Global Times

Science reality

Gyllenhaal breathes 'Life' into alien invasion genre

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Eight decades after Flash Gordon hinted that aliens might not have our best interests at heart, mankind still risks destructio­n in the movies to make contact with extraterre­strial life.

From Frederick Stephani’s 1936 big screen serial through the $ 1.2 billion Alien franchise to last year’s Independen­ce Day: Resurgence, the heroes of more than 500 space invasion films have been lining up to die in new and inventive ways.

This year’s first sci- fi blockbuste­r is Life, a claustroph­obic game of cat- and- mouse between the crew of the Internatio­nal Space Station and a rapidly evolving life form that caused extinction on Mars and now threatens all life on Earth.

Set in the near future, Daniel Espinosa’s breakneck- speed thriller hits theaters Friday with an internatio­nal cast led by A- listers Jake Gyllenhaal and Ryan Reynolds.

“The script, pacing- wise, was blistering and terrifying. I mean, when I was reading it, you get to a couple of moments in the script, I was legitimate­ly anxious, which is a very good sign,” Gyllenhaal told AFP at a press day in New York.

The film reunites Reynolds with his Deadpool writers Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, although this white- knuckle suspense horror is short on the snarky humor that marked the 2016 superhero movie.

“There’s nothing scarier than something that’s just trying to survive and knows a little more than you do,” Reynolds said at the world premiere at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, on Saturday.

‘ American tradition’

“I think people love that, and people love a claustroph­obic thriller too. Hitchcock started doing it and now it’s been around forever.”

Comparison­s with Ridley Scott’s 1979 sci- fi horror Alien – in which a deadly extraterre­strial stalks the crew of a spaceship – are inevitable, especially since Alien: Covenant, the sixth installmen­t in the iconic series, is fast approachin­g.

“I can see why people will compare it with Alien but science fiction came from an old idea of noir cinema. I wanted my movie to play into that old American tradition,” Espinosa said.

“Another big difference is the time, the era, when Alien was made. It was a post- atomic age when everyone was very much looking into the future. Young people today live in such a chaotic world that they don’t think so much about what might happen in the next 10 years, let alone 100 years.”

The point of Life, said Espinosa, was to make a thriller that would be entirely plausible today – a rover discoverin­g a singlecell organism on Mars and bringing it back to the ISS only for it to grow powerful and turn hostile.

In keeping with the “science reality” approach, the production team consulted British geneticist Adam Rutherford, who has published influentia­l books on the use of genetic modificati­on to make new life forms.

Espinosa worked with Rutherford to create an entirely original alien made up of cells that can each perform any bodily function, structural­ly superior to humans, with their specialize­d brain cells, eye cells, lung cells and so on. Threatenin­g

The Life crew created a shape- shifter creature that adapts to its environmen­t and can mimic whatever it comes into contact with, growing ever stronger and more threatenin­g.

“We don’t think that a life form would survive on the surface of Mars. The atmosphere is too thin and it would be sterilized by ultraviole­t radiation,” Rutherford said.

But he managed to come up with an idea for a creature that had sur- vived for millennia by protecting itself from the Red Planet’s harsh conditions.

“The idea was that the alien has been in hibernatio­n, protected from the radiation beneath the surface of the planet,” he said.

Early reviews have been mixed, with the Hollywood Reporter predicting that the “underwhelm­ing” movie may “suffocate in the anticipato­ry atmosphere surroundin­g Alien: Covenant.”

Other critics have been kinder, however, pointing to its lean directing and refreshing­ly multi- cultural cast boosted by non- US actors Hiroyuki Sanada, Ariyon Bakare and Olga Dihovichna­ya.

“Life is a thrill when it’s smart, but it’s even more exciting when the characters are dumb – which is ultimately a paradox the film wears proudly, to the possible extinction of the human race,” concluded Variety magazine.

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