Super 8: Blu Ray Review
Super 8
Rating: M
Released by Universal Home Ent
Small town America - Ohio to be precise - in 1979: Following an
incident at the town mill, young Joe Lamb (Joel Courtney) is left
bereft of a mother.
Joe's solution to cope with the loss is to throw himself into his
friends' movie-making project; despite his police deputy father's
insistence that once summer is done, it's off to camp for
him.
When the group ends up filming their amateur zombie flick at a
train station one night, their movie-making is rudely interrupted
by a massive train crash, which they soon realise was not an
accident.
To make matters worse, when the US Air Force move in with the might
of the military and people start disappearing, they begin to
suspect something is seriously wrong....and something nasty is
loose in the town
Super 8 is clearly a film that wears its influences on its
sleeve - and those are many; the fact it's by Amblin Entertainment
(Steven Spielberg's production company) shows all the way through -
with the whole film having a feel of the Goonies, Stand By Me, ET,
Close Encounters et al inevitably dripped throughout.
Yet, you really shouldn't be put off by the fact it's a film about
an alien loose in small town America; at its heart Super 8 is a
nostalgically tinged relationship film with broad strokes of
tenderness brushed through.
There's a wonderful camaraderie between the young kids as they make
their film - how Joe copes with the loss of his mother and falls in
love for the first time with Alice (the prodigiously talented Elle
Fanning) and plenty of intimately played character moments
throughout
Super 8 is a great piece of cinematic entertainment with some
beautifully played intimate human moments; if director JJ Abrams
had pulled back a little on the influences and symbolism and added
a bit more subtlety, this ride would have been perfect; as it is
though, it's one of the better thrills of the year.
Extras: Commentary, docos
Rating: 8/10