Earth to Echo (DVD REVIEW)
Earth
to Echo
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Headline: “E.T.” Inspired Sc-Fi Adventure Arrives on DVD
Most people know
E.T. revolves around several kids who befriend an alien stranded on Earth and
eager to return home before ill-intentioned adults can do him any harm. That
coming-of-age classic landed four Academy Awards back in 1983, and was even
voted the best sci-fi of all time in a recent survey by Rotten Tomatoes.
But if you’re too young to
remember Steven Spielberg’s heartwarming adventure, or if it’s been so long
since you saw it that the storyline’s a little fuzzy, have I got an homage for
you. Much about Earth to Echo just screams remake, starting with the picture’s
vaguely-familiar promotional poster which similarly features a human hand
reaching out to touch an extra-terrestrial.
Still, this delightful
variation on the theme endeavors to refresh the original by incorporating
current cultural staples, ranging from texting shorthand to social media. So,
when the protagonists here communicate with each other, they often rely on
inscrutable slang apt to befuddle fuddy-duddies unfamiliar with the lexicon
employed by today’s average adolescent.
At this found-footage
flick’s point of departure, we find narrator
Tuck (Astro) lamenting the impending separation from his BFFs Alex (Teo Halm) and
Munch (Reese Hartwig) when their Nevada neighborhood is razed in a week
to make way for a turnpike. The plot thickens after all their cell phones
inexplicably “barf” simultaneously, and they decide
to discern the source of the mysterious malfunction.
Equipped with a camcorder
and state-of-the-art spyglasses, the youngsters ride their bikes into the
desert in the middle of the night accompanied by a cute rebel (Ella
Wahlestedt) with her own reason for running away from home. GPS sends the sleuths to a site in the desert where, lo
and behold, they find Echo, a cuddly visitor from another galaxy with pressing
issues akin to the aforementioned E.T.
The kids, of course, kick
it into high gear on his behalf, keeping just a step ahead of the untrustworthy
authorities. Their noble efforts inexorably lead to a satisfying resolution
every bit as syrupy as Spielberg’s.
An unapologetic retread
bordering on plagiarism that will nevertheless delight the tyke and ‘tweener
demographics.
Excellent (4 stars)
Rated
PG for action, peril and mild epithets
Running
time: 90 minutes
Distributor:
20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Blu-ray
Extras: Creating the Truck Scene; Casting the Characters; We Made That: The
Making of Earth to Echo; Friends No Matter How Far; and the original theatrical
trailer.
To
see a trailer for Earth to Echo, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMlcdEtAiBA
To
order Earth to Echo on Blu-ray, visit:
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