By James Bowman on 8.18.09 @ 6:02AM
A hard-to-dislike mockumentary from South Africa, of all places.
It's hard -- well, a little bit hard -- not to like District
9. This South African mockumentary by Neill Blomkamp manages
to keep its audience awake through yet another alien invasion
flick by making jokes at the expense of the American-o-centric
popular culture -- hitherto pretty much the only place where such
invasions are known to exist -- and by hinting at parallels from
South African history. The solemn announcer who, at the beginning
and for no good reason gives us the history of the alien
presence, hovering above Johannesburg in a space ship so large
that it looks like an inverted reflection of the city itself,
can't resist remarking on the surprise the thing occasioned by
not appearing over New York or Washington instead. Isn't that
where aliens would naturally want to go? It's in all the movies.
But then it turns out that these aliens are immigrants, not
invaders, and their outlandish appearance takes on a racial cast
which swiftly results in a return to Apartheid.
As under Apartheid, too, there is no shortage of rationalizing
intellectuals, many of whom are paraded before Mr. Blomkamps's
cameras, to explain why these creatures, whom the movie's humans
refer to with the derogatory epithet "prawns" -- "You can't say
they don't look like that," says one of Mr. Blomkamp's talking
heads -- don't fit in with the rest of society and have to be
fenced off in shanty towns that bear an uncomfortable resemblance
to those still to be found in South Africa. Though the prawns
come from what is obviously a much more technologically advanced
society than our own, they are apparently all but helpless here
on earth as they huddle in their pathetic shacks and trade
whatever they can scrounge to Nigerian gangsters for cat food.
One theorist explains their condition in a familiar way by
opining that these prawns, found desperate and starving on the
mother ship, are "basically the workers" who, inexplicably
abandoned by their leaders, have no real intelligence or
initiative of their own
At this distance of time from the bad old days, you've got to
wonder quite what the point is in digging up the carcass of
institutionalized racism -- the real thing, as opposed to the
hysterical fantasies of the race-relations industry in America or
Europe -- in order to have a few more shots at it. Is there
widespread nostalgia in South Africa for segregation by racial
classification? White-black-colored-prawn? Possibly there is, but
surely there can be no serious prospect of its return? Insofar as
Mr. Blomkamp's movie is a satire, its target is by now much too
uncontroversial and easy to attack to be very much worth
attacking. That is presumably why the satirical allusions to
Apartheid seem, at least at first, to be mostly decorative,
lending a bit of atmosphere and local color, while the dramatic
gravamen of the film moves on to a story of something not
entirely unlike heroism.
This is the other thing that makes the movie almost rise above
its comic book provenance to the level of a real movie where such
American equivalents as Independence Day (1996) or
Signs (2002), mired in their comic-book origins, do not.
That, too, may have something to do with its non-American
setting, which helps to create a certain sense of dislocation
from comic-book land and provides a point of contact with the
real world as well as the real world's social and political
problems. On the other hand, the absurdity of the
mise-en-scène -- which is deliberately exacerbated by
such satirical touches as having the aliens look like giant
crustaceans hardly adapted to the making and use of tools, let
alone the piloting of space ships -- is kept in something close
to equipoise with the dramatic excitement of the hero's exploits,
instead of being allowed, quite, to overwhelm it.
This hero is Wikus Van De Merwe (Sharlto Copley), a clueless
Afrikaaner bureaucrat who, through nepotism, is put in charge of
a government scheme to relocate the aliens to a camp in the
veldt, far from the city. "The people of Johannesburg are going
to live happily knowing the prawns are very far away," says Wikus
cheerfully. In the process, however, he becomes contaminated with
a prawn science project to manufacture the propellant ("the
fluid") which is required to get their giant space ship moving
again, and this causes his DNA to change to the point where he
gradually begins to metamorphose into a prawn himself. It's
ridiculous, I know, but the suspension of disbelief is less
difficult than you might expect in the quasi-realistic
circumstances. The fluid is a bit like the magic potion in a
fairy tale that you can take on trust just because everything
else isn't magic as well.
Nor is that the only fairy-tale element. Wikus's is a kind of
male Cinderella story, like that of Gamelyn or Orlando in As
You Like It, since he is the despised poor relation who
rises above his misfortunes to become a hero. Starting out as one
of the film's bumptious talking heads -- "The prawn doesn't
understand the concept of property," he confidently informs the
documentary audience -- he learns to sympathize with the aliens'
plight and eventually joins with their leader in the desperate
plot to escape from inhospitable earth. This means fighting
against the authorities, including his overbearing father-in-law,
who were once so patronizing towards him, and it casts him in the
role of freedom-fighter according to a familiar narrative, lately
of much potency in his homeland and throughout the continent. So
that's good, then, right? Because it takes us back to the satire?
No, that's bad, because the reminder of such serious things
contrasts too jarringly with the silliness of everything else.
But the movie almost had me going there -- which, being stuck
here in comic-book land, I consider no small accomplishment.