Monday, April 22, 2013

Movie review: The Host (2013)





Cast: Saoirse Ronan, Max Irons, Jake Abel, Diane Kruger
Directed by:  Andrew Niccol
Written by: Andrew Niccol (screenplay), Stephenie Meyer (novel)
Release date: April 19, 2013
Rating: 1.5/5

The Host is the misconceived result of Andrew Niccol and Stephanie Meyer deciding to make a movie baby together. Niccol is known for directing insightful and memorable films such as Gattaca (1997) and Lord of War (2005), while Meyer is famous for her Twilight movies about sparkly teenage vampires. Why the two chose to collaborate with each other will puzzle film historians for many years to come. The movie is primarily created for young girls to take their boyfriends to the movies with them. If this is you, prepare for an intense session of eye-rolling. 

The Host is set in a world where a parasitic yet benign alien species called Souls has taken over the planet by possessing human bodies. It’s a premise we’ve recently seen in the Nicole Kidman-starrer The Invasion (2007) and the many Invasion of the Body Snatchers adaptations that came before it. There’s no more war, poverty or suffering, but there are also barely any people left to experience this paradise. We follow the story of Melanie (Saoirse Ronan) who is captured and inhabited by the one of the aliens. However, the host nicknamed Wanderer soon finds out that some of Melanie’s old self still lingers around thus leaving it with a condition we here on earth call a multiple personality disorder.

It’s pretty hard to be entertained or interested in a film where the first half consists of placid-looking aliens speaking to each other in monotones. The only human element is the petulant, bratty inner voice of Melanie who regularly throws temper tantrums chiding her host to flee her captors. When Wanderer finally meets up with Melanie’s former human companions, the film descends into a bizarre four-way love triangle, much like Twilight’s Edward and Jacob who fight over Bella. The two male leads Jared (Max Irons) and Ian (Jake Abel) display little acting ability and it’s obvious they were picked to make the film’s target audience coo. The only thing The Host has going for it are its stunningly shot desert and cave locales, otherwise the film is dull, overly sentimental and flubs as a teen sci-fi romance.

-          Gautam Kagalwala