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About Casey Criswell

Location: Noblesville, IN

Occupation: Professional Nerd.

Bio: Falling in love with bad horror films at a very young age, Casey Criswell strives to bring back the classics in today's modern age of horror remakes. Armed with nothing but a DVD player and keyboard, he charges into battle with his mighty battle cry of "I watch crap, so you don't have to!" Casey runs his film blog, dedicated to reliving the finest in horror, science fiction, and the obscure at Cinema Fromage as well as BloodyGoodHorror.com.

Posts: 6

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The Planet

DVD: 0 comments: 05/21/2008

By Casey Criswell

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Indie sci-fi that almost gets it right but falls short

A group of futuristic space mercenaries take on a risky mission transporting a dangerous convict through deep space.  In transit they are attacked by a mysterious group of ships and forced to evacuate.  They crash land on “the Planet” and the soldiers set in to survival mode in hopes that somebody will come looking for them.  In the meantime Mr. Convict is loose and soon, our mercs learn that there is more going on than meets the eye in the sandy hills surrounding their camp.

The video stores are rife with independent horror flicks these days but indie sci-fi is a far rarer commodity; so you can imagine that my curiosity was piqued when The Planet crossed my desk.  I had hopes of an epic story packed with high tech whiz bangs and lots of laser blasts.  In the end I got hints towards most of my hopes and a lot of muddled confusion on top of that.

I don’t knock a movie for their low budget.  There’s a certain mystique behind the low budget feature that’s shot on a handy cam and the hard work put in by eager filmmakers.  They’re showing their love of the genre, the art form, and to put something together that’s feature length and packed with CGI graphics, well they’ve got heart.  I’ll give them that. 

The problem comes though when there is so much CGI threaded throughout the movie, some of it so bad that it’s distracting and takes away from the end product. The Planet makes heavy use of CGI; 3D space maps, high flying space fighters, and flames.  The majority appear to come straight out of a mid 2000’s PC game, but over all they were handled well and added to the atmosphere. (Except for the flames, they were bizarre!) Some of the imagery was down right nice, including numerous external shots of the planet that drive home just how isolated these guys are.  Which is all well and good except for the fact that this movie is only 1 hour and 9 minutes long…and the external planet shots make up at least a third of the movie; I understand the need for filler, but come on guys. 

With the CGI coming across a tad distracting and a bit hokey, we then turn to the story itself to help keep the movie interesting, and in that The Planet fails.  With a high potential for a good old fashioned epic space adventure, the movie disappoints as we get the story in short disjointed bursts. 

It’s apparent what they were aiming for; they wanted the character driven dialog to convey the story, the back story, and the over all plot.  Commendable surely, but when there is no cohesive flow to the plot it becomes a jumbled mess.  It doesn’t help that the cast is mostly a bunch of new actors who lack the skill to convey any sense of excitement, fear, or emotion.  When the camp was first attacked by invisible baddies immune to their laser guns, the majority of the mercenaries looked rather bored aside from the mulleted Scotsman who swore a lot. The only truly memorable role in the movie was that of the captain played by Mike Mitchell, and he was only memorable as he ran around sleeveless the entire time to show off his huge muscles while toting about the biggest gun.  (That did no more damage than the rest of the guns.)

What could have made for a fun little action sci-fi romp unfortunately falls short.  In fact, by the time the big finale came about, I had no clue what the hell was happing. All I knew was that some how we made a turn from a ‘planet that was a doorway to a new universe’ to ‘a big ass monster’ in a matter of seconds.  And I really don’t know how, or why. 

The Planet gets kudos for the effort to put together such a grand vision, but ultimately this one isn’t interesting or vaguely entertaining which is sad because they kept me there for at least half the flick.  I just wish they would have followed it through until the end.

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