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Super 8 (2011): The Gang’s All Here

Super8
Zombos Says: Very Good (but will seem very familiar)

The gang’s all here in J. J. Abrams’ Super 8. You’ll recognize them from The Goonies, The Monster Squad, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial: there’s the fat kid waiting for his lean years; the geeky kid with needed gadgets (explosive ones this time); the love-struck kid dealing with loss; the cute, hip girl everyone likes more than she likes herself; and parents who stay in the background much of the time because this is not their story. What’s different is the monsterkid nostalgia you’ll experience if you’ve ever held an 8mm camera to film backyard horror movies, or dry-brushed Aurora model kits with Testors paints, or just wore dark paisley shirts with big collars, sported mutton chops, and listened to music cassette tapes while cruising.

Charles (Riley Griffiths) is the fat kid who’s directing a zombie movie everyone’s got a part in. He’s secretly got a crush on the cute girl, Alice (Elle Fanning), so arranges for her to drive them to the train station late at night for a shoot. The Dick Smith’s Do-It-Yourself Monster Make-Up Handbook geeky kid, Joe (Joel Courtney), unknowingly mucks it up by falling for Alice, but he does fantastic zombie make-up so Charles can’t lose him. Watch the gang’s finished ‘movie’ during the end credits and you’ll see the same Dick Smithish zombie kid stumbling in different scenes, although he’s killed each time. Getting to the end credits is a Spielbergian adventure seen through Abrams’ eyes and the avocado greens and harvest golds of 1970s melange.

A mysterious late night train surprises the kids during taping, and when it’s driven off the rails, it surprises us. An almost endless shooting gallery of heavy train cars, twisting metal, flaming explosions, and mad dashes through it all flying through the air, thunking down too close, becomes absurd, outrageous, and awesome. The incendiary-prone geeky kid (Ryan Lee) eats it all up with relish. What comes out of one of the train cars is a multi-legged nightmare for the small town and a Hardy Boys mystery for the kids to solve. The adults get in the way without realizing it, but youthful resourcefulness pays off when the military takes over the investigation of the train derailment, and the hunt for the missing living cargo. Of course there’s the essential antagonistic-and-sadistic-career-military-guy-who’s-sinister-agenda-only-makes-things-worse running the investigation (Noah Emmerich).

Charles, taking a page from the Roger Corman school of filming, unperturbed, takes advantage of the army’s investigation and train derailment by including them in his taping. His investigator (Gabriel Basso) conducts an investigation while the military conducts theirs in the backgrounds of his scenes.

The often hopped-up, long-haired, electronics store shlub Charles gives his 8mm film to have developed provides necessary ground transportation in exchange for a date with Charles’ hot sister as the hunt picks up speed for the monster, the really pissed-off something kidnapping townspeople, wrecking property, and driving all the dogs away. It’s unhappy and angry from being locked up for years. Coincidentally, Joe is unhappy and angry because his mom was killed at the steel mill and his dad ignores him. And Joe’s dad is unhappy and angry at Alice’s dad, who was supposed to be working that shift where she died instead. And Alice is unhappy and angry with her dad because he can’t get over his guilt, either, or the loss of her mom. Her dad’s a long haired shlub, too, but he has his moments of redemption. And redemption comes for everyone when it’s needed the most.

Super 8 isn’t a coming of age movie. It’s not really meant to be a nostalgic mind trip, either, though some of us will be reminded of nostalgic things and yearn for them again. It’s even not a Spielberg adventure, but the camera movements and your emotions will remind you of what those adventures were like, except Super 8‘s more up to date in its nostalgic hipness.

It knows what we miss and gives it back for a little while.

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