War of The Worlds (2005) Retrospective / Review New War of the Worlds artwork by Jack Davies / jackdaviesart / oliverharper www.olivers-ret... / ollieh82 / oliversretroreviews / oliverharper1982 Join the discord! / discord
It's a shame Spielberg didn't cast Tim Robbins (or a similar actor) as the protagonist. I like Tom Cruise in his action roles and he was "ok" in this, but I think the movie just needed more than that. And the kids... Well, don't think I even have to go into that, they were pretty awful.
This movie is underrated in my opinion. The first two acts feel like a straight up horror movie. The hopelessness the characters feel is incredibly palpable, and the tripods are terrifying. The third act kinda crumbled under its own weight, but I still love it.
@@GabiteEditz Yeah, it had SOME good parts (the alien colonoscopy camera checking for human polyps, seeing the true face of the enemy) but God, all I could think was "Why did you jump into that guys basement?"
@@allenharper2928 My main belief on the aliens exploring the basement was pretty much for the sake of exploration. Their whole point of invasion was to basically colonize earth.
Just watched this movie again for the umpteenth time on one of the HBOs. The "emergence" scene and the attack at the ferry are still gripping 14 years later.
@@nikolaszuraff1234 the horns they sound to signal each other from their slow and methodical genocide reaping everything in their path. still haunting. they did a great job
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My favorite scene was the dock scene, when everybody thinks they’re gonna be ok, they here a tree collapse and then there’s a tripod on top of the hill just staring down thousands of people. One of the most epic sci-fi scenes of all time.
I really dug this movie. It’s kinda gives me the same feeling the first act of Independence Day did. Sure the family is annoying as shit in this situation, but yours would be too.
Look I don’t have a problem with the family...I know everyone would act like this...but you have to admit they don’t have to have the child screaming all the time like would if not give you a bloody head ache?
@@V1nce_man Before or after I have a heart attack from the freaky tension, atmosphere, and visuals? In my opinion, it works better being more realistic. This would be terrifying to experience as an adult, and I can't imagine a child not screaming so much in the midst of this situation. Kids don't necessarily think as rationally about what's the best thing to do in the situation. There is a crazy killer robot thing coming out there to KILL you.
TayoEXE And I get that! But... it’s just that blood curdling scream! It really hurts to listen to and I know that’s a bit weak on my part but don’t say you’d listen to it all the time... I love this movie so much I’ve watched it at least 20 times! And yet that scream still scares and makes me so annoyed
I think he means that the soundtrack doesn't really stand without being heard in the movie. Take for example when someone uses a John Williams score in parody. You will likely get something more like Jaws or Star Wars. The soundtrack does its job very well in the movie but you don't really go home humming the tune. In my opinion however this gives it its own strength given that War of the Worlds isn't a grand spectacle like Jaws or Star Wars. It's a dark story of people running just to stay alive in what seems like the end of the world.
My dad was unaffected by these movies and basically made the family sit down to watch it and I kept getting nightmares about those arms. My 5 tear old brain was very imaginative.
weldonwin In the book the martians went "aloo" as they burned towns and people. When they were dying from the dogs and crows eating them they said "ulaa". This was because the martians had a very basic anatomy as stated in the book and likely no vocal chords.
This movie scared the shit out of me when I was a kid, I remember watching this and breathing heavy when the tripods started vaporizing people and every time that horn came on
This movie has a special place in my heart. It may not be perfect, but it always manages to deliver and make me fell the terror and powerlessness of the protagonists like no other movie does.
Why the hell would people want to mass slaughter a tiny child for being annoying? Shes just in fear, whats next? Torturing her causing more screams while tom cruise gets beaten up by guards? Freaking- Argument Starter: *_oH YoU IdiOt sHeS ANnOyIng scReAMs_* Seriously, what is wrong with the internet.
Bananappleboy World you missed out the fact that if this was irl and I’m trying to survive but this dumbass kid keeps screaming , you ar gonna be annoyed as fuck
After watching this movie in theaters, I got in the car and looked at the sky. “I will never look at the sky the same way again”. And I never did. Every time I see clouds forming I get petrified. Iconic classic.
