Watched: 09/02/2022
Format: Amazon Watch Party
Viewing: Unknown
Decade: 1980's
Director: John Carpenter
I saw They Live (1987) twice in the theater. I still think it's a pretty keen movie, and would now make for an interesting TV series or something.
But, yeah, when I was twelve, there was some sci-fi coming out (see: RoboCop, Running Man, arguably even Spaceballs) that was kind of tricking studios into making movies that were some curious cultural commentary dressed up in action-adventure guise. Which, you know, is what good sci-fi should be, anyway.
They Live mostly went under the radar, and I recall straight through college being The Only Guy In The Room Who Had Seen It, but as I kidded/ not kidded - it's not like I wasn't getting what these movies were on about. But I do think in the past 30-something years, people have eventually seen They Live, and it's not everyone's cup of tea. I can still bathe in the nostalgia I have for the movie and remember what it was like getting served up the movie's messaging as a novelty (there's always a 12-year-old out there getting these ideas for the first time). But, I mean, as a 47-year-old, it is, as someone at the watch party said, a bit like something written by a college freshman.
It's got some strange pacing and budgetary constraints that keep the hard sci-fi stuff crammed into just the last few minutes. The pacing is super odd, from the kind of draggy first twenty minutes of set-up to the five and a half minute fight in the middle of the film. We clearly needed more Meg Foster, but that's always true. And I think it's 100% intentional that the aliens look ridiculous. Because they're grotesque and laughable at the same time, and that's just good stuff. Make it weird, man!
Anyway, it was a kick to watch it with people who hadn't seen it.
Meg Foster will come with her own special FX, thank you |