I’m a big fan of the film Independence Day that was released in 1996. The perfect cast
starred in this apocalyptic kind of tale where the world must come together to
combat the aliens that are intent on doing humanity and all earth’s creatures
in.
Now, 20 years later (2016), we have Independence Day: Resurgence. The film is rated PG-13 for sequences
of sci-fi action and destruction, and for some language. Captain Steven Hiller
(Will Smith) has unfortunately died, but his stepson Dylan (Jessie T. Usher)
has become a fighter pilot in his footsteps. His mother Jasmine (Vivica A. Fox) seems to have dropped her
career as a stripper to become a nurse.
We have former President Whitmore (Bill Pullman), who seems
to be suffering from a type of dementia, and new hotshots Jake (Liam Hemsworth),
and the President’s daughter Patricia (Maika Monroe), now all grown up. David
Levinson (Jeff Goldblum) is in Africa where he meets an old flame, and a strong
African man who has noticed signs of the resurgence. Seems the world has hung
together over these twenty years in anticipation of the aliens striking again. Good
thing we did, because yes! They are back!
I only saw this recently on DVD, and must say that some of
the same themes are revisited. There are portions that seem old, but ultimately
the story and the action won me over and I was on the edge of my seat, hoping
that my favorite characters wouldn’t bite the dust during the inevitable
fighting that occurred. Some of the communication themes kind of reminded me of
Arrival, a messy film I reviewed
earlier on my blog.
Sequels are difficult to make. A lot of them go flat because
they use the themes and what worked from the original blockbuster rather than
taking on new, fresher material. But Independence
Day: Resurgence was okay for an evening’s entertainment. The call to action
for the people of the world to bond together to fight a common foe doesn’t get
old. Isn’t that what we still need to do today? Come together to fight greed
and corruption in government, to assure that the planet is not further
destroyed by global climate change, to combat the centuries old archaic
religious beliefs that only serve to divide humanity instead of illuminating
our commonalities.
The special effects were pretty good, but I was only
watching it on my screen at home. Those aliens had the biggest space ship I’ve
seen in an alien type film. I noticed that earth’s ally was a smooth sphere,
and the aliens were gangly, ugly monsters. One intelligent and serene looking,
one stupid and aggressive. This didn’t seem to me to be simply a random choice!
There is a little romance
going on here and there, and people coming together to survive some really horrifically
devastating destruction when the aliens attacked. You might find it fun to
watch the first one and then this sequel directly afterwards as a double
feature.