- Actors: Temuera Morrison, Bruce Spence, Jacqueline McKenzie
- Disc Format: NTSC, Widescreen
- Language: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: R
- Studio: Lions Gate
- Release Date: September 25, 2018
For those who haven’t
had their fill of Hollywood blockbusters and don’t want to wait until next
summer for more mindless entertainment, the Australian film industry has begun
to follow suit. Although they are not the only national cinema to imitate
America’s money-based industry of spectacle, the shared language makes the
Australian film industry and natural one for easy import. While most foreign
films are thought to bring American audiences respite from the typical
special-effects-driven narratives, Occupation
embraces them.
Calling Occupation derivative would be an understatement,
but also seems to be a label that the film does not avoid. Nothing about the
narrative is attempting to revise the tired alien invasion film (even the character
design for the bug-eyed aliens feels comically cliché), with far more time spent
on special effects than the screenplay. This is most apparent in the character
development, or lack thereof. Despite an ensemble cast of characters, all
banded together in the seclusion of their small town when the widespread
attacks begin, their interactions are a weird blend of cheap melodrama and
forcefully buoyant humor. There are relationships within the film, between
family members and romantic partners, but they all feel like perfunctory filler
between the scenes of sci-fi action.
If you enjoyed Independence Day and War of the Worlds, but longed for the
characters to be even more wooden and a narrative with more limited scope, Occupation is the film for you. It was
successful enough to warrant the production of a sequel, but I can’t imagine any
of the human characters are reason to continue the narrative. I imagine the
focus of the sequel will be to improve on the focus of the original, which is clearly
the special effects above all else.
The Blu-ray
release of this Australian alien invasion film comes with a digital copy of the
film, which is the closest thing the package has to special features.
Considering all of the background actors were unpaid volunteers, it would seem
that the production had to get creative in order to achieve its vision. This is
the kind of stuff that makes for great making-of featurettes, which are unfortunately
absent from this release.
Entertainment Value:
5.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 4.5/10
Historical
Significance: 3/10
Special Features: 2/10
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