhile, the South African military rationalizes an escalation of the ruthless roundup into an indiscriminate slaughter reminiscent of the mistreatment of the indigenous peoples under Apartheid.
So, Wilkus returns to District 9, switching loyalties to lead the resistance, suddenly sympathetic to the plight of the brutalized Prawns he has increasingly come to resemble. A thoroughly-absorbing, edge-of-your-seat thriller which is right up there with the best of sci-fi because of the subtle fashion in which it delivers its thought-provoking, universal message about ethnic tolerance.

Excellent (4 stars)
Rated R for graphic violence and pervasive profanity.
In English and Nyanja with subtitles.
Running time: 112 minutes
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
2-Disc DVD Extras: Filmmaker’s commentary, deleted scenes, filmmaker’s 3-part documentary, plus 4 featurettes.

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