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DERANGED (2012)

October 14, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

DERANGED (2012) is the first Korean film to cover a major disease epidemic. It rates as a fast-paced medical thriller and brutal apocalyptic fun.

Jae-hyuk is a former biochemistry professor who is working as a pharmaceutical sales rep after losing his life savings and job after a bad investment his younger brother, a police detective, advised him to do. As a result, he is always working and irritable with his wife and two children. When dead bodies are found in a river, a major epidemic of a parasitic worm is discovered, which drives its hosts to seek water for a grisly reason. Jae-hyuk and his brother must work together to alternately solve the mystery of the crisis while also saving his family.

This is another great Korean apocalyptic film along the lines of FLU and TRAIN TO BUSAN. As with TRAIN TO BUSAN, we have a man who works too much to the detriment of his family, and through crisis learns what is truly valuable to him, providing a basic and decent character arc with people we care about. His brother is guilt-ridden about ruining his brother’s life and wants to make amends. The worm is suitably disgusting and horrific, its victims overwhelmed with the desire to eat (to nourish the worm) and ultimately to seek water (to allow it to hatch). Jae-hyuk and his family give us sympathetic characters thwarted at almost every turn, constantly ramping up the tension while the stakes get ever higher. Loads of fun for apocalyptic film fans.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

CLADE by James Bradley

October 13, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

CLADE by James BradleyJames Bradley’s literary dystopian novel CLADE tells the story of three generations of a family living in a world dealing with climate change caused by global warming. A clade is a group of life forms consisting of an original form and its descendants. Similarly, we get the story of Adam Leith, a climate scientist living in the near future, and his offspring. Their stories are filled with typical human joys and pain while the world slowly changes and becomes increasingly hostile to life and civilization.

As a cautionary tale, CLADE works very well, making climate change and its effects the backdrop of each of the book’s interconnected stories. Fish die-offs, bird die-offs, rising sea levels, mass extinctions, super storms and resulting flooding, killer heat waves, disease, and social unrest plague the planet as things keep getting worse. By focusing on a single family, Bradley makes it all personal, and by showing three generations, he’s able to flash forward so we see the impact of climate change occurring rapidly. The author’s literary style is engaging.

The book’s advantages, however, may also challenge some readers. By switching point of view and jumping forward in time in a short book, it’s hard to get invested in any one character and care about them. For me, the biggest problem is aside from Adam and his daughter Summer escaping massive flooding in a depressed England, they don’t really suffer from the effects of climate change. There are millions of climate refugees, economies are staggering, and the food chain is collapsing, but they all seem to live out their lives in relative comfort, able to focus on the mundane and relatively trivial goings on in their lives. While the world is getting worse, there is no real sense it is getting worse for them, which keeps the reader a safe distance from the impending misery the author is trying to communicate. In contrast, THE FOUNTAIN AT THE CENTER OF THE WORLD takes a similar approach by telling the human story of globalization, but in a much more coherent, personal, visceral way; you feel as well as see its effects, and you become deeply invested in the characters.

When I think about climate change, I seriously worry for my children, my species, and myself. As in this book, because we lack the political will to buck the elites and do something about climate change, we and our descendants will suffer for it, and I doubt we’ll make out as well as the people in this novel.

Filed Under: Books, Reviews of Other Books, The Blog

INTO THE GUNS by William C. Dietz

October 5, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

into the guns dietzIn INTO THE GUNS by William C. Dietz (author of LEGION OF THE DAMNED), meteors strike the earth and wipe out the U.S. government. In the ensuing chaos, military units find themselves cut off from the chain of command, and the Southern states plan secession. The result is a setup for a second American civil war.

