The
Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)
Directed by: Scott Derrickson
Premise: A remake of Robert
Wise’s 1951 film. An alien spacecraft lands in Central Park with an
emissary named Klaatu (Keanu Reeves). After warning the Secretary of Defense
that human beings will be exterminated if they do not stop harming the planet,
Klaatu finds himself on the run with a scientist (Jennifer Connelly) and her
stepson (Jaden Smith) as they attempt to dissuade the extraterrestrials from
destroying the planet.
What Works: The casting of the lead actors works
well. Keanu Reeves’ flat, minimalist acting style works in The Day the Earth Stood Still like it did in The
Matrix. His blank stares and detachment from the events going on around
him tend to work in his favor and suite the character. Jennifer Connelly and
Jaden Smith also work well together as mother and son and the tension in their
relationship is interesting to watch.
What Doesn’t: Aside from the leads, not much else
in this version of The Day the Earth Stood
Still is done very well at all. The film has no tension. Despite the
impending end of humanity, the film is unable to create a sense of urgency about
it. This is largely due to the lack of a clear goal and the film never puts an
antagonist in the way of that goal. The closest the film comes to this is Kathy
Bates who is miscast as the Secretary of Defense. The film needs a Don Rumsfeld
or a Robert McNamara to act as an antagonist toward the protagonists, but Bates
has no menace and never comes into direct conflict with the heroes. This is
indicative of the superficiality of the film’s politics. The
Day the Earth Stood Still is about change from a violent, reactive, and
unnecessarily aggressive world view to a more tolerant and thoughtful point of
view and how change in a culture can be willed by its members in the face of an
impending disaster, but the film does not qualify that change or offer the
viewer tangible evidence to believe in it.
Bottom Line: The Day the Earth Stood Still is reminiscent of 2004’s The Day After Tomorrow in its lazy storytelling, forced politics, and softball handling of big issues. On the one hand, The Day the Earth Stood Still does have better science to it but at least The Day After Tomorrow was exciting if stupid.