Ender's Game (2013) [Blu-ray]
Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi
Tagline: The future must be won
As fears of an alien invasion grow, Earth's International Fleet recruits an unlikely leader - a young and brilliant boy - to command its forces and fight for the future of the human race. Based on the worldwide bestseller and featuring an all-star cast,
Ender's Game bursts with epic adventure and stunning visual effects.Storyline: The Earth was ravaged by the Formics, an alien race seemingly determined to destroy humanity. Seventy years later, the people of Earth remain banded
together to prevent their own annihilation from this technologically superior alien species. Ender Wiggin, a quiet but brilliant boy, may become the savior of the human race. He is separated from his beloved sister and his terrifying brother and brought
to battle school in orbit around earth. He will be tested and honed into an empathetic killer who begins to despise what he does as he learns to fight in hopes of saving Earth and his family. Written by CrystalSinger45, Jesse Daniels,
strouda56
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman on January 25, 2014 -- The legendary Arthur C. Clarke ( 2001: A Space Odyssey) famously posited an alien who looked like The Devil in his epochal novel Childhood's End,
certainly one of the more fanciful imaginings of what our first contact with visitors from outer space might entail. But more and more over the past few decades, it seems that science fiction has been overrun by nasty bad beasts from beyond the Milky Way
who look like various insects. All sorts of properties from the Starship Troopers Trilogy to the Alien Anthology have grossed out viewers with various bug-like creatures that may have left even the most ecologically minded begging for the
return of DDT. Add Ender's Game to that seemingly ever increasing list. In fact in the book series by Orson Scott Card which gave birth to this film, the aliens are referred to pejoratively as Buggers, though the film utilizes Card's later
formulation, the supposedly more scientific sounding term Formic, which refers to the Latin word for ant, formica (which begs the question of what the developers of the laminate countertops were thinking). Ender's Game had an unusually long
gestational period between its first appearance and its film adaptation, at least part of which was due to novelist Card's insistence that he have creative control over the adaptation. While Card does indeed have a producing credit on the film, the rest
of the creative crew may have actually wanted to create a little distance between themselves and Card after some of Card's long held beliefs about homosexuality and same sex marriage created a firestorm just as the film was about to hit theaters. Card's
contrarian worldview is part and parcel of Ender's Game, though certainly not with regard to either of the "issues" mentioned above. Instead, Card in his novel addresses several really interesting and even provocative ideas, including the
militarization of youth and the slow but stunning realization that sometimes an enemy may not indeed be as dangerous as originally thought. While both of these concepts make it into the film version of Ender's Game, the film is surprisingly flat at
times, never really fully exploiting some of Card's almost deliberately challenging theses.
Earth barely survived its first encounter with the Formic, and it has spent the intervening fifty years making sure that any new encounter will result in the Formic's destruction. Part of the planet's strategy is to raise kids with nonstop access
to videogames that feature battle scenarios (wait—isn't this supposed to be the future?). Those with especially promising gaming skills are recruited to be part of a paramilitary organization where they are trained, again in a game simulation
environment, to ultimately take on the Formic in what is anticipated is an imminent, unavoidable maelstrom. The kids are repeatedly shown film of hero Mazer Rackham saving Earth by flying his craft directly into the literal belly of the beast, a huge
hovering mother ship whose destruction put an end to the Formic's initial invasion of the planet.
Fifty years after Rackham's heroism, a young boy named Ender Wiggin (Asa Butterfield) has attracted the attention of two officers in the International Fleet, Colonel Hyrum Graff (Harrison Ford) and Major Gwen Anderson (Viola Anderson), who keep track of
the boy via a monitor that has been implanted in Ender's neck. They watch him easily defeat a much older kid in a violent videogame, and furthermore deal strategically with the kid's none to pleased reaction after having lost. Ender is taken to an
infirmary where the monitor is removed, which leads Ender to believe he has failed to make the cut at the military academy. Shortly thereafter, he's accosted by the kid whom he beat in the videogame and several of the kid's buddies, but he rather handily
dispatches all of them in hand to hand combat. It turns out that Graff and Anderson don't actually need the monitor to keep track of Ender (shades of the NSA), and they're more excited than ever that this young man may in fact be the heir to Rackham for
whom they've been searching.
