Day the Earth Stood Still
Keanu Reeves Actor , Jennifer Connelly Actor , Jon Hamm Actor , Kathy Bates Actor , Jaden Smith Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Sci-Fi Violence
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Day the Earth Stood Still
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 12 12 (USA - IMAX) / 2008 12 12 (USA)
UPC: 024543569688
Studio: 20th Century Fox
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Sci-Fi Violence]
Summary: Keanu Reeves tops this adaptation of the seminal 1951 sci-fi film The Day the Earth Stood Still with this 20th Century Fox production. Scott Derrickson (The Exorcism of Emily Rose) helms the story of an alien traveler, Klaatu (Reeves), who heads to Earth along with his bodyguard robot, Gort, to deliver a warning of planetary destruction if the people of the world fail to stop laying waste to the environment. Jennifer Connelly, Jon Hamm, and Kathy Bates co-star in the David Scarpa-penned film. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi
Category: Science Fiction
Features:
cc
Day the Earth Stood Still
Format: DVD
Release Date: 04/07/2009
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Cinemascope
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DDS Dolby Digital Surround
Runtime: 104 Minutes
Sides: 2
Number of Discs: 2
Language(s) English,French,Spanish
Subtitles: English,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- The Day the Earth Stood Still: 2008 Version
1. 1928 (Main Titles) [5:23]
2. In Federal Custody [6:27]
3. Impact Location [3:53]
4. The Object Lands [5:37]
5. Shot Down [2:45]
6. Nothing to Fear [4:29]
7. Property of the U.S. Government [2:55]
8. Taking Time to Adapt [2:45]
9. Run! [3:29]
10. You Should Let Me Go [3:49]
11. Observing Human Behavior [2:46]
12. A Huge Risk [3:05]
13. Any Other Ideas? [1:32]
14. To Save the Earth [2:14]
15. An Unreasonable Race [3:17]
16. All Over the World [4:46]
17. The Spheres Ascend [1:39]
18. It's an Ark [5:38]
19. Not So Different [4:06]
20. On the Brink of Destruction [2:15]
21. In Control [4:34]
22. Eaten Alive! [4:12]
23. Let Me Try [2:18]
24. Everything Is Transformed [3:11]
25. Just Give Us a Chance [:02]
26. At the Precipice [2:12]
27. The Earth Stands Still [5:06]
28. End Titles [3:47]
Disc #2 -- The Day the Earth Stood Still: 1951 Version
1. Main Titles [2:00]
2. Something Real [3:24]
3. They've Landed [2:31]
4. Peace and Good Will [4:36]
5. The Future of the Planet [2:19]
6. Impatient With Stupidity [2:56]
7. Mr. Carpenter [3:41]
8. In Grave Danger [4:04]
9. Sightseeing [3:32]
10. A Real Screwball [1:52]
11. Calling Card [1:20]
12. A Fun Day [2:30]
13. There Is No Alternative [3:00]
14. Jittery [2:49]
15. Learning the Truth [5:06]
16. Waiting Up [6:13]
17. What a Brilliant Idea [4:46]
18. Dead or Alive [1:12]
19. Turning a Deaf Ear [1:38]
20. Remember Those Words [5:29]
21. A Message for Gort [3:03]
22. Unimaginable Power [4:28]
23. Resurrected [:27]
24. A Simple Choice [3:57]
Cammila Collar
The Day the Earth Stood Still is pretty good as science fiction thrillers go, but sadly, there isn't much more to say about it. A remake of the 1951 classic, this film tries to increase the freaky factor with modern-day special effects and to update the original movie's message about nuclear war with a vague moral about humankind's general mismanagement of the planet. This actually sounds like a fairly solid premise, but it doesn't always work -- even if you don't think about the massive shoes it's trying to fill. The story begins with Helen Benson (Jennifer Connelly), a young widow who was left to care for her eight-year-old stepson, Jacob (Jaden Smith), when her husband died the previous year. She spends her days in a university lab working as a research scientist in astrobiology, so naturally when a big alien orb shows up in Manhattan, she's called in by the U.S. government to offer expertise on its inhabitant -- an alien representative named Klaatu who, in order to survive Earth's atmosphere, must manifest himself in the form of Keanu Reeves. Of course, the government, led by Secretary of Defense Regina Jackson (Kathy Bates), reacts hostilely to Klaatu's arrival, thus failing the test he was sent here to administer: to decide whether humans can continue to be trusted with planet Earth. With Dr. Benson's help, Klaatu is able to get the upper hand with his Secret Service captors and use his alien powers of electricity to escape. He takes off with Benson and young Jacob, who's very surly and unresolved over his dad's death. They learn what Klaatu was sent to Earth for, but of course, they also demonstrate the love-in-the-face-of-turmoil that might convince him to spare humanity -- despite its epic squandering of a planet that can support complex life (a rarity in the universe at large). All three of the main actors turn in solid performances, even little Smith (the spawn of Will and Jada Pinkett Smith), who plays Jacob. And in a very cool and unexpected choice by the filmmakers, the role is devoid of any and all quippy racial stereotyping; the fact that Helen's stepson is black is never even mentioned in the script. It also has to be said that Keanu Reeves was kind of born for this role. It sounds a little pejorative to say that his biggest talent is playing someone kind of non-human, and a little dead-behind-the-eyes, but not everybody can do it, and he does it better than everybody. Unfortunately, that whole first act -- when there are mysterious vessels landing and giant expressionless robots emerging and people completely freaking out -- should feel pretty scary and ominous, but it really doesn't. It's not boring either, but if Cloverfield can conjure up an eerie sense of foreboding, apocalyptic danger, you'd think that this movie could, too. Instead, it just feels vaguely weird. Things pick up quite a bit when the action starts, and events build toward the awesomely strange method by which the aliens were planning on wiping humanity and its structures off the Earth. But even then, it can sometimes feel a little chintzy, and the idea that we're supposed to be imbibing an important message from the story feels watered down -- because if the filmmakers were hoping to draw a parallel between 1951's threat of nuclear war and 2008's threat of global warming, they don't take a very direct route in doing so. Like everything else in the movie, this idea still comes across, just not as sharply as we'd like it to. ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Erwin Stoff
Producer
Gregory Goodman
Producer
Tyler Bates
Composer (Music Score)
Paul Harris Boardman
Producer
Scott Derrickson
Director
David Scarpa
Screenwriter
Keanu Reeves
Actor
Jennifer Connelly
Actor
Jon Hamm
Actor
Kathy Bates
Actor
Jaden Smith
Actor
John Cleese
Actor
Kyle Chandler
Actor
Robert Knepper
Actor
James Hong
Actor
John Rothman
Actor
Sunita Prasad
Actor
Juan Riedinger
Actor
Sam Gilroy
Actor
Tanya Champoux
Actor
Rukiya Bernard
Actor
Alisen Down
Actor
Lloyd Adams
Actor
Mousa Kraish
Actor
J.C. MacKenzie
Actor
Kurt Max Runte
Actor
Daniel Bacon
Actor
Brandon T. Jackson
Actor
David Lewis
Actor
Country: USA