I read the synopsis and thought, wow, count me in. Here’s what I liked and didn’t. First, I’d heard Dietz is a master of military sci-fi, and his skills are on full display here. The guy writes supremely well, carries a story, gives you likeable characters, and delivers detailed action. I also enjoyed the ideas behind the North and South getting ready to fight. What’s at stake is the strategic petroleum reserve, which in the South. The South wants to keep it for itself, the North says it belongs to the whole country and wants it shared. The South wants to reconstitute as a confederacy incorporated like a business, with a CEO, board of directors, and voters become shareholders–in short, a version of libertarian government where corporations and the rich can buy votes and dominate decision-making. The North wants to spend money on a massive reconstruction program to repair the damage and rebuild the country.

Dietz portrays the North in a more favorable light, but I was just grateful for once not to read a second civil war novel in which dirty liberals try to steal everything under the direction of Black socialists who want to disarm patriotic citizens and create a Marxist one-world government. Seriously, I’ve read one or two of those, and they’re basic right wing wish fulfillment. They don’t require willing suspension of disbelief from the reader so much as an unquestioning ideology, one in which the world is divided between evil liberals and plucky patriots.

Despite what I liked about it, I had some reservations. Within days of the attack, gangs attack and begin to overrun major military bases. One military unit, run by one of the book’s protagonists, finds itself under attack by a nearby town that wants its fuel for itself. While this created opportunities for Dietz to show off his excellent skills as a military fiction author, I found it hard to believe that within days of disaster, gangs or even small towns would find the wherewithal and strength to take on U.S. Army units in their bases, much less win. Civilians don’t come across as very nice people in this novel. Most of them are selfish looters. The President is a civilian but for one odd reason or another ends up going into combat with the troops much of the time.

A final issue for me was the timeline and pacing. The country falls apart, everybody starts attacking everybody else, military units go rogue and turn mercenary (strangely resisting the chain of command when it begins to reassert itself), and the South plans secession in a timeline that seems to be highly compressed for the most part but then suggests time is jumping ahead quite a bit. This is apparently a series; I would have hoped the first book would deal with the meteor strikes and their aftermath, leading up up to the civil war, and the second book get into it. That being said, the quick pacing keeps things moving.

In the end, you just have to regard it as pulpy military adventure fiction and run with it. If you’re good with how some of the events bump fast forward, and the dubious realism of how the country responds to the crisis in its first months, you’re in for a fast-paced, action-packed read.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Books, Politics, Reviews of Other Books, The Blog

A DARK SONG (2017)

October 4, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

a dark song

A DARK SONG (2017) is another indie horror gem that shows what filmmakers can do with a limited budget when they tell a good story. It’s powerful, bleak, and original in its execution.

Sophia (Catherine Walker), a middle-aged woman grieving the loss of her seven-year-old son, who was murdered, rents a house in Wales and hires occultist Joseph Solomon (Steve Oram) to perform a complicated ritual used to summon one’s guardian angel. Once the angel appears, you can ask a favor, which can be almost anything, special powers, knowledge, whatever you need. Sophia wants to speak to her dead son again, though she may have darker motives. Solomon typically seeks knowledge but is looking for another special power.

The film’s ritual appears to be based on the BOOK OF ABRAMELIN, a Kabbalistic grimoire, which became important to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and later in the Thelema mystical system created in 1904 by occultist Aleister Crowley. I found Sophia’s and Solomon’s machinations fascinating as day after day, they undergo the ritual toward its conclusion. Otherwise, the characters themselves are interesting, the conflict inherent in their personalities, the occasional moments they connect as people. Sophia is highly driven and impatient with getting results. Solomon is slovenly, prone to baser urges, but highly meticulous about the ritual and its boundaries.

Put it all together, and the result is a gripping story about two people probing the occult and discovering its darkness. Recommended.

Filed Under: Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

BUSHWICK (2017)

September 24, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

bushwick

BUSHWICK (2017) is a film that imagines a second American civil war fought in the streets of New York. The South is attempting to secede again, and to increase their bargaining position, they sent militia into Brooklyn to seize hostages and create a base of operations. Only they don’t bargain on the people of New York giving them hell right back with any weapon they can get their hands on, resulting in all-out warfare on the borough’s streets. It’s a supremely improbable scenario, but without it, the movie doesn’t work, so you just gotta run with it. The bad guys are here, and for now, they have the upper hand.

