Cloverfield - Buy from Amazon
Cloverfield was one of the most hotly anticipated releases this year and had built up a huge buzz starting last summer when the trailer debuted in front of
The Transformers. The film arguably had more build up of any film since, well, since
Snakes on a Plane. This was a level of anticipation that would be practically impossible to live up to. Overall, I'm not sure the movie did; I'm not sure any movie could live up to that level of hype.
The movie starts with a going-away party for Rob Hawkins, who has just landed a job in Japan. His best friend, Hud, is filming the event and getting various people to give their best wishes. His possible girlfriend, Beth, shows up with another man and they have a fight and afterward she leaves. Shortly after that, the ground shakes and the power goes out. What is at first thought to be an earthquake is then followed by an explosion and it becomes clear something is attacking the city. Something huge.
Cloverfield is like a combination of Godzilla and The Blair Witch Project. A monster movie as seen through the eyes of YouTube. On the one hand, this format allows the viewer to feel like they are really apart of the film. Only seeing what the characters see heightens the horror because the unknown is always scarier. On the other hand, the handheld nature of the movie grew tiresome at times. There were reports of people becoming nauseous because of the jerky nature of the filming, and I can see why. (It would certainly be much worse on the big screen, so I don't think this will as big an issue on the home market. Only once did I feel queasy at all, and that was when they entered the tilted skyscraper. Something about the way the set was on an angle set something off, but not in a bad way. )
As for the extras, the DVD certainly delivers. Starting things out is an audio commentary track with the director, Matt Reeves. He gives an informative lecture on the making of the film, the difficulties of casting without revealing too much information, and there are almost no dead spots. ... until the credits that is. The movie ends, he stops talking, I grab the remote control to pop to the menu when he starts up again. He talks for a few minutes and then stops. I grab the remote control and he starts talking again. The third or fourth time this happens I said, 'Fine, I'll watch until the end of the credits.' Other extras include a 28-minute long making of featurette, another 22-minute featurette on the special effects, and finally a 6-minute featurette on the origins of the monster. These three featurettes run close to an hour and have serious replay value. Fans of the movie will want to watch them again. Next up are 4 minutes of blown lines, which are better than most outtakes. There are also four deleted scenes, and two alternate endings, also with audio commentaries. In total it runs just over 8 minutes, and the deleted scenes would have worked in the movie, but the ending they chose was the best. (Just a note, they alternates are barely different.)
Cloverfield was saddled with some of the most oppressive hype I've seen in a while. This hurt the film somewhat, but while it didn't live up to the hype (no movie could), it is still a very good movie and one that I can certainly recommend checking out. Even when it is a little too predictable, like when they first switch to nightvision, it is still effective. As for the DVD, there are more than enough extras to lift the value beyond a rental and solidly into the purchase category. My only concern is Blu-ray, as I find it hard to imagine a High Definition edition of the movie isn't already in the works. Hopefully it will be worth the upgrade so I don't feel bad recommending the DVD.