LIFE [2017]

()
Directed by:
Written by: ,
Starring: , , ,

USA

ON DVD & BLU-RAY NOW

RUNNING TIME: 104 min

REVIEWED BY: Dr Lenera, Official HCF Critic

A multinational six-member crew aboard the International Space Station performs a successful capture of a space probe returning from Mars with a soil sample. The crew’s job is to study the sample, which could prove to be the first evidence of extraterrestrial life. After extracting a single cell from the sample, biologist Hugh Derry is able to revive the dormant organism with atmospheric adjustments and glucose. Named Calvin by some school children in America, it quickly grows into a multi-celled organism, reacts to stimuli, and evolves further – eventually becoming hostile and crushing Hugh’s hand….

I can’t be the only who thinks that movie titles can be so short, dull and nondescript these days, at least for major releases of the horror and science fiction genres. Many decades ago Life would have been called Attack Of The Slime Monster or something, and it still possibly wouldn’t be quite so silly. Boy do people in this movie act like total idiots. Somebody is having their hand crushed by the monster and everybody else stands there bickering rather than rushing in to help. Somebody else is hiding in a sleep pod but, even with the monster trapped in one area, nobody goes to look for him. Three characters are believably hanging on for dear life when a door is opened, but a few seconds later are moving around as if they’re in normal gravity. One character actually allows this deadly, murderous monster to crawl onto her. And so forth. Maybe that’s what being in outer space does to you. And this is a film from Rhett Reese and Pal Wernick the writers of Zombieland where its characters behaved like complete and utter dunces throughout.

I’m glad I’ve got the biggest flaw with this movie out the way though, because otherwise it’s a pretty solid science fiction horror that does grip and even scare in quite a few places. Much was made of its resemblance to Alien even when the second trailer came out, and yes it is heavily indebted to Ridley Scott’s classic, to the point where certain moments are clearly being rehashed, and also to the point where inevitably unfavourable comparisons have to be made. However, it does have a somewhat different look and feel to it, and there are enough differences in the story and in its handling to very much justify its existence. After all, Alien was quite obviously [despite this being denied by many of its makers] inspired by It! The Terror From Beyond Space, Planet Of The Vampires and others anyway. Life has enough tension, frights and thrills to make it a decent night out at the movies, and, while this probably wouldn’t be a problem for many others, my biggest concern – the fact that was written by the duo behind not just Zombieland but also Deadpool – proved not to be as big a problem as I expected [aside from what I mentioned in the above paragraph of this review] as this particularly film is free of smugness and snarkiness except for a few brief moments featuring Ryan Reynolds’s character. And it’s not trying to be funny and almost completely failing.

A very cliched but still impressive opening of the Earth being gradually revealed by the lights of the space station, leads us into a nice single take sequence showing us the geography of the surroundings which will get more and more foreboding as things subsequently get worse and worse, and then an opening action beat of Reynolds’s character Rory “Roy” Adams single handedly capturing a probe. We aren’t allowed to get up close, instead viewing what he’s doing from the point of view of the other characters, which actually works very well. It’s hard to be impressed by CGI effects these days, especially in this kind of film where we haven’t long had Gravity, but right from the offset everything looks pretty convincing. Unfortunately the characters don’t really register much as rounded human beings, Reese and Wenick being content to give them token beats to differentiate them. Rory has a Ryan Reynolds mouth because he’s played by Ryan Reynolds – and that’s about it for him. Jake Gyllenhaal’s character Dr. David Jordan is an ex-soldier badly effected by war who likes being in outer space more than being on earth. Japanese Engineer Sho Murakami has a wife back home who’s soon to give birth. British Biologist Hugh Derry was wheelchair bound but can move around fine in zero gravity. And the two women – British Dr. Miranda North and Russian Katerina Golovkina- are pretty much defined by their accents. Every now and again Life does pause for a few minutes to half heartedly try to let us get to know this lot a bit, but it’s nothing like [and I’m going to try not to compare Life to Alien too often] the first few scenes of Alien where we hung out with these grumpy but very human characters and got a real sense of who they were by just seeing how they acted around each other. The cast do try their best though to give some life to these people – Gyllenhaal especially delivers another terrific performance – and do succeed in making us care a bit about them as the film goes on.

