Michael Scott
Partner / Reviewer
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Captive State is film that’s less in love with the aliens in an alien invasion, but rather focuses in on the human’s reaction to alien rule, and the inevitable resistance. After viewing the film I’m reminded of a Timothy Zahn book called “The Blackcollar”, where an alien race named the Ryqril invade human space, dominate them completely, and then have human beings who are loyalty conditioned rule as benevolent rulers in their stead. The same type of scenario plays out in Captive State, with the film focusing in on the brooding conflict between the resistance forces who want to repel their alien masters, and the authoritative humans who rule in the aliens stead. The film shows us the porcupine like aliens right at the beginning of the movie, but that little tidbit vanishes quickly as the show takes over with a much more subtle and humanitarian based plot where the aliens are just the inciting incidence, vs. the faced enemy of the story.
We start into the film after a worldwide invasion of the alien race, who have decimated us so badly that humanity surrendered in order to stave off utter annihilation. The alien overlords have set themselves up as the highest authority and law to keep order, and have stationed certain human beings to act as the basic extension of their legislation. Known as the “legislators”, these aliens are the end all, be all of the law and the buck stops with them. Humanity struggles along under the alien rule, with the richest of the humans (the collaborators) helping the aliens in their goal to absorbing Earth’s natural resources while the rest of humanity struggles in abject poverty. The digital communication systems that we once had are completely cut off, and while the alien race puts on a facade of being benevolent dictators, their iron rule of law and complete control of all communication shows them for what they really are.
Director Rupert Wyatt never seems to really connect the film with his audience, despite having an engaging premise. His story is a bit too cluttered, and I felt like an outsider looking in, instead of an active participant in the story. The story really feels like a rushed miniseries instead of a movie, and very well may have done better on the TV screen with more time allotted to flesh out the plot. The movie paints in broad strokes of black and white, but never really engages the audience with the plight of their heroes. Things unfold and happen on screen, but there’s a strange disconnect in the emotional resonance of the story. At times I really was pulled into the resistance and their plight, but most of the time I spent the movie looking in wondering why I was supposed to care.
Rating:
Rated PG-13 for sci-fi violence and action, some sexual content, brief language and drug material
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• Igniting a War - Featurette
• Building the World of Captive State - Featurette
Final Score:

Captive State is a slow burn alien movie that is much more intimate and humanity based than your average shoot em up. Director Rupert Wyatt introduces some solid ideas with the plot, but gets his film a bit too overstuffed for its own good, and the film suffers from a strange disconnect from the viewer. While it’s a fun enough watch for a decent rental, the movie isn’t going to be a classic alien movie and really is not much more than a decent slow burn popcorn movie. Universal’s Blu-ray is stunning to look at and listen to, but suffers the typical weak extras of non blockbuster films that is prevalent in today’s home video market. Solid watch.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: John Goodman, Vera Farmiga, Ashton Sanders, Alan Ruck, James Ransone, Kevin Dunn, Jonathan Majors, Madeline Brewers
Directed by: Rupert Wyatt
Written by: Erica Beeney, Rupert Wyatt
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, French DTS 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, French, Spanish
Studio: Universal
Rated: PG-13
Runtime: 110 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: June 11th, 2019
Recommendation: Decent Watch