I love how the film gives you a sense of hopelessness as in most alien films the humans always have a good fighting chance and manage to beat them but here they have no weapons that can beat them and have no escape from them
That would be in the movie. In the novel the british army brought a few tripods down with field guns and naval artillery. One of the reasons why they shoehorned shields.
@@rapatacush3 It was supposed to be an unwinnable battle in the novel too. Humanity would have gone extinct, or been relegated to being basically cattle had the Martians not been killed by a virus. One of the themes of the novels is british colonialism, and how a "conflict" like that would feel from the perspective of the victims. They attack the London area, because at the time the novel was written, that was basically the center of the "civilized" world. "Hey what if the worlds biggest empire got its shit kicked on by something that makes THEM look like ants." This is also why the movies change the setting to America (we're now the biggest superpower), and why the technology in the films dwarfs that of the novel. With modern technology the Martians from the novel would've been less threatening, and it would've made that aspect of the story weaker, and the horror less intense. It's not a bad thing the Martians are OP. They were always supposed to be.
@@anarchistjesus7354 funny thing there is a history were a few cylinders fell in texas and they were quickly deal with by an angry posse of cowboys. How? They never let them to build more than a tripod.
@@rapatacush3 That's from the novel, or sequel, right? That's true, but the obvious response to that from the aliens is going to be to land further from people, and not let themselves be seen until they're already in the tripod.
It’s not a river of blood. It is the Red Weed, essentially terraforming the earth. (Mars-forming?). The weed, in the novel, is the source of Mar’s red color
@rob slack: Having not yet read the source-material novel by Wells, would that "red weed" be in the water, though? ??? Anyway, the Martians would "water" their plants with lots and lots of Terran blood, no...?
@paper back writer: You read the book? Hmm, did H.G. Wells' novel spell fertilizer as "fertilizar lol"? ??? Nevermind that, assholes! I'm not asking anymore! I'll read the damned book myself, and then I won't tell any of you weirdos a damned thing about it thereafter, so BLEAH! I win, so take that! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-uRMpwNiiyLk.html LOLOLOLOLOLOL BWAAHAHAHAHAHA!
@@HuntersMoon78 the little girl is horribly annoying, the boy is a stupid asshole. Sure it makes the film more interesting in my opinion, a weird family with weird relationships and very contrasting personalities
The emergence scene still gets me, honestly. The ferry scene, the burning train. This terrified me as a kid, and even now as a mother the sheer hopelessness gets to me. I genuinely think it is vastly under-rated, especially because of the terrible more recent adaptations of WOTW. The rock opera is still the best, I think.
Minor correction. The red landscape isn't literally a "river of blood" (at least not for the most part) but rather the results of a kind of terraforming where the aliens are planting down a carpet of red weed. This detail is from the book. The movie does seem to show the tripods spraying harvested human blood on it as a fertilizer, however, so you're kinda right. I actually think it makes a bit of sense if the red plant life is unlike Earth's green plants which take in CO2, but rather breathe in O2 almost like animal life--what better to spray on them than human blood rich in oxygen? But anyway, I think the color comes from the weeds themselves, not blood or gore (though the visual similarity is powerful and creepy in its own way). Thanks for the review! I've always appreciated this movie a lot, despite its final moments which undermine it somewhat.
Spielberg mentioned something around those lines, that he wanted the terraforming aspect from the book to be featured in the movie. There was also a fluff documentary released for the movie called "watch the skies!" or something around those lines that was a backdoor promotion for WOTW disguised as a serious documentary about the history of Sci-Fi, I seem to remember he mentions it there?. It wasnt too bad, it featured Ridley Scott, George Lucas and James Cameron. I cant blame Ollie though, this is a very uneven movie.
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds from 1978 still remains my favourite adaptation of the story, I'll never forget listening to it for the first time back in primary school and hearing the late Richard Burton's voice was so haunting.
I always thought that the aliens were waiting for a specific number of the Earth’s population to reach, before coming to harvest our organic matter. Much like raising cattle or chickens, waiting for the right amount of production before they can gather whatever it is they need.
the Tripods were done nearly perfect for what they were supposed to be. their movements were believable and they did a fantastic job at showing the sheer scale of the machines.
