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Girl with All the Gifts (2016) [Blu-ray]
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
Sennia Nanua, Gemma Arterton, Glenn Close, Paddy Considine, Anamaria Marinca, Dominique Tipper. |
Director: |
Colm McCarthy |
Genre: |
Drama | Horror | Sci-Fi | Thriller |
DVD Release Date: 04/25/2017 |
Tagline: Our greatest threat is our only hope
The near future humanity has been all but destroyed by a mutated fungal disease that eradicates free will and turns its victims into flesh-eating "hungries". Only a small group of children seem immune to its effects. At an army base in rural England, this
group of unique children are being studied, subjected to cruel experiments by biologist Dr. Caldwell. Despite having been infected with the zombie pathogen that has decimated the world, these children retain normal thoughts and emotions. And while still
being subject to the craving for human flesh that marks the disease these second-generation "hungries" are able to think and feel making them a vital resource in the search for a cure. The children attend school lessons daily, guarded by the ever watchful
Sergeant Parks. But one little girl, Melanie, stands out from the rest. Melanie is special. She excels in the classroom, is inquisitive, imaginative and loves her favourite teacher Miss Justineau. When the base falls, Melanie escapes along with Miss
Justineau, Sergeant Parks and Dr. Caldwell. Against the backdrop of a blighted Britain, Melanie must discover what she is and ultimately decide both her own future and that of the human race.
Storyline: In a dystopian near future, humanity has been ravaged by a mysterious fungal disease. The afflicted are robbed of all free will and turned into flesh-eating 'hungries'. Humankind's only hope is a small group of hybrid children who crave
human flesh but retain the ability to think and feel. The children go to school at an army base in rural Britain, where they're subjected to cruel experiments by Dr. Caroline Caldwell (Glenn Close). School teacher Helen Justineau (Gemma Arterton) grows
particularly close to an exceptional girl named Melanie (Sennia Nanua), thus forming a special bond. But when the base is invaded, the trio escape with the assistance of Sgt. Eddie Parks (Paddy Considine) and embark on a perilous journey of survival,
during which Melanie must come to terms with who she is.
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, April 21, 2017 Despite how unusual it is, remember this name: Sennia Nanua. Not to toot my own horn (at least not much, anyway), I'd refer you to my long ago Winter's Bone Blu-ray review
where I trumpeted (sorry) the efforts of a then little known actress going by the name of Jennifer Lawrence, (correctly) predicting Academy Award nominations and a notable career for the actress, then just at the beginning of what has turned out to be a
rather remarkable several years of prime film performances. Though Sennia is a good deal younger than even how quite young Lawrence was several years ago when Winter's Bone first appeared, I feel confident in making the same sort of prognostication
with regard to this incredible little girl, one who more or less anchors The Girl With All the Gifts, a really interesting take on the by now tired zombie genre, despite the involvement of such other notables as Glenn Close and Gemma Arterton. It's
notable that it takes a while for The Girl With All the Gifts to ultimately reveal its "Walking Dead" attributes, and indeed that's one of the best things about this often riveting film. Instead, The Girl With All the Gifts begins
in medias res, documenting a patently weird situation where an apparently preternaturally sweet little girl named Melanie (Sennia Nanua) is kept isolated in a cell, allowed "out" (which means into other places in a secured bunker) only when she's
securely strapped and confined to a wheelchair. While there are certain narrative elisions that screenwriter M.R. Carey (adapting his own novel) employs that perhaps could have been filled in a little better, it turns out Melanie is one of a gaggle of
so-called "second generation" children who have been born in the wake of a huge fungal infection which has turned the vast bulk of humankind into, yep, zombies, or at least something akin to zombies. The children seem relatively normal until they catch a
whiff of good old human "meat", at which point they transform rather abruptly into white eyed demons intent on having a snack (so to speak), hence the restraint systems that are in place. The Girl With All the Gifts is in many ways one of the more
remarkable reimaginings of zombie lore, one that should appeal not just to devoted horror fans but also to those who like character based dramas that just happen to play out in a post-Apocalyptic environment.