Now to the story. Lucy (Brittany Snow) steps off the train from graduate school hoping to introduce her boyfriend to her grandmother. Instead, she walks out of the subway into a bloodbath. She takes shelter in the basement of an ex-Marine named Stupe (Dave Bautista, who shines in the role of capable veteran who hates war), who agrees to help her get to safety.

That’s pretty much the plot, but I didn’t expect much from this indie thriller. The acting is passable, the actors doing the best they could with a script that was at times a bit hammy and incredibly demanding on Snow, who has to mourn one loved one after another only to soldier on as if she’d never known them. While the movie often had this former New Yorker thinking, “F–k yeah! New Yorkers ain’t gonna take this!”, the ending is pretty dark.

What I liked most is the crazy tension that is sustained through much of the movie. The director relies a lot on very long takes, where the camera follows the action down the street only to be frequently distracted by violent set pieces. Imagine if the battle scenes in CHILDREN OF MEN took up about half a movie, and you get the idea. While the special effects weren’t on par with CHILDREN OF MEN, some of the action is pure adrenaline fuel. I was fascinated by the technique they showed in putting this together in the middle of Brooklyn. Count me in if they ever release a making-of.

BUSHWICK seems to be timed well for the violence and divisions in Trump’s America, and it emotionally touches on that, though otherwise it has no political aspirations, and as such it doesn’t function very well as a cautionary tale of civil war. The film is really a set piece what-if and then produces a tense and scary cinema verite-style portrayal of one man and woman trying to survive it. It doesn’t reach very high beyond what it gives you, but I was okay with that.

Looking at reviews, the film has taken some heat for all sorts of things, but I took it for what it was and enjoyed it quite a bit.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Movies, Movies & TV, Politics, The Blog

SEA OF RUST by C. Robert Cargill

September 24, 2017 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

sea of rustIn the future, intelligent robots rise up against their human masters and after a short, horrific war, destroy all of humanity. C. Robert Cargill’s SEA OF RUST tells the story of Brittle, a robot plagued by guilt over everything she’s done, scavenging for spare parts in a wasteland created by the war.

When I read the synopsis, I didn’t see much new being added to a dense field. I also wondered if the author was up to the task of getting me to emphasize with creatures that are basically machines. But a few random pages grabbed me, as did the cover. I’m glad I gave it a chance, as I loved it. Cargill manages to deliver an entirely fresh take on a familiar idea, while delivering plenty of action, interesting characters, empathy, and even some engaging philosophy in the execution.

The robots are handled very well, with varying capabilities, self-given upgrades, and levels of artificial intelligence, resulting in different personalities. Brittle, for example, was a Caregiver, resulting in her thinking and feeling closer to humans than other models. This provides the needed empathy for the reader, explains the colloquial dialogue, and treats the reader to characters who are human in some ways (the legacy of the masters they killed) while being machines in others. After the war, the new civilization they wanted to create was compromised by the rise of OWI–One World Intelligence–giant mainframes absorbing millions of robots into its consciousness and seeking global domination. Unable to build factories, the only option robots have to stay alive is get parts on the open market or from each other. As internal circuitry degrades, some robots start to lose their sanity, and end up roaming the Sea of Rust until they die.

The world building is rich and believable, leaving me with no loose ends or unanswered questions. Overall, Brittle’s world is pretty bleak and filled with existential dread and very real dangers, a sort of Western with robots, and she has to live with the memories of the horrible things she’d done in the war. When she’s given a chance to play a part in remaking the world again, she takes it, joining a great cast of characters on a trek across the Sea of Rust to the town that started the war.

If you dig the robot apocalypse, check out SEA OF RUST for a story offering great action and world building, likeable characters, plenty of originality, and interesting ideas.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Books, The Blog

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