I really like this 2005 version of "The War of The Worlds." I first saw this in 2010 and it was very dark and scary but I kept on watching it to the end and I really loved watching it. I'm now 21 years old now. It was the very first "War of The Worlds" film I've watched as a young kid. I also liked the 1935 "War of The Worlds" movie as well. The 2005 Tripods are amazing and also terrifying at the same time.
They're not blood actually. They're red weeds that martians needed to colonize or sustain their own beings. Tripods just use bloods as fertilizer for these weeds.
Who is Rake quoting, that isnt even what he said in the commentary? He said, " purchased a Boeing 747 and cut it up for the scene " (see 10:45 ) I think Rake meant ship not shipped, probably not a native English speaker. Dont try to make sense of what Rake said - imho there is none to find
One of my favourite Alien invasion films. It's dark and gloomy, and the tripods are so creepy! I love the boat scene. The eerie horn sound in the distance announcing the arrival of the aliens, and then they slowly rise over the hill. It's the stuff of nightmares! Yes it somewhat struggles in the third act, I think the Tim Robbins stuff should've been cut down in favour of more scenes in the eerie red world left behind by the aliens. As it is, the film lacks a big scene at the end. Ray defeats the tripod to save his daughter a little bit too easily. And I fully agree that his son should've been dead, my god was he selfish and annoying. I guess he takes after his father ;) I didn't know about the upcoming BBC adaptation, that's got my interest!
In the 1950s version the female lead did nothing all movie except wail and scream. That was far more annoying. Think the male lead even slapped her because she was hysterical. Imagine trying that in a modern movie or casting a woman as weak willed. The script would never see the light of day 🙂
It is so weird how often an old top comment will have another new comment under it saying the same thing but in a different way. Weird because it some how still gets voted up. That's literally the first comment you see. Not subtle just blatant I'm going to post the exact same comment that has the most views 😵
@@bilwisss He looks like my buddy who went to college with me 43 years ago. This guy is a concealed carry instructor and safari hunter. Aliens be scared of him.
The tripods were so perfect imo, Wells himself said he didn’t want them to be so stiff and robotic & they nailed it, the tripods move so organically they’re fuckin terrifying. If they wouldn’t just ditched everything else and followed the source material this could’ve been the movie that finally got the book right
In my opinion Spielberg's most underrated movie, and his last great blockbuster. Really captures the feel of the novel whilst updating it satisfyingly. Also, the visuals are genuinely striking and evocative of classic sci-fi like Invaders From Mars.
My god, you're so right on this being his last great blockbuster, sadly. Indiana Jones in 2008 was such a dull waste of time and ever since then, he's practically just been making movies to appease the Academy in Hollywood it seems. Ready Player One felt more like a Robert Zemeckis or JJ Abrams movie, I keep forgetting it's Spielberg's.
@@theminisimmer agreed and set in the wrong time period. Still waiting for a faithful adaptation. I think Spielberg's artistic license went way to far...too much family drama. I'll stick with Jeff Wayne's musical version.
@@ZERARCHIVE2023 Imagine if it went country through country like a mock-documentary Russia, UK, Germany, Japan, Iran, Australia, and more would all be really interesting
@@pugasaurusrex8253 There actually was something like that on RU-vid years ago. It was fan made and was based off the 2005 version of the film and the animation was semi-decent, but it was neat. I’m pretty sure it took place in Eastern Europe. Idk if it’s still on RU-vid anymore (I saw it almost 10 years ago) but if it is, I recommend checking it out
this movie makes you feel. it does not hold back. i care about literally every single person that appears in this movie because of how real it’s portrayed. if this happened in real life, this is exactly how it would play out. and i love that tom cruise is just some ordinary guy going through these events. every time something with the aliens happens my heart drops because i care about all of these people. the third act does slow down a little bit and is nowhere near as good as the masterpiece that is the first and second but it’s still alright. this is defiantly one of my favorite movies of all time idc what anyone says i love this movie to death
I rewatched this film today after probably over ten years since i last saw it. Maybe not quite a masterpiece, but definitely unique and memorable for me. It’s quite a forgotten gem as nobody seems to talk about it anymore.
After re-watching this movie, I can definitely say that the Harvester scene was the scariest part for me. Especially seeing all the people cowering in terror, since they know what's going to happen to them.