The retrieved organism, described by Miranda as “all muscle, all brain and all eye”, and named Calvin by a load of school children in a ridiculously cheesy and out of place scene, soon evolves and proves to be dangerous when it crushes one character’s hand in a genuinely uncomfortable moment [despite nobody helping the guy], which is then topped by a commendably gross dissolution of a lab rat. It escapes from containment and then it’s business as expected as the crew try to survive with a deadly creature who intends to kill them off one by one to survive, and a creature who of course seems impervious to any conventional ways of killing a living being. It’s really closer to It! The Terror From Beyond Space than Alien at times, though this creature is a jellyfish-like thing that later sports a kind of head but is only very vaguely humanoid in its later stages. Its slimy texture really is quite unappealing in a good way, though I doubt Calvin will be remembered much as a memorable monster in years to come, and unfortunately the writers haven’t really worked out a lot of its details, nor can they seem to decide on things like whether it can survive without oxygen or not. The fact that nearly every scene appears to be the result of a bad decision by somebody putting everybody else at risk is compensated for by the fast pacing and some moments really being bed-wettingly tense. Now Life’s second trailer hinted a little too strongly at later developments in the story so if you’re like me you’ll be able to guess much of what happens, but there’s a surprisingly strong sense of impending doom, an equally surprising number of moments near the end where characters actually think about what they’re doing and amazingly do the right thing, and one genuine surprise [well, it was to me] in the final scene which is quite cleverly set up.

Most of the deaths hold back on being as gruesome as they could have been but the staging is strong and we do get an inordinate amount of blood floating around in zero gravity throughout, something we don’t tend to see very often. The interiors are of the conventional kind though generally believable except for the laboratory which seems curiously lo-tech, and it helps that they are realised through actual sets rather than CGI. Director Daniel Espinosa, whose previous work that I’ve seen I’ve rather enjoyed even though none of it has been even slightly outstanding, only once relies on a jump scare [and even that wouldn’t be much without the obligatory musical sting backing it up], and focuses on trying to making the viewer feel uncomfortable with lots of quite nerve-wrecking moments when characters find themselves trapped with the monster, though after a while the film does seem to be repeating the same couple of scenes over and over again. All the mayhem is totally visible though – no Child 44-style vomit-cam for Espinosa here – and I’d like to see him next do a horror film perhaps without science fiction trappings [though Reese and Wernick have already talked about the possibility of Life sequels], as I think with a good screenwriter[s] he could really come up with something very strong indeed.

In the end Life doesn’t really have quite enough to make it stand out, and is sometimes truly dumb without having quite enough ‘B’ movie-style conviction to not make that matter too much, but there were passages where this reviewer was genuinely on the edge of his seat and the film was obviously working in the way intended – and when you watch as many alien and monster movies as me then that’s quite an achievement. No, Life doesn’t really compare with Alien [though I’m one of those oddballs who has always thought The Thing to be the superior picture anyway], but it doesn’t really disgrace it. Consider it more as a big budget version of all those cheapo Alien knock-offs that came out in the few years following that film’s release, and it holds up quite well.

Rating: ★★★★★★½☆☆☆

The Blu-Ray comes with a handful of special features including a making of and a featurette focusing on the concept of the alien creature. The high definition visuals are pretty crisp as you would expect for a Blu-Ray with the 7.1 and 5.1 audio options providing an in-house cinema experience for those with surround sound.

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About Dr Lenera 1969 Articles
I'm a huge film fan and will watch pretty much any type of film, from Martial Arts to Westerns, from Romances [though I don't really like Romcoms!]] to Historical Epics. Though I most certainly 'have a life', I tend to go to the cinema twice a week! However,ever since I was a kid, sneaking downstairs when my parents had gone to bed to watch old Universal and Hammer horror movies, I've always been especially fascinated by horror, and though I enjoy all types of horror films, those Golden Oldies with people like Boris Karloff and Christopher Lee probably remain my favourites. That's not to say I don't enjoy a bit of blood and gore every now and again though, and am also a huge fan of Italian horror, I just love the style.

1 Comment

  1. Man, I had some hopes for this movie but it suffers from the same problem as the Alien Pre-quels: The scientist behave like high-school kids. They’re are irrational and rush into situations. As a swede “I qlenched my fist in my pocket” as Ryan Reynolds decided to go hunting for the monster – words can’t describe the scene. The lifeform is ofcourse another Alien rip-off supermonster that grows exponentially, regenerates, is super strong, stealthy and very intelligent. The writers actually had to dumb it down since the monster otherwise would have taken control of the station, venting the air ( killing everybody) and then flewn and landed it at a comfortable beach in Mexico. It is your typical top-of-the-food-chain monster who knows that if you eat a human instead of a pre-frozen taco there will be less fuzz with wash-day hours. What I will give this movie is the ending which is interesting and a sequel might be promising if the franchise gets new writers. But most of all: Why an “Alien-clone”? Why not have it be interested in consuming other materials ( think the 80s Andromeda Strain), or make it a non-aggressive plant or similar but one that competes with living lifeforms over air or water? Something that would force the scientists to be scientists instead of them going hide and seek MacGyver-style. In the end I would rate it 4/10, the effects are good, sound is great but it relies on jump scares and is WAY too predictable. You shouldn’t be able to guess in which order the characters “drop-off” ( what if NOBODY DIED – that would have been a huge thing). So please dear god for the love of all that is holy – make the next Alien movie beyond great and if this franchise continues let it be about an alien non-aggressive lifeform that competes rather eats humans, that forces the scientists to act like grown ups and were nobody dies. THAT is gonna take some Oscar-level writing!

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