Poor Peter – the schmuck hasn’t slept well in forever, plagued by nightmares about losing his family in some sort of attack. Michael Pena stars in Netflix’s new sci-fi offering Extinction, and the guy who’s known as the one good thing to come out of Crash is a perfect fit for family man Peter. It possibly doesn’t hurt that his character appears to work on a set that looks like an exact copy of the Van Dyne lab.
Anyway. Both his boss (Mike Colter) and his wife (Lizzy Caplan) urge him to see a sleep specialist and get his shit in order. But Peter starts to wonder if maybe there’s a reason he’s been chosen for these visions. And, for the first time in the history of marriage, it turns out he’s right. An alien invasion interrupts their dinner party and things get to explodey, apocalypty, emergency level so quickly that he doesn’t even get to say I told you so.
It occurs to me that Extinction’s invaders remind me a lot of something that invaded Ottawa this time last summer. We called it La Machine. Basically they’re storeys-tall robot-puppets that stalked the city’s busiest streets.
It looks relatively benign behind Sean at the moment, but you have to see it in action to really get the gist. The spider, which is what I was reminded of in the movie, was joined by a dragon AND THEY WERE NOT FRIENDS. When they met up in the city, they invariably fought.
Sorry for the crummy video, but you can kind of see the people under neath the spider’s body who are controlling its various legs.
Anyway, sorry guys, this was a pretty big sidebar, even for me. Back to the movie.
Extinction isn’t bad, you just have to be willing to hang in during the first half, which is pretty standard, perhaps even subpar fare. At any rate: nothing you haven’t seen before. But there’s some clever foreshadowing that makes the second half much more interesting. It’s probably not a great move to inject the film’s personality into only the back end because lots of viewers won’t stick around long enough to find it. But for those that do, it’s an engaging and curious interpretation that a true sci-fi fan has likely encountered before in some form or another, but this kind of backward and forward thinking is always welcome. Extinction, by Hounds of Love director Ben Young, looks like a thriller, but this is a trick. You’ll have to survive the invasion to find out what’s really going on.
“You’ll have to survive the invasion to find out what’s really going on.”
Now, see, it’s those kinds of comments that make me curious about a movie. I’d rather have a spoiler than watch this, though. Please, tell us.
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I would prefer to be a bug slowly being preserved in amber than watch this movie. it makes you see the good side of the sixth mass extinction that will wipe out this horrible species.
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The trailer seemed all right and I really like Lizzy Caplan, especially after Masters of Sex, so I’ll be watching this to see what she’s been up to.
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Yeah, I’m more used to her from indie stuff, and this is trying to be a blockbuster, so it was a bit of an adjustment!
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That event looks like so much fun. Going to check out the movie and be bitter nothing fun ever happens in my city!
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Yeah, it visited last year when we turned 150 but apparently will be back again next year – though perhaps not these friends in particular. The crowds were enormous, as you can probably tell. It was crazy.
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For the exhibition, it is worth watching the movie. It seems interesting.
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Sounds interesting!
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How cool is that? Reminds me of a (safer?) Survival Research Laboratories performance.
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