The lastest from the team who gave us "28 Days Later" (Danny Boyle & Alex Garland) is a very interesting film, especially because it deals with something that doesn't really permeate sci-fi horror or anything--and again, the genre-bending Garland scripts something that's pretty unique after taking a story that's been done (team of scientists on mission to deliver something to save mankind). In this case, it's a team of astronaut scientists who are delivering a nuclear bomb to the dying sun. Not to re-ignite the sun actually, but to create a star close to it, and I believe the idea is...it'll create a star-within-a-star effect, thereby revitalizing the sun's power.
Meanwhile, the story is about having that power, and the Last Man Standing to do it...can they go through with saving mankind or do they end up selfishly abandoning the project, and sabotaging the mission? The question is posed in the film in the form of the team that went before the team that the movie bases itself around. And a lone survivor becomes quite troublesome for the new team.
There's a lot of ideas thrown around, and I like that there isn't really a resolution except for the ultimate one. And there is really no mention of God, so it doesn't become a faith-based idea. I think Garland wrote it, that in the absence of God, what does man do in a time where they can be either hero or villain?
I found it to be just as up to par with "28 Days Later", another film that is a statement of mankind without being too over the top, and using a "zombie movie" disguise. This somewhat uses a "slasher movie" disguise at parts, but never loses focus of what it's trying to say. There is ambiguity throughout, and you kind of have to go along with the movie and figure things out on what the theme is. But eventually I think you get there, and I wound up really finding this to be a "lost gem" of the summer.
It'll probably be out of the theatres by the end of the week, since "Superbad" is coming out.
out of