Event Horizon (7/10)
Much to my surprise, Event Horizon turned out to be a good movie. Not a great movie by any means, and it's got nothing on Alien (which serves as a clear inspiration), but as its own sci-fi horror thing? Yeah, it's a good romp.
I'm not going to give you a plot summary, since Wikipedia is a thing and this film is over 20yrs old at this point, but rather, just a collection of thoughts.
-The intro states that we colonized the moon in the 2010s? Um...
-We get one shot of the Earth in the film, and is it just me, or does it look kind of...barren?
-Fun fact, Dr. Weir's shoulder patch is an amalgam of the Australian flag with the Aboriginal flag replacing the Union Jack. Fun fact, this is a mite controversial among some indigenous people in Oz, though that's the Internet for you.
-Similarly, did the US flag get a bunch more stars? And is that an EU flag on someone's shoulder with a hell of a lot more stars?
-The group works for the USAC (United States Aerospace Command). I...wait a minute...USAC...UAC...oh my God, this IS a Doom prequel!
-General comment, but this film is pretty well paced. There's a few exceptions, but most of the time, it never feels that the film lags, nor does it feel that it's rushed.
-So, why does Weir need to use such basic terminology to explain how the Event Horizon's drive folds space? I get that it's for the audience's benefit, but these are all veteran space operators, they should probably understand a fair bit about quantum mechanics.
-So a fair bit has been made about the design of the Event Horizon itself, how it's in the shape of a crucifix, and its interior resembles that of a church, at least in some cases. I think this is fair, but it got me thinking. I doubt that in-universe the EV was conciously designed like that, but its interior is...weird, in a number of cases. Makes me wonder though, is this how the EV is actually designed, or was its interior altered by its foray into Hell? That what the crew is seeing now isn't how the EV originally looked? There's nothing that really suggests this is the case, but I dunno, I think that would explain things better than the alternate explanation of engineers saying "why yes, we DID design the most advanced spaceship ever to resemble Gothic architecture, why do you ask?"
-Speaking more on the ship, and in general, I know that a big deal is made of how the ship visited Hell, and that therefore this movie is a Doom/W40K prequel, but frankly, this is really underselling it. I'll deal more with the Hell aspect later, but the horror here is quite constrained. I like the idea of the EV being a 'living ship,' how the ship itself causes bio-readings, and the hallucinations the crew experiences is likened to an immune system dealing with pathogens. Similarly, there's an air of plausible deniability with said hallucinations. This is established through the buildup of CO2, but even that aside, it's left vague as to whether a lot of these apparitions are literal creations, or hallucinations. For isntance, Weir gets sucked into space, but appears later for the final showdown, saying (paraphrased) "the ship won't let me leave." However, it got me asking, did the ship literally bring Weir back, or is this just a hallucination that Miller has to deal with?
-Towards the end, there are a few gaffs though. The scene where Cooper uses his oxygen to get back to the ship is so tonally discordant, I had to blink, especially considering how the movie earlier handled decompression. Similarly, how quickly must Weir have worked to crucify Jason Isaacs's character? Apparently he carved his flesh and strung him up in med-bay within just a few minutes. That, or Miller is a really slow runner.
-Dealing with Hell...this is a weird case of the movie being quite subtle, yet also, arguably, too subtle. As in, this is still a pschological horror piece. There's no demons, no zombies, nothing that actually comes out of Doom, for instance. For the majority of the film, Hell is simply talked about, and pretty much established to be beyond human understanding. Yet we see a few glimpses of Hell through Miller's eyes, and it's...um...the crew being tortured? Inside the ship, seemingly? I...what? I feel the film would have been better if we never saw Hell at all, or alternatively, if we did, go full bore with it. Show a place that really is a nightmarish reality where nothing makes sense.
-The ending is weird. It has a fakeout of the lifepod being activated, and Weir seemingly having a presence still, but then gives us the real ending with the crew being rescued. This honestly feels like a cop-out to me. I've seen it suggested that the fakeout is meant to explain that the lifepod of the EV is 'infected,' that while the crew is genuinely saved, the lifepod has brought Hell's influence with it. Still, I think that more likely, it just didn't want a downer ending.
So, yeah. Like I said, a good film.