It’s a shame they can’t seem to do a faithful rendition of H.G. Wells incredible novel. The original alien invasion story may I remind you but we get what we get. Funny that the musical by Jeff Wayne is more book accurate than any movie
That's because the story is basically narrated on top of the music, while the movies actually have to show what's happening. Thus, the movie tripods (especially the 2005 one) are much more accurate to the novel in comparison to the musical's tripods.
I think the most memorable thing about the film is the tripod bellows. Their sound resembles some of the sounds Bernard Herrmann included in his fantasy scores, especially Journey to the Center of the Earth. I feel Williams pulled back on his usual overblown arrangements, in order to let the sound design shine, and I like the restraint.
I can sort of excuse those kids for how they were behaving in this movie. One is a neglected teen who probably has more personal problems than we know. Rachel acts like how many other girls would in situations like this. She is probably traumatized for what happened. Trust me, kids can behave way worse than how they did in the movie. This movie is my favorite guilty pleasure movie lmao.
I was a very young kid when I saw my mother watching this film, I ended up falling in love with it almost instantly and my fascination with aliens and alien invasions as a whole. Without this Movie I wouldn't have discovered the gem known as "Jeff wayne's" adaptation of War of the Worlds.
I saw this movie in the theater when it was released. Totally amazing in a theater on the big screen. The visual effects can't be truly appreciated on a TV screen, no matter how big the TV screen. I am a sci-fi and horror movie junkie, watching this movie in the theater on the big screen was one of the few times I've actually been scared during a movie. Great flick, great time!
One of my favorite Spielberg movies. It was genuinely terrifying. My only quibble with it was that the main characters somehow skipped over Connecticut on their way to Boston. The geographical logic of the film has you go from the Hudson River to suddenly being in Mass. Ironically, the scene where the creatures are dying in Boston was filmed less than five miles from where I'm writing this. In Naugatuck, Connecticut.
The ferry scene takes place in Athens, NY, which is right across the NY-Mass border. So, they basically traveled north from the NYC area up to Athens, then went east across Massachusetts. They wouldn't have needed to go into Connecticut with that route.
Your criticism about the photography is the same problem I have with A.I. and Minority Report. Did Spielberg ever realize those lighting techniques may work while working with film but look God awful when working digitally?
But it’s transferred to digital and the aperture gets fucked on a number of shots. None of his pre-digital work look that terrible. It sucks stylistically.
I loved this version of WOTWs. You need to see and hear it on a good setup. The Tripod horn is terrifying and so is that bloody weapon. It's in my top ten sci-fi movies.
I watched this when i was very young, im 18 and i still get nightmares of the tripods every now and then, which helps why this is one of my favorite movies
oliver, in what world do you think a little girl would not be screaming and terrified all the time during an alien invasion? I know what you mean about the son being annoying due to going from not caring about anyone to wanting to save the world but I think the little girl has every right to be scared!
It's not that a girl wouldn't be screaming, but that you could not have the kids in the film as they are annoying. The orignal novel the main character is married but has no kids. The kids are just annoying. They aren't out of character or unrealistic however.
I don't think it was the fact that she was screaming, it was the SOUND of her screaming. I know a scream isn't melodic or anything but shrill screeching is just not pleasant to listen to.
@@nutyyyy The truth is that not all children are annoying, Rachel was a less irritable character, of children today, this is mainly due to the difference in education through the ages, but her yelling is completely natural, even that woman who appears in the Peter Jackson's king kong movie screams equally high-pitched and from being exposed to some pretty scary and distressing.
My biggest criticisms with this film are 1) The heat-ray victims' clothing remaining intact when their bodies are vaporised, and 2) Bobbie running off FOR NO REASON to get himself blown up, yet somehow still survives!!!
If it helps with your immersion, I imagine the ray instaboils any water in what it touches, like a powerful microwave. which may not affect dry clothing
It wasn't just the black and white into color. That whole transition was just like in Wizard of Oz, including the way the door was opened. Check out the video Dorothy entering Technicolor at 39 seconds in and compare to this video at 19:49. Even the design of the door is similar.
This movie is an underrated gem. I loved the hyper-real nature that doesn't try to explain everything, we only know what Tom Cruise's character knows. It's a character movie about an alien invasion and I found there to be some quite chilling moments. My parents had The War Of The Worlds musical LP, that we'd listen to as a family growing up and some of the visuals in the film, remind be heavily of the artwork in the booklet tucked away in the sleeve cover.
