skjam: Skyler Sands as a UNIT soldier (Unit)
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) dir. Steven Spielberg

Elliott (Henry Thomas) is a middle child. He's old enough to want to participate in his teen brother Michael's (Robert MacNaughton) Dungeons and Dragons game, but not old enough to be welcome there. He thinks of his little sister Gertie (Drew Barrymore) as babyish, and hasn't noticed yet how smart she is. The kids quarrel a lot, exasperating their separated mother Mary (Dee Wallace). But Elliott is about to become one of the most important little boys on Earth. An alien has been stranded near their Northern California suburb, and Elliott is the key to saving this extra-terrestrial.

Somehow, I had just never gotten around to seeing this much-beloved movie during the year it ran in theaters or on TV or home video. My knowledge of it was all from pop culture references and ripoffs. So it's nice that I was randomly challenged to finally give it a watch.

E.T., as it will come to be known, is a member of a group of peaceful explorers who were examining an Earth forest when the ship was forced to take off before meddling humans could get to close. In the excitement, E.T. was left behind, and evidently the aliens do not possess a way to return to the same coordinates. E.T. senses a kindred spirit in the nearby town, and slowly reveals itself to the shocked pre-teen.

Elliott is forced to admit the existence of the alien to his siblings--despite their own tensions, they quickly bond over protecting the visitor. They try to hide E.T. from their mother, though Gertie tries the other approach and Mary completely misses what's going on due to her own pressing concerns. Meanwhile, shadowy figures infiltrate the neighborhood, led by the mysterious Keys (Peter Coyote).

E.T. has seemingly miraculous powers, but separation from its people is slowly killing it. The kids need to help it "phone home." Fortuitously, Halloween has arrived, making it easier for weird creatures to go out on the street, but will it be too late?

Good: Neat special effects, excellent music, some lovely shots. Keeping the government agents shadowy and a bit sinister until the last third of the movie works well. I also like that said agents turn out to be well-meaning, if overbearing and not willing to listen closely enough to the children.

Oh, and one of the first D&D scenes in media and mostly positive!

Less good: I found my attention wandering during the early "cute kid" scenes. Elliott seems a little too invested in E.T. being "a boy" (officially, its species does not have gender as we understand it.)

Content note: Some naughty language from children. E.T. comes close to dying and Elliott suffers with him. Younger children should have a grownup for support during darker moments.

I think I missed the window to consider this a really great movie, but it is pretty good and suitable for families to watch together (if your family is okay with "penis-breath" as dialogue.)
skjam: (fanfic)
Ready Player One (2018) dir. Steven Spielberg

It is the dark future of Columbus, Ohio in the year 2045. Ecological disaster and economic collapse have made the outside world unbearable for many of the world's citizens. Fortunately, there's an online virtual world known as the Oasis that they can escape to. But worse news, creative culture has stalled out since sometime around the pandemic of 2020. And that's been made worse by a resurgence of fanatical worship of 1980s pop culture. You see, Halliday (Mark Rylance), the inventor and owner of Oasis, died a few years back and left control of the company and its virtual world to whoever solves a series of riddles and challenges, and to beat them you must know all about Halliday's obsessions--and since he was an 80s kid....

One of the Gunters (Easter egg hunters) is Wade Watts, known online as Parzifal (Tye Sheridan). He lives in the Stacks (mobile homes stacked on top of each other in rickety frames) outside Columbus with his aunt and her abusive boyfriend. He's secretly created a base where he has a decent gaming rig to play games in Oasis and search for clues. Wade is best online friends with Aech (Lena Waithe), who often teams up with Daito (Win Morisaki) and Sho (Philip Zhao) in competitions. During a race meant as the first challenge in the Halliday contest, Parzifal meets his favorite livestreamer Art3mis (Olivia Cooke) and quickly falls in love despite warnings from both Aech and Art3mis that he only knows her online persona.

Opposing our heroes in their quest is the monopoly-seeking IOI corporation, led by CEO Sorrento (Ben Mendelsohn) who was once Halliday's intern. IOI wants to turn the Oasis into a pay-for-play advertising-ridden cash cow. "We can cover up to 80% of the display with advertisements before triggering brain aneurysms." Most of IOI's employees are anonymous Sixers (because they are issued six digit employee numbers) but two minions who get names are online expert I-R0k (T.J. Miller) and offline enforcer F'Nale Zandor (Hannah John-Kamen). F'Nale is a movie-exclusive character.

Early in the story, Wade figures out a clue that no one else had in the last five years, and wins the first key. Although he refuses to "clan", it's people near him that get the idea from him, and become the High Five. Can the High Five solve the remaining challenges and beat IOI to the prize before they're zeroed out online and in the real world?

This movie is based on the novel by Ernest Cline, which I have previously reviewed. As with the novel, this movie is squarely aimed at men who were nerds in the 1980s, although the big cultural references are well known enough that other audiences will be able to follow along. The move from book to movie means that quite a few references have to be changed because of rights issues, and there's much more emphasis on movie references. On the good side, this also means that at least in the background of scenes, we see much more variety in eras and fandoms than the book has, even a blink and you'll miss it appearance by a character from a movie that wasn't out yet in 2018!

The CGI is nifty, and really shows off what you can do with a full budget. (The Iron Giant and Gundam RX-78 vs. Mechagodzilla!) The actors for the High Five do an okay job, but the baddies' acting is better. Spielberg (famous director in the 1980s) is still good at his profession.

Good: The movie scraps a lot of Parzifal's stalker tendencies towards Art3mis, probably to condense the timeline, but it also makes him a bit more likable. This version of the story also foregrounds that the contest is as much about not making the same mistakes Halliday did in not connecting with people and pushing them away as it is about sharing his obsessive fandoms. This Wade Watts, having learned those lessons, would never have made the mistakes the Wade Watts of Ready Player Two did.

Less good: The main romance still feels forced.

Content note: attempted suicide, gore (the movie warns you it's coming up) and female nudity.

Overall: A fun popcorn movie, especially for male nerds of a certain age. Watchers the same age as the protagonists may find it a bit baffling.

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