Cloverfield
Starring:
Michael Stahl-David, Odette Yustman, Lizzy Caplan
Directed by: Matt Reeves (“The Pallbearer”)
Written by: Drew Goddard (debut)
By Kiko Martinez
In an age where idiotic creature features like “Primeval” and
“Skinwalkers” are getting greenlit for production, you have to
be a bit surprised when someone actually gets it right. Sure,
the new monster flick “Cloverfield” is a bit gimmicky with its
delivery, but make no doubts about it, it’s an entertaining
addition to the genre.
Set in New York City
(like a number of monster movies of the past), “Cloverfield”
opens with a group of young adults throwing a going-away party
for their friend Rob Hawkins (Stahl-David), who has accepted a
job in Japan and will be leaving the next day.
The get-together
gets a bit dramatic when Rob’s best friend Beth (Yustman), who
he recently realized he has fallen in love with, brings a date
with her to bid him adieu. Words are said that can’t be taken
back and before you know it, Beth and her new man leave the
party in a haste.
All the while, Rob’s
friend Hud (T.J. Miller), has been capturing all the action on a
camcorder (possibly for a YouTube upload after the party is
over?). Despite the early fireworks, Hud and everyone else in
the Manhattan area hasn’t seen the big show of the night just
yet.
Minutes later, the
partygoers are startled when the apartment they are in begins to
shake. They head for the roof of the building to get a better
look when the local news reports an oil tanker has capsized near
the Statue of Liberty. “Do you think it’s another terrorist
attack?” a scared individual says as they climb the stairs to
see the destruction.
As they peer across
the city – and as Hud continues to videotape – a building in the
center of N.Y. explodes. Everyone runs back downstairs and
scatters into the streets. When the head of the Statue of
Liberty is thrown into the fracas, things take a turn for the
worst.
An enormous
Godzilla-like monster has found its way into the city and is
destroying everything in its path. Rob and a small group of
friends find their way out of the neighborhood as fires blaze
and buildings crumble.
Instead of following
the military’s orders to evacuate the Manhattan area, Rob is
persistent about finding Beth. Although they have nothing
invested in his love-struck and heroic plan, the rest of the
group decides to follow him and hope for the best as they weave
through the middle of the war zone.
Taking a voyeuristic
angle to the film (Hud’s camera work tells the whole story),
screenwriter Drew Goddard (TV’s “Lost”) keep the story intense
and fast-paced for the quick 90-minute runtime. Although there
is not much of a human element or emotional stronghold in the
entire thing, the film delivers on what it has promised from its
marketing campaign. We’ve seen it before when the White House is
annihilated in “Independence Day” or when the Statue of Liberty
is buried in snow in “The Day After Tomorrow,” but “Cloverfield”
has enough of a distinctive purpose for the genre to make it
something fun and terrifying to witness from the outside in.
Grade: B