I'm still waiting for someone to give the Jeff Wayne musical the big budget adaptation it deserves. Yes there is the live performance, but imagine even getting a seasoned animation studio to bring that thing to life visually. ULLAHHH!
@@Outsidecontext That's the one that I meant with "the live perfomance" I was thinking more in the lines of a proper movie treatment using the songs in the musical. Also. I never did enjoy the guy who played the Parson in the stage show on DVD. He just had the wrong vibe for the performance for me.
One of these days someone will do a big budget version of the book War of the Worlds without changing the story and the tech. The tripods looked good though.
There's supposed to be a 2019 miniseries on BBC, and it takes place in the time and location described in the novel. I haven't seen the miniseries so I don't know if it's good.
@@atomicvinylreviews3420 Don't get me wrong, I can't stand musicals, but I enjoy Wayne's album. The book though, an absolute masterpiece. It's more about the human condition than the invasion.
I remember seeing the trailer for this movie in theaters, and to this day I remember how absolutely eerie it was. The people coming out of their houses to see the flashing lights and sounds beyond the hills. Something about seeing that in theaters was something I’ll never forget. I enjoyed the movie but admittedly the trailer has left a lasting impression on me more than the film itself.
The first hour or so of this movie is excellent. I think there are even Jurassic Park-esque moments of tension that remind us why Spielberg is the best at what he does.
Having studied the movie and Tripods and when you look at everything, it's actually a great movie. The aliens, Tripods along with the music and cast are good, I can and have listened to the original score on it's own and I like it, I'm currently building my own Tripod so I have to look at everything in detail...It's very fun and challenging :)
First saw this back when I was about 5 or so with my folks when it first came out. Not sure why they took me to it when I was so young- but I'm honestly pretty glad they did. That opening scene of people being vaporized was burned into my mind. There's something about seeing that sort of thing at so young makes you value life and the people you care about- If I hadn't seen this I'd have probably become a fairly different person.
Great review Oliver! War of the Worlds 2005 I feel is a good film, but it stops short of being great. As a protagonist Ray Ferrier is somewhat difficult to root for and the pacing and plot both clunk to an end in the third act. Despite this though, the film's dark tone and brilliant effects still hold up very well for me.
The beginning and middle of this film is amazing, but the ending is just too nice and neat. Everyone from the family lives?! I can't suspend my disbelief that much.
I remember being 12 when I had seen this at my nearby drive-in, I remember it was not-at-all the _ID4_ type of film I was partially expecting, it instead showed me what a realistic alien invasion would possibly look like, that being the human race may be overwhelmed by the invasion and possibly be fighting a losing war against a more-technologically-advanced civilization much like what happened with Columbus and the Native Americans. But still, I do hold a soft spot for this film due to how dark-toned it was and being more of a survival thriller film rather than another typical sci-fi war action film. It may not be as memorable as the 1953 film, but it is certainly better than the other 2005 (albeit more-faithful) adaptation which was 3-hours long with effects that'd make Ed Wood blush and it being very boring.
I have a lot of nostalgia for this movie. I was 5 years old when it came out and I remember seeing it and it shook me to my core. Looking back on it, the writing was definitely its weak point and if not for the bad dialogue this would’ve absolutely been a instant classic. I still love the visuals and the atmosphere Spielberg creates of hopelessness to a much more advanced enemy. A solid 7/10 but one of my personal favorites.
I love this movie, the third act is the weakest part of the movie, but everything before that is amazing....especially the first time we discover the tripods, what about that incredible sound they make the first time we see them? It gives me goosebump every time!!
Surprised you don't mention Jeff Wayne's Musical version mate, Richard Burton et al. For our generation that's the introduction to this story. Absolute pop culture mainstay!