Melanie's kind of melancholic existence doesn't seem to have affected her emotional outlook, at least not that she's willing to let on. This is one almost annoyingly polite and sweet little girl, one who greets the soldiers who keep her at gunpoint as
she's strapped into her wheelchair and who scream at her favorite teacher Miss Justineau (Gemma Arterton) when Justineau caresses Melanie's head, something that is strictly off limits. The disease free humans regularly smear a "scent blocker" all over
themselves, which makes them "invisible" (or whatever the olfactory equivalent to that is), and in an early and quite shocking reveal, martinet commander Sgt. Parks (Paddy Considine) smears a little saliva on his forearm and then dangles it in front of
one of the kids, who lurches into spasms of zombieism, clacking his jaw manically as he attempts to get to the "food". Parks makes it quite clear that getting too close to any of these kids is a dangerous gambit. It's notable that virtually all of the
soldiers in the film refer to each of the children, whatever their gender, as "it".
Melanie's sunny outlook extends to Dr. Caldwell (Glenn Close), a researcher who regularly plies Melanie with various riddles (including the famous conundrum involving Schrödinger's cat) to see how smart the little girl is. Caldwell is working on a vaccine
for the fungal outbreak, and it turns out she's dissecting various children in an attempt to harvest the appropriate antibodies to create the serum. Melanie is smart enough to figure out that when Caldwell asks Melanie to name a number between one and
twenty, Melanie is in fact choosing who the next kid to undergo Caldwell's scalpel will be. Unsurprisingly, Melanie quickly proffers her own number, which in turn gets her outside for probably the first time in her life, as Parks and a bunch of armed
escorts take the amazed little girl to Caldwell's lab.
Unfortunately (or perhaps fortunately, considering what's in store for little Melanie), the base is just then being overrun by hordes of "hungries", as this film terms those who have contracted the fungal disease. These particular zombies aren't
confined to moving slowly, and in fact they kind of burst into hypersonic speed when they smell nearby munchables. In a kind of almost funny (but gruesome) sequence, the infected souls barge in on the lab, where Miss Justineau has already intruded, hoping
to prevent the demise of Melanie. The upshot of everything is that the base is obviously compromised, and a small group of survivors, including of course Caldwell, Parks, Justineau and Melanie herself, set off into the outside world to try to find a safe
haven and, perhaps, other uninfected humans.
It's here that The Girl With All the Gifts perhaps loses just a bit of momentum, with some character beats that probably aren't completely necessary. Ultimately, some folks make it and others don't (as should be expected), and there's a completely
predictable plot point considering Caldwell that might have been handled a bit more artfully, but the general tone of this film is both completely distinctive and, finally, rather unexpectedly moving. The title of the film is an indirect reference to the
story of Pandora, and in fact Melanie ends up unleashing a certain set of horrors herself in the film's fiery climax. But like the Greek goddess herself, Melanie refuses to give up hope, even in a world that seems inherently hopeless.
There are a couple of minor issues with The Girl With All the Gifts, including the ambivalence as to whether Melanie's "condition" leaves her incapable of resisting the urge to cannibalize or not (the film clearly presents it both ways, at
different times). There are also some probably unintendedly comic moments when Melanie attempts to subdue feral children in scenes that play oddly like the Dawn of Man sequence in 2001: A Space Odyssey. But overall this is an unusually thoughtful
and viscerally effective piece of filmmaking, one that has an unexpected twist on the by now way too familiar zombie genre and one which caught me rather by surprise, delivering a uniquely compelling viewing experience. And best of all it also has an
incredible performance by Sennia Nanua. You heard it here first. Technical merits are strong and The Girl With All the Gifts comes Highly recommended.
Trivia:- Based on the book 'The Girl With All The Gifts' by M.R. Carey
- Some of the aerial footage was shot by a second unit in the ghost town of Prypjat, near Chernobyl, in the Ukraine. Director Colm McCarthy: "I was very interested in post-apocalyptic imagery and urban exploration. We wanted to surprise people rather
than have people coming in expecting a studio level film. We sent a micro drone unit to Pripyat, Chernobyl to shoot helicopter footage with Pripyat doubling for urban London." [2016]
- The film shares similar themes and plot points to the PS4 video game the Last of Us. Both feature a fungal zombie plague, both have a last stage of infection where people sprout spore pods, both zombies overwhelming rely on a single sense (smell and
sound respectively) meaning the heroes can move from hordes, both feature a young girl who potentially has the cure who needs to be moved through the infected zone, both focus on her relationship with a gruff reluctant father figure. The similarities were
highlighted in several reviews.
- Glenn Close's sister-in-law, Deb Close, is a massive fan of zombie films, having always wanted to be in one, and has a small role as one of the "hungries" in the scene where the group has to work their way through a crowd of them. She is the one
wearing a blue knit, with green facial fungus and blood around the mouth and neck, that Glenn stares at as her character walks past. Deb flew to the UK especially for the part, and the first thing Glenn did after accepting her role was call to let Deb
know she was in a zombie film.
