bureau42.com      

bureau42.com email
Check your mail, or get a free address

Add to Google

part of the everyone.net Entertainment Network

Dreamhost Web Hosting

Problems with the site? Comments? Questions? Let us know!

 
welcome to bureau42.com
 
Weekend Review: Close Encounters of the Third Kind
posted July 6, 1:34 pm by Timeshredder

Category: Movies

Movie SF ruled the big screen in '77, with two lasting hits. Star Wars tooks its inspiration from old pulps, serials, and comics; Spielberg's big movie drew on UFO contactee lore.1


Read more... ( 4 comments already posted ) | ( 7955 bytes in body ) | ( Post a comment )


<< Doctor Who Discussion: Turn Left, The Missing Earth, and Journey's End  | Post a comment | Thomas Michael Disch, 1940-2008 >>

Director: Steven Spielberg
Written by Steven Spielberg, et al.

Cast
Richard Dreyfuss as Roy Neary
François Truffaut as Claude Lacombe
Melinda Dillon as Gillian Guiler
Teri Garr as Ronnie Neary
Bob Balaban as David Laughlin
J. Patrick McNamara as Project Leader
Cary Guffey as Barry Guiler

Full cast and crew details may be found at the imdb

Available at Amazon in DVD and Blu-Ray.

Premise

After close encounters with a UFO, some ordinary people find themselves drawn to a site in Wyoming. Meanwhile, a mysterious agency tracks clues around the world and keeps watching the skies.

High Point

Yes, I suggest later in this review that the abductions create a problem for the conclusion. Yes, the aliens are disappointingly humanoid, because Spielberg makes them look as the alien contactees claim they look. And no, I don't know why their ships shine with the combined candlepower of Las Vegas, Shinjuku, and that guy a block over who always overdoes his Christmas decorations. I can put these matters aside. The movie comes to a spectacular conclusion, and our uncertain communication with beings from another world resonates as it has in no previous work of mass-media SF.

Low Points

The already lengthy and, in places, slow-paced film was given the Special Edition treatment a few years later. Spielberg added and removed scenes, ensuring that several versions of the film would become available. Some of the changes aren't bad—- though the film did not need to be longer. However, he added a scene that occurs inside the ship. It manages simultaneously to show too much and yet be anti-climactic.

Arguably, Spielberg is responsible for starting the whole Special Edition trend, which has had decidedly mixed results.

The Review

Originality: 4/6. The film borrows heavily from many sources, and yet it plays like nothing else before it.

Effects: 6/6. They’d do these all with CGI now. Spielberg didn’t have the option in '77, and the physical effects designed for this film hold up today.

Story 5/6. The story begins slowly, but I find it draws me in, even years later and on a small screen. I wonder, however, why the story needed to include the abducted humans. Never mind that it problematizes the heavenly vision of the aliens at the end, That's all right; we simply don’t know much about the aliens to really understand what they're trying to accomplish. But if the extra-terrestrials had access to humans since the 1940s, why don't they understand us better? Why are they using non-linguistic methods of communicating? Surely, they would have learned some basic words and phrases, such as "hello," and "y'know, it's really gonna freak people out if you hover over their houses, cause weird power effects, and steal their children."

Acting: 6/6. This is in so many ways a film of the 70s. The acting and characterization takes the natural approach popular then. Neary is very much an ordinary man, unspectacular and seriously flawed (consider how he treats his family). The children are obnoxious, not in the manner of cute movie kids, but in the way that many real-life children are obnoxious. Faced with the extraordinary, human beings act still like human beings.

Production: 6/6.

Emotional Response: 5/6. Spielberg has crafted a fine film, though it's a bit slow-moving at times. The final scene works much better on a big screen.

Overall: 5/6.

In total, receives 37/42.

Notes

1. I'm cannibalizing much of this from a piece I wrote on the song "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft." That article first appeared here and was reprinted in Context.

People have been seeing things in the sky for millennia, but the modern flying saucer movement didn't really get underway until 1947. On June 24, a pilot named Kenneth Arnold reported several crescent-shaped objects flying at high speeds, moving "like a saucer would if you skipped it across the water." The term flying saucers entered the English language. It wasn't long before someone connected Arnold's craft with the enigmatic Foo (Feu=French for "fire") Fighters reported at the end of World War II. Reports of Unidentified Flying Objects swarmed in (that other '47 incident, Roswell, however, rarely rated mention until years later). The Air Force launched Project Blue Book, confirmation that the government saw something serious in these reports. Were we under observation? Had Hiroshima and Nagasaki drawn the attention of extra-terrestrials? Would our nascent space programs bring us in contact with beings from other worlds?

