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Thursday, May 26, 2011

Review: ATTACK THE BLOCK * * * 1/2

It's within human nature to get overzealous...to bite off more than we can chew.

We take up the sword and get on to our theoretical steed determined to slay the dragon, only to get around the corner and find ourselves facing down an entire legion of dragons. What to do then? If ATTACK THE BLOCK is any example the answer is to run...and to hope that the mighty beast doesn't follow you.

Late one night we meet Sam (Jodie Whittaker) on her walk home to the the lower-income tower block she calls home. Not far from home, she is mugged by a group of five young hoodlums. Before they can make off with their meagre spoils, they almost get hit by an unidentified object crashing out of the sky. After letting Sam walk away, the boys investigate the crash. It's discovered that the object is in fact some sort of alien creature - a creature they waste no time in killing.

They haul the carcass back to the tower block (turns out they live there too), with the intention of stashing it at Ron's place. Ron is the neighbourhood drug dealer, and seems poised to make the gang leader Moses (John Boyega) a foot soldier in his drug racket. It's right around then that a few dozen more objects fall out of the sky.

having already brought back one as a trophy, the boys are feeling badass and go looking for more armed with bats, blades, and whatever else they have handy. The hitch is that these creatures aren't quite like the one they already danced with. These ones seem...meaner.

Knowing that they've strayed into the deep end, the boys retreat back to the block, and run back into Sam in the hopes of getting away from the aliens. Soon the entire block is under siege, and everyone needs to work together to stay alive.


ATTACK THE BLOCK plays like a mosaic of many great - and seemingly unrelated - films. Within it are traces of FISH TANK, DISTRICT 9, GOONIES, and CHILDREN OF GOD. If that sounds like high praise...well...it is. The film brings together elements from all of those films (and more) and infuses them into a wickedly energetic narrative. The engine driving that narrative is clearly the gang of kids, who come across as true thugs when they first show up, but all show their true colours of immaturity before the night is out.

On the other side of the court from the kids stand the aliens. In the trailers I've seen for this film, I'm happy to see that the design of the aliens aren't fully revealed. I won't dare give more info here, except to say that the creature design is quite original and exciting. You never get used to seeing them attack, and the way they move might well make you forget you're sitting in a theatre seat and give you the impulse to get up and run.

But what use is it bringing together memorable players if you aren't going to make use of the stage they play on? To that end, director Joe Cornish makes great use of the apartment building much of the story take place in and around ("The Block" referred to in the title). One would think that using a filing cabinet of a community that the action would take on a claustrophobic feeling. Not so! The story never lets our heroes sit too long in one spot, and leaves us believing that no door can be bolted shut securely enough to keep the menace at bay.

Because of that, Sam and the boys never seem to stop running through the corridors, stairwells, and walkways. Bedrooms are traps...corridors are gauntlets...elevators are tombs. The characters are all filled with dread not just from the creatures, but by the way the creatures are turning their home - a place that should seem like sanctuary - into a slaughterhouse floor.

As intense as I have made this out to be, it's not something that the faint of heart need to avoid. Quite the contrary, the script is filled with cheeky humour provided by the boys in the gang. Sometimes it's as simple as letting their childish colours show, other times it comes courtesy of summing up the bedlam in the most poetic ways.

is part of my excitement over ATTACK THE BLOCK due to the experience of going in blind? Probably. It's a mindset I don't often find myself in outside of a film festival, and after the amount of joy it brought me, I almost wish i could find myself in this mindset more often. Whether you go in blind, or read every morsel of info you can find on the project, I venture that most audiences will have a fun time with this film...and find themselves wondering on when's the time to flee, and when's the time to fight?

What did you think? Please leave comments with your thoughts and reactions to ATTACK THE BLOCK.

4 comments:

Univarn said...

I'm worried about this one. The praise I've heard has been consistently good for so long, I hold reserved fears that when I actually watch it, I will be left wanting. Which I hope isn't so, but has happened more often than I dare count.

fatpie42 said...

I had some misgivings about it when I reviewed it. (Link to my blog if you click on my username.) However, overall it is really good.

Not sure why you think it's high praise to compare it to Fish Tank. This is an exciting movie, not a cure for insomnia.

Patrick Gamble said...

Re Fish Tank; can't really see the link but perhaps that's because the little nuances are more noticable to me living in London. Certainly don't agree with it being a cure for insomnia though!

Great review all the same, I agree with the score, I think the films main problem was how it was marketted - selling it like a version of 'Shaun of the Dead' but with Aliens, when it's far more of a serious Sci-Fi film than the trailer makes it out to be (as well as an interesting social commentary, without being to symbolic)

enjoy the blog btw,

www.neonklaws.blogspot.com

The Mad Hatter said...

@ Univarn... Don't be mislead, this film isn't a game-changer, but it is a lot of fun. Take your seat and expect to be entertained, you won't be disappointed.

@ Fatpie... Heh, not a fan of FISH TANK, eh? It wasn't that one comparison that I felt was high praise, it was the four films together. I'll definitely check out your post to dive into these misgivings of yours.

@ Patrick... It's just the setting that made me think of FISH TANK (and HARRY BROWN). i'm sure there are many more Brit films set in those sorts of neighbourhoods, but that was the first one that came to mind.

PS, my score is out of four so I'm actually rating it a B+ / A-