- In the book, Helen Justineau is described as a dark-skinned black woman in her 40's. Miss Justineau's dark skin is also a draw for Melanie, as the character states more than once in the book. Melanie also considers her teacher the most beautiful woman
in the world. An excerpt from the book says; 'Although Miss Justineau's face stands out anyway because it's such a wonderful, wonderful colour. It's dark brown, like the wood of the trees in Melanie's rainforest picture whose seeds only grow out of the
ashes of a bushfire, or like the coffee that Miss Justineau pours out of her flask into her cup at break time. Except it's darker and richer than either of those things, with lots of other colours mixed in, so there isn't anything you can really compare
it to'. A short story written by Melanie in class describes Miss Justineau's general appearance: "Once upon a time there was a very beautiful woman. The most beautiful and kind and clever and amazing woman in all the world. She was tall and not bent over,
with skin so dark she was like her own shadow, and long black hair that curled around so much it made you dizzy to look at her". Gemma Arterton, who is white, was cast for the role. She was in her late 20's when the film was shot.
- Sennia Nanua's feature film debut.
- Cameo: Mike Carey: Writer of the book and film briefly appears as one of the "hungries" thrashing against the fence to the military base, wearing a jacket and blue shirt at the front.
(Possible Spoilers) *** The trivia items below may give away important plot points. ***
- There is a real-life fungus that bears a remarkable resemblance to the one described in the movie. The O.unilateralis, or zombie fungus, thankfully only infects carpenter ants. When the ants are first infected they undergo severe whole body
convulsions (as seen in the human hosts of the movie). The fungus then starts controlling their brain. Eventually, the zombie fungus directs the ant to climb up a tree where the 'next stage of the fungus' life cycle' occurs. Specifically, as seen in the
movie, the fungus grows through the victim's head to produce a long stalk; when the conditions are right, pods open to make the fungus airborne, allowing it to infect many more hosts. Interestingly, the ant zombie fungus also protects its infected host
from some environmental pathogens, as also seen with Melanie's symbiote.
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[CSW] -3.9- As I often remind folks good science fiction ends in an idea rather than an action. This was good Sci-Fi wrapped in an apocalyptic zombie movie. After the cause of the "hungries" is explained the question is can mankind find a cure using
scientific methods? Are there enough uncontaminated people left and if not what is the outcome of the human race. It is billed as drama, horror, and thriller but I saw it as good philosophical sci-fi. If you look it as just a zombie movie with no
philosophical or sci-fi overtones, it will seem a bit disappointing even though it is a pretty new take on that genre. But if you include those then the two twists at the end represent the expression of a great idea, and as I said before, good science
fiction ends in an idea rather than an action making this a great science fiction film.
[V4.5-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box
Cast Notes:
Sennia Nanua (Melanie),
Fisayo Akinade (Kieran Gallagher),
Dominique Tipper (Devani),
Paddy Considine (Sgt Eddie Parks),
Anamaria Marinca (Dr. Jean Selkirk),
Gemma Arterton (Helen Justineau),
Anthony Welsh (Dillon),
Glenn Close (Dr. Caroline Caldwell),
Mia Garcha (Melanie),
Double),
Grace McGee (Anne),
Eli Lane (Kenny),
Connor Pratt (Peter),
Joe),
Lomas (Joe),
Will Brooks (Painted Boy),
Joe),
l Sheldon (T-Shirt Boy).
IMDb Rating (12/14/17): 8.4/10 from 157,835 users Top 250: #66
Additional information |
Copyright: |
2016, Lionsgate Films |
Features: |
- Unwrap the Secret World of The Girl With All the Gifts (1080p; 20:45) is an okay EPK that has some fun interviews and
candid footage, especially of Glenn Close, who looks like she's kind of a goofball on set.
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Subtitles: |
English SDH, Spanish |
Video: |
Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Resolution: 1080p Aspect ratio: 2.00:1 Original aspect ratio: 2.00:1 |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
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Time: |
1:51 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
ASIN: |
B01LTIAQE6 |
UPC: |
031398262480 |
Coding: |
[V4.5-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC |
D-Box: |
No |
Other: |
Producers: Camille Gatin, Angus Lamont; Writers: Mike Carey (novel and screenplay); Directors: Colm McCarthy; running time of 111 minutes; Packaging: Slipcover in original pressing. Blu-ray Only --- (DVD
and UV digital copy and Digital copy --> Given Away) |
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