Totally agree with the review. Was so excited when it was released but ended up disappointed by the irititating characters and nonsensical plot with regard to the tripods being buried and Spielbergs desire to avoid showing a major battle. It reminded me of the recent godzilla release when the camera cuts away just as something happens. I prefer the 50s release and Jeff Wayne musical version
I love the book, love the 1953 movie, love the Jeff Wayne musical but i didn't know what to think about this (2005) movie. When the tripod emerges for the first time, it gripped me due to the look of the tripod, the roar, the musical score and then when it started attacking but from there on, i didn't enjoy it as much as i hoped, especially those damn kids. It's a good effort for a modern take but in my heart, i would have loved to see it set back in late 1800's and give a faithful adaptation instead of the trash produced by Pendragon released in 2005 also. I don't love this movie but i don't hate it either and i'll happily watch it. Nice review by the way :)
For some reason, looking at the footage of the Martians coming through the lightning to pilot their machines reminds me of the gag in cartoons where a character gets sucked into a vacuum cleaner or flushed down a toilet and you see the pipe bulge as they move through it. I've just ruined the movie for myself, lol.
When Robbie wanted to fight aliens I can see maybe if there was a friend that was get killed by one of them or he always wanted to be in the army or something but still it makes no sense.
scottieman2 you aren’t getting what I’m saying. Tons of random people with families signed up for service after 9/11. Young people get angry. They want a purpose. And to some of them that means war.
I remember this being one of the first DVDs i got when we got surround sound. I watched it numerous times and every time the alien appears in the basement there was a certain noise that would always play only from the rear left speaker, it ALWAYS caught me off guard thinking something was behind me.
This movie started out well. It was very atmospheric and there was a strong sense of encroaching doom. Then it slowly degenerated into the usual popcorn nonsense with screaming and explosions. What a missed opportunity!
Hello, thanks for your question. The movie has a number of issues. First, the movie focuses too much on the family drama, which actually stole most of the limelight from the alien invasion. In other words, after the first attack, the movie almost forgets what it is about. I believe that the decision to have the main character running around with his two children also tied the hands of the writers. It's difficult to give someone something interesting to do when he is busy trying to keep two children safe on his own. This comes through very clearly when the son abruptly "dies" in a silly manner, which seemed like a rather cheap attempt to get rid of some unneeded ballast that was holding the main character down. The 1950s version actually tackled this aspect better. We had the character first being a civilian and running away, then being involved in attempts to tackle the issue militarily and scientifically before finally returning to being a civilian who has practically lost all hope and is resigned to the end. Through this arc we actually get to understand the character and care about him. In the 2005 version, the family members and their general internal dynamics are not fleshed out properly so I never actually cared about what would happen to them. Additionally, in terms of writing, pacing was completely off in my opinion. The 2005 one started strong, then sagged very heavily in the middle before rushing through the ending to tie the story up. Also, I would have liked to see what was happening in big picture terms. The intro was promising when we saw a whole neighborhood being wiped out by the aliens and the following part where the plane crashes, hinting that the whole world was collapsing. Unfortunately, most of the time I felt that the story was too "zoomed in" on a family dynamic that was not interesting at all. Again, the old version actually tackled this better. Although the 1950s version focused mainly on one character, we got to see the world gradually collapsing around him through the many characters and situations that he encountered. In the new version, we only got very small glimpses of what was happening in terms of big picture. We needed more scenes like the one where the journalist showed him footage of the attacks happening in other places. Without such scenes, we cannot really know how high the stakes are. I have some other issues with the movie, but this post is already rather long as it is. Cheers!
Because Spielberg. He also messed up A.I. and Minority report. Don't get me wrong I think he's an excellent director when dealing with the correct material but darker material with complex shades of grey is out of his range as a director.
I personally really enjoyed this movie. It's a different kind of movie for Tom Cruise and it's a classic story being modernised and updated for modern audiences. With narration by Morgan Freeman.
I've never thought of Robbies' actions as selfish, but to me they where selfless. In a time when all is on the line, robbie stood up, robbie walked right in to hell...not for glory, but because it's what needed to be done.
You forget to mention the essential : it's terrible bleakness and cold description of humanity's destruction, with no hope at all. Death comes within, no from outside. It's buried in the earth and is our fate. You could almost say we are somehow responsible for it. That's why "War of the Worlds" shares many traits with "Schindler's List". I always thought this film was it's distant "fantasy" cousin (people turn into ashes either way in both films). I think "War of the World" is the sci-fi version of "Shindler's List". It's the other side of the coin.
