Super 8A rich, thrilling, and fun ride into summer movies past.Todd Hertz | posted 6/10/2011 12:16AM

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Super 8
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MPAA rating: PG-13 (for intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, language and some drug use)

Genre: Science Fiction, Thriller
Theater release: June 10, 2011 by Bad Robot/Amblin Entertainment
Directed by: J. J. Abrams
Runtime: 1 hour 40 minutes
Cast: Joel Courtney (Joe Lamb), Kyle Chandler (Jack Lamb), Riley Griffiths (Charles), Elle Fanning (Alice Dainard), Noah Emmerich (Nalec)
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Super 8 could be called many things: thriller, science-fiction, action-adventure, comedy, mystery, etc. But maybe more than anything, it is a ghost of blockbusters past—especially the past of co-producer Steven Spielberg.
Working families jostle and argue in hectic meal-time scenes reminiscent of E.T. Adolescent boys banter and heckle one another—all talking at the same time—like a certain group of Goonies. The military mysteriously pokes around town as residents process close encounters they cannot understand. Even the light shimmers and flares in a Spielberg-ian way.
Oh, the nostalgia. But luckily, it's more than just that. Spielberg and adventure movies of the late '70s/early '80s are channeled not just in appearance but in tone, storytelling and—most importantly—heart by director and writer J.J. Abrams (director of Mission: Impossible III and Star Trek, producer of Cloverfield, creator of Alias and Lost). You're gonna need a bigger boat for all the clever Spielberg homages, genre conventions, and Abrams' retro-style filmmaking. The result? A surprisingly fresh and rich character-based adventure full of roller-coaster thrills, genuine scares, hearty laughs and touching moments. This could be many filmgoers' favorite movie of the year—and it will certainly be one of 2011's most fun.

Elle Fanning as Alice, Joel Courtney as Joe
In 1979, Joe Lamb (Joel Courtney) and five middle-school friends are filling the long summer days in their Ohio steel town by making a zombie movie for a film festival. Filming on location late one night, this new group of goonies witness a catastrophic train crash. Strange discoveries at the wreck lead them to believe it was no mistake. Soon, common genre movie conventions start cropping up: dogs run away, people vanish, lights flicker, property is damaged and the military covertly conducts tests. While the boys juggle finishing their movie with figuring out what really happened that night, Joe's dad (Kyle Chandler of Friday Night Lights), the town's deputy sheriff, pushes closer and closer to uncovering the surprising truth.
Another surprise is how well Super 8 executes both the little quiet moments and the big loud elements. The teen characters—led by newcomer Courtney—are deep, likeable and compelling. Meanwhile, the humongous thrill-ride set pieces are first-rate. Two back-to-back scenes showcase this versatility. The boys add a girl to their movie cast not knowing if she can act (she's cute!) and are tenderly speechless when she delivers a soft, tear-filled scene completely out of nowhere. Seconds later, Abrams stages the most ambitious, explosive, theatre-rocking train wreck in film history.

Kyle Chandler as Jackson Lamb
Like Abrams' Cloverfield or Spielberg's War of the Worlds, Super 8 doesn't follow key military leaders or brilliant scientists who save the day from a threat. Instead, it follows those who are simply enduring, surviving and learning about themselves in the heat of the fire. I love that type of focus. However, some will feel that in Super 8 it leads to an anticlimactic ending. Just as the plot seems to be building to a crescendo, the entire conflict just … goes away. Literally.
The cause seems to be twofold. First, the movie has two distinct story threads that touch but never really intertwine. In fact, if the story of Joe and his friends was edited out of the movie, the more standard plot of the mysterious train and its cargo would play out in pretty much the same way. Abrams has said that this movie began with "a premise without characters … and great characters who needed a premise." The more time passes since I've seen it, the more it feels exactly like that.

Be afraid. Be very afraid.
The second tension is well-expressed by the young filmmakers in Super 8. Charles (Riley Griffiths), who directs the kids' movie, adds a wife to the central detective of his zombie script to, as he says, give the movie a story. "If he has a wife," Charles says, "you care more when he's investigating." Charles is right: Emotional investment in characters is key. But it alone does not make a story. Story also necessitates plot. You can have the world's greatest characters but they need something to do. This where Super 8 trips a bit in the final half hour. I loved these characters and their relationships and wanted them to achieve. To act. To accomplish. Instead—save for one great, brave speech—they mainly react. Because the movie is only 100 minutes long, I was ready to see these loved characters make one last meaningful stand just as it abruptly resolved.