Hollywood thought so. Cinematic saucers brought strange visitors to drive-ins throughout the 1950s. Most, like The Thing from Another World and The Man from Planet X, were obviously dangerous. The Day the Earth Stood Still took a different perspective. Its visitor brings a message of peace, backed by the threat of annihilation. His name is Klaatu. While in hiding, he takes the name Carpenter. Flying saucers became a fact of life, at least in the media. Entire mythologies grew up around big-eyed Greys, Men in Black, and Little Green Men. Some believed the aliens were dangerous, and warned that they were already here, tampering with human history. Others wanted them to come, and cults sprung up beseeching the visitors to save humanity from ourselves. One such group, the International Flying Saucer Bureau urged their members to send a simultaneous telepathic message on May 15, 1953, which would begin, "calling occupants of interplanetary craft."

The darker side of the contactee lore came from Betty and Barney Hill, who told an ever-shifting tale of kidnapping and experimentation by aliens in 1961. In the early 70s, Roswell finally took its place among the lore. The story was dusted off when tales of alien bodies started circulating.

The alien phenomena was at its height in the 1970s. A musical prayer to the aliens charted: "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft," written and recorded by Canadian band Klaatu, but better known by the Carpenters' 1977 cover. A tv show of the late '70s, Project U.F.O. dramatized the Blue Book investigation. Aliens found their way onto series such as Soap and, yes, The Dukes of Hazzard. Close Encounters took the messianic view of the extra-terrestrials. Other stories told of late-night abductions, sadistic experiments, and interspecies sex.



 Comments

The late 70's were fun.
posted by joe__gee on July 6, 7:22 pm
From the perspective of a wide-eyed kid soaking it all up, the movies and television from the late 70's sci fi craze were wonderful.

After Close Encounters I remember spending hours outside looking up at the sky (I lived near an airport in Ohio, so the sky was almost always interesting.) I remember watching the sun set one summer evening after seeing Star Wars and thinking how cool it would be to have two suns. I was a big fan of the Buck Rogers movie, and the first year of the series (before they turned Twiki into a simpering *thing*.)

It was a good time.

-Joe

reply to this

Re: The late 70's were fun.
posted by Timeshredder on July 7, 6:01 am
From the perspective of a wide-eyed kid soaking it all up, the movies and television from the late 70's sci fi craze were wonderful.


Maybe it was the sense (both from the flaky perspective of the age and the ingenuous perspective of our age) that, hey, maybe this stuff could be real.

Any requests for future weekend reviews from the 70s?

reply to this

Re: The late 70's were fun.
posted by joe__gee on July 7, 8:47 pm
From the perspective of a wide-eyed kid soaking it all up, the movies and television from the late 70's sci fi craze were wonderful.


Maybe it was the sense (both from the flaky perspective of the age and the ingenuous perspective of our age) that, hey, maybe this stuff could be real.

Any requests for future weekend reviews from the 70s?


I know you've already done Logan's Run, A Clockwork Orange, and Laserblast (shudder). Have you done Silent Running, Westworld, Phase IV, or the Buck Rogers movie?

I loved Phase IV, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070531/ .

-Joe

reply to this

Re: The late 70's were fun.
posted by Timeshredder on July 8, 6:24 am


I know you've already done Logan's Run, A Clockwork Orange, and Laserblast (shudder). Have you done Silent Running, Westworld, Phase IV, or the Buck Rogers movie?

I loved Phase IV, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070531/ .

-Joe


I remember Phase IV.

It'd take some time to even locate some of these films. Maybe we could do a 70s month some time.

Are you certain we've reviewed Laserblast? I can't find it.

