Cloverfield

Godzilla meets Blair Witch in this highly secretive blockbuster from the producer of the equally mysterious Lost. The footage in the film is said to be culled from a videotape found in a handicam after the ‘incident’, and revolves around a group of young New Yorkers struggling to stay alive throughout the crisis.

The exact nature of the beast has not been disclosed, and will not be revealed in any marketing material other than the movie itself. Curiousity, it has to be said, is killing us.
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I apologise, we feel bad, but there's no trailer available. ~Ed.

Rating: 4 Flicks Review:

Cloverfield is a compact, intense, unrelenting monster of a movie. A gigantic, ghastly beast (realised very convincingly) rips apart Manhattan and its unexpecting inhabitants. The action, in its entirety, is presented as handicam footage "found" after the attack.

Once the threat is announced in central New York, its full throttle. Our cameraman Hud (T.J. Miller) insists “people will want to know how it all went down” and captures our characters' plight to save friends and get out of the city.

It’s a clever film, and one could read into it a relevance to youtubers, myspacers & facebookers, as well America’s fear of terrorism. Indeed it’s the best monster movie in a long time (alongside last year’s very different The Host) but, more than anything, Cloverfield is hugely entertaining. A good, old-fashioned, fun night out at your local cinema.

The great thing about it is that while staying faithful to the gimmick (the movie never leaves the view of the handicam) the filmmakers have still been able to build tension, create scares and structure a satisfying watch. Within it are many contrivances (the fall and rise of a romance is also caught between monster mashing), but being left to see the disaster unfold just as the characters have is great - you know what’s going on only as much as they do. And yip, you get a good look at the monster. The lack of explanation around the monster’s origins might irritate some, but the film is stronger for not knowing.

Technically it’s quite a feat. It sells the realism of the handicam ‘look’ but doesn’t distract by cleverly maintaining a high production value. Convenient lighting at convenient times mean you always see what you need to see. The CGI is flawless.

It’s a shame the film and its characters are rather sanitized. The characters are gorgeous young yuppies who never swear (the kind of people you’d hate unless their lives were in danger), and while the action is scary it’s not terrifying. Plus there’s overt product placement. But it’s all forgivable because the movie is just so much fun. If you can accept the conceit, Cloverfied is a short, sharp and intense rollercoaster. Sit near the back of the cinema.

By Paul Scantlebury, Flicks.co.nz

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Release date: January 17th 2008.

We haven't received times for this movie in this location yet. However these are updated as cinemas announce them, so check back soon. Hopefully the lovely cinemas in your location will choose to play it shortly. ~Ed.