Although “Pacific Rim” is derivative (of other monster
movies like Godzilla), it’s also an
imaginative sci-fi epic with first-class special effects, crafty behemoths that
calculate and react to circumstances in non-dumb ways, a smart director who
injects a sense of fun and surprise whenever he can, characters you don’t mind
watching and a few decent plot twists. However, about 75% of the movie takes
place at night or deep under the ocean, where light is at a premium. 3D by its
nature diminishes the amount of light that reaches the viewer’s eyes and this
becomes an issue. There are many times when it’s difficult to see what’s
happening in 3D. Also the comic relief featuring Charlie Day and Burn Gorman as
rival scientists is distracting and played too over the top although their
presence is integral to the narrative.
The movie opens with a prologue, explaining that the first
Kaiju, an enormous amphibious dragon, rose from beneath the seas,
Godzilla-style, to decimate San Francisco. Mankind’s answer to continued
attacks has been to build 25-story-high Jaegers, fighting metal robots
controlled by two pilots, whose minds are synced together, positioned inside
them. The initial Kaiju/Jaeger showdown, along the Alaska coast during a nocturnal
hurricane, has hotshot pilot Raleigh Beckett (Charlie Hunnam) and his older
brother Yancy (Diego Klattehoff) fighting an aggressive Kaiju. They defeat the
beast, but Yancy is killed. The movie picks up a few years later when the
Jaeger program is being dropped in favor of building giant walls to protect
seaside cities. Jaeger force commander Stacker Pentecost (Idris Elba) searches
for a disillusioned Raleigh, who has dropped out of sight, to pilot one of his
few remaining Jaegers in a plan to close the bridge in the ocean that’s
allowing the Kaiju to enter our world. Under the sure hand of del Toro, all of
the crash-bang action scenes move the narrative forward, rather than being
space fillers. Everything is coherent. For someone who watched all of those
cheesy black and white monster movies, “Pacific Rim” is a hoot! 7/14/13
1 comment:
Better than average "save the world" sci-fi. A Transformers upgrade, this film is well made and well animated, with the added twist of internal operators that battles the giants from the oceans bottom. This film will grace the cable channels for years to come.
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