Ender arrives home absolutely distraught over the removal of the monitor and the subsequent showdown with the older kids, and he confides in his sister Valentine (Abigail Breslin), a girl who herself had not made the cut in the same training academy Ender
also attended. (The siblings' overly violent eldest brother was also summarily dismissed from the academy.) However, things begin to look up when Graff shows up at Ender's home and invites him to the next step up in the training regimen, Battle School.
It's at this location that the bulk of the rest of Ender's Game takes place, as Ender is put through his paces as a kind of grunt (initially called "launchies") learning the ropes of the military organization and also having to deal with a
seemingly unending array of bullies who don't like the fact that he seems to be getting prepared by Graff to assume leadership duties.
The film is almost ridiculously formulaic at various points, despite its unusual setting and themes. Ender is initially an outcast, but slowly wins the respect of his fellow "gamers", a transition which is depicted in an almost funny scene (shot from
overhead) where kids at other lunch tables come over to join Ender, who had been sitting alone at his. Is this a high school popularity contest or something? Ender of course bonds with a pretty young recruit named Petra (Hailee Steinfeld), but
continues to run afoul of various nemeses, most notably a pugnacious superior aptly named Bonzo (Moisés Arias). And in fact there's a rather odd dichotomy in the film where teamwork is both celebrated and simultaneously denigrated, since, as one of the
adults tells the kids, their "comrades" are also their competitors. It's distinctly at odds with the way most military units tend to breed groupthink, and something that keeps coming back (too many times, some might argue) to haunt Ender, who seems to
repeatedly be the "class nerd", so to speak, subject to being bullied by the more "popular kids".
Ender's Game has a couple of relatively decent developments, including one featuring Bonzo, that manage to give the film some forward momentum. But a late appearance by Sir Ben Kingsley in a kind of "special guest star" role (which won't be spoiled
here, despite its predictability) threatens to derail the film. And the seemingly near incestuous appearing relationship between Ender and Valentine is less emotionally affecting than it is downright disturbing. In fact the film is weirdly emotionless.
This is probably nowhere better seen than in the closing moments of the film, in what amounts to more a less a cinematic coda. Ender's ability to ferret out what his enemies are thinking has been a running subplot throughout the film, and a late
denouement allows him to finally grasp something about the Formic that (of course) no one had previously caught on to. Ender's heroic move at this point, something that would seem to be one of the most epochal moments in Card's original formulation of the
story, is here handled almost as an afterthought, and as such, there's absolutely no real emotional connection to the act. There may be tears in Ender's eyes as the film fades to black, but my hunch is there aren't very many in any audience members'.
Ender's Game is perfectly serviceable in virtually every area, but I personally kept wishing it simply had more emotional heft. This is a really strangely cold and dispassionate space opera, something that seems decidedly odd considering it deals
with a very emotional hero. The film has stunning visuals and its themes are quite relevant to our contemporary world, but if you're looking for something to actually move you, this is probably not the right property. This Blu-ray has top
notch technical merits and comes with some good supplements. Recommended.
[CSW] -3.8- I thought this film was very well crafted on every level. The story was well-paced. You were given the information you needed, and no more, so you didn't wind up buried in inconsequential details you didn't need. The characters were also
well-played. One area where sci-fi as a genre can sometimes fall short is in character, and these characters are all strong, recognizable and human, for better or worse. The FX are spectacular, but all of it is in service of the story (which is as it
should be). There's a lot of food for thought here (and no easy answers). There is the question of leadership and how it develops, and the even bigger question about what war is, and what might be sacrificed in order to win. Really good science fiction
leaves you with an idea not an action no matter what medium it is presented in and this movie is good science fiction - and I'll bet the book was even better.
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.
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