This is my favourite film of all time, granted, I have rose-coloured glasses on thanks to nostalgia. I personally never found the kids to be annoying, since I was around Rachel’s age when I first watched the film and would have reacted how she did in some situations, and even now I still sympathise with them. Spielberg’s film also introduced me to the War of the Worlds book and musical, which I’m a huge fan of now!
Highly agreed. I read the H.G. Wells book when I was about 11 and it blew my mind. After that I had always dreamed of a good modern adaptation of the movie, and even wrote screenplays myself growing up. When I first saw the movie I was in Iraq, and it was a terrible cam version. I still vividly remember watching it thinking "this is exactly how I envisioned a modern version of the book", even though the cam version was so goddamn bad. Anyway, it's a great movie and one of my all time favorites. I think people cant get the full appreciation of it without reading the book. It kinds leaves out a certain context to the movie.
I got to say every one of your fan made trailers are exponentially better than the actual trailers and get me excited to see movies even if I've already seen them. You should do this for a living.
I remember watching this in the theater with my dad when I was 12 (I was a huge Spielberg fan even younger than that), and I won't lie, this film came on tv two years back and my reactions was, "oh yeah, this movie exists." How does that happen? How do you just forget a Spielberg movie exists?
Yes. I love Dakota but her character as well as the others frankly were written poorly. They made her annoying and she is actually very charming in reality. The boy was also irritating, I feel like the writers had him leave because they didn't know what to do with him or something. It would have been more ballsy if they killed him off like Oliver said. Tom Cruises character was very under written. I do like where they were going trying to make him a bit of a selfish jerk who seems to really come into fatherhood when his kids lives are threatened, they could have developed that more with some interesting layering like maybe he had a terrible abusive father and is terrified to become him so thinks its better to be a distant father or something more interesting. There is some really great visuals and ideas. The first attack is awesome. It does slow down a bit and the Tim Robbins scene does drag on but does feel like it's necessary for the characters. There are some haunting scenes when the attacking at night happens and people including Dakota and Tom's characters get captured to be harvested is pretty intense, some great ideas and for the most part execution is great. But characters and character development are important and this would have been a much better film if they had been well written. Also, yes if your going to have John Williams it needs to be a more memorable score. Its does it's job for the movie but isn't memorable and seems phoned in which is sad for John Williams. It feels like someone else's work frankly.
+1 I get that Dakota Fanning's character is a young girl who would probably be terrified of the alien invasion taking place around her. And shrieking or screaming can be a natural response, at some level, to danger of that nature. The character was written that way, and Dakota was directed by one of the best directors out there. But by god her character's shrieking got to be annoying in the film, and also the way she constantly questioned her father/brother.
what exactly is a young girl meant to do in the middle of an alien invasion. i'd take dakota screaming over will smith's character's son in ID4 anyday.
The sounds of the tripods walking, the horn, the darth-vader-like sound when they sprayed, and the vaporizing noises will always be imprinted on my mind
Yeah, I have to agree. I do like Spielberg's version, there's a lot of good in it. But the 1950's has been the best take so far. Fantastic effects, great score, charismatic leads and killer pacing all make a film I dearly love. And it has the best coffee drinking General in all movies ever. "All I know is, when the martians begin to move no more news comes out of that area." *Drinks coffee ominously.*
I was a big fan of the 50s version, I must have watched that movie on VHS, a hundred times back in 90s as kid. that how much I love it. The part where they encounter the aliens, always give me the chills. While the 2005 version is not as great as 1950 version, I still love it all the same. More so than all the low budget versions of recent years.
What's my favorite part was family kidnapped her rams over there was top of the hill it's looks good I love it it's so good I just opened on DVD hollywood
I know its not a movie, but I hate how everyone misses out Jeff Waynes version of the war of the worlds, with a brilliant soundtrack, designs, and voice. also the designs for the tripods are amazing
So what, people can't express their opinion on a media platform that's literally designed for that? You feel better now that you've recycled a bad joke?
i love the soundeffect and i think it was great. the part where they are underground could be better but what in my opinion was the worst was the ending. it felt extreemly rushed and all of a sudden everyone is just alive they all just die done. the ending took about 3-5 minutes
That bloom effect was all the rage at the time. Spielberg also used it in Minority Report, and it really dates both films. The main bloom culprit at the time was CSI, but it even made its way into games like Rainbow Six.