We've also reviewed a few 70s horror films, but no Exorcist. Hmmm....

reply to this



<< Doctor Who Discussion: Turn Left, The Missing Earth, and Journey's End  | Post a comment | Thomas Michael Disch, 1940-2008 >>
 
Current Headlines
Weekly Digital Disc Picks - August 19, 2008 (11)
Weekend Review - "Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008)" (8)
WorldCon Video (0)
Secret Invasion Review - "Captain Britain and MI13 #4" (0)
Potter VI Delayed till July (3)
Warp drive design? (0)
Olmos to direct new BSG prequel (1)
Secret Invasion Review - "Secret Invasion #5" (0)

Other SF Sites
Sci-Fi Storm

What Are Humanity's Greatest Achievements?
<i>Gemini Division</i> starts web episodes today
The Visitor From Hades
<i>Half-Blood Prince</i> delayed until July 2009
Hugo award winners
<i>The Starlost</i> on DVD!
Olympic Opening Ceremonies
<i>Flash Gordon</i> gets writers
Another <i>Galactica</i> prequel movie announced
Elfwood growing in popularity
STARTREK.COM - Headlines

Next Remastered Episode: "Tomorrow Is Yesterday"
Keep the conversation going on StarTrek.com boards
Okuda Logo for New Lunar Lander Unveiled
"InAlienable" Premieres, "Of Gods & Men" Soon!
Jerry Goldsmith: A Personal Reminiscence
TNG20: It Was Twenty Years Ago Today (December 1987)
EDITOR'S PICK: Suzie Plakson - "Good Luck Charm" CD
Etchstar Customized iPod nano Giveaway
ASK KATE: Trekkies, Trekkers, Which Is It?
POLL: Which TNG "gift" would you like this holiday season?

Other Random Cool Sites
Ars Technica

Cell phone sales down, average price up in the US
Judge lifts fare card hack gag order, punts on 1st Amendment
RIAA confirms it's behind the Muxtape shutdown
As IDF begins, Intel, IBM tout next-gen process technologies
SportsFanLive arrives: social networking for sports fans
Google to help bloggers blanket Dem, GOP conventions
Buzz and NewsCred: two different takes on social news
US, EU heading for showdown over high-tech tariffs
Mozilla drags IE into the future with Canvas element plugin
TinEye image search helps ferret out copyright ripoffs
Gods among menus: a review of Too Human
Dell's Eee-killer to ship with Ubuntu preinstalled
"Functionally voluntary" music may lead to blanket licenses
Linux Foundation gets a boost as Canonical signs on
RIAA, KaZaA user settle 3-year-old lawsuit for $6,050
FCC commissioners will hit the road to tout DTV transition
Using viruses to build self-assembled nanoscale batteries
Georgia cyberattacks lead to questions about risk to US
Mint.com gets facelift, new financial management guides
Despite credibility issues, online news consumption grows
[H]ardOCP News/Article Feed

Nehalem Technology Overview Webcast
Nehalem Slide Presentation - PART I
Nehalem Slide Presentation - PART II
Kingwin at 1.2 Kilowatts
Live Nehalem Coverage from IDF
PC Per Coverage of Intel Pat G Keynote
Blow Stuff Up
Stealth NES Computer
HardWare Roundup
Live IDF Coverage at PC Perspective
SyncToy v2.0
SpeedFan 4.35 Final
New µTorrent BETA
Just what Atom was Meant For
Is that a Nano in your pocket, Or are you just on Fire?
Kingwin ABT-1220MA1S Mach 1 Power Supply
BIOSTAR T-Power I45
MSI K9N2 Diamond
GIGABYTE X48T-DQ6
Antec Signature Series 850 Power Supply
Intel DX48BT2 Motherboard
MSI R4850-T2D512 Video Card
FSP Everest 1010w Power Supply
Intel Atom vs.VIA Nano
BFGTech GeForce GTX 280 OCX
ASUS Maximus II Formula
Koolance PSU-1300ATX-12N Liquid Cooled Power Supply
AMD's ATI Radeon HD 4800 Series Custom Filtering AA
Sigma SP-700 700w Power Supply
ASUS Lion Square
Slashdot

Adobe Flash Ads Launching Clipboard Hijack Attacks
New Multi-GPU Technology With No Strings Attached
Judge Rules Man Cannot Be Forced To Decrypt HD
DPI and Net Neutrality's Overseas Weak Spot
IBM and AMD Create First 22nm SRAM Cell
Flagship Studios' Founder Discusses Its Demise
MIT Students' Gag Order Lifted
Support Grows For Blanket Music Licensing
Mars Lander Snaps the Most Detailed Pics Yet
Teens Arrested For Motorized Office Chair
Leaping the Uncanny Valley
A Good Reason To Go Full-Time SSL For Gmail
OpenSolaris From a Linux Admin and User Perspective
Open-Source College Textbooks Gaining Mindshare
Dell's Subnotebook To Ship With Ubuntu


Want our headlines on your site? You can snag our RSS file and go to town. (RDF/RSS parser sold separately.) All site content © and owned by its author - for the full skinny, read the legal disclaimers bit.