
One of the first things a viewer notices about
Cloverfield is that it doesn't play by ordinary storytelling rules, making this intriguing horror film as much a novelty as an event. Told
from the vertiginous point-of-view of a camcorder-wielding group of friends,
Cloverfield begins
like a primetime television soap opera about young Manhattanites coping
with changes in their personal lives. Rob (Michael Stahl-David) is leaving New York to take an executive job at a company in Japan. At his goodbye party in a crowded loft, Rob's brother Jason (Mike Vogel) hands a camcorder to
best friend Hud (T.J. Miller), who proceeds to tape the proceedings over old footage of Rob's ex-girlfriend, Beth (Odette Yustman)--images shot during happy times in that now-defunct relationship. Naturally, Beth shows up at the party
with a new beau, bumming Rob out completely.
Just be
fore one's eyes glaze over
from all this heartbreaking stuff (captured by Hud, who's something of a doofus, in laughably shaky camerawork), the unexpected happens: New York is suddenly under attack
from a Godzilla-
like monster stomping through midtown and destroying everything and everybody in sight. Rob and company hit the streets, but rather than run
with other evacuees, they head toward the center of the storm so that Rob can rescue an injured Beth. There are casualties along the way, but the journey
into fear is fascinating and immediate if emotionally remote--a consequence of seeing these proceedings through the singular, subjective perspective of a camcorder and of a story that intentionally leaves major questions unanswered: Who or what is this monster? Where did it come
from? The lack of a backstory, and spare views of the marauding creature, are clever ways by producer J.J. Abrams and director Matt Reeves to keep an audience focused exclusively on what's on the screen. But it also
makes
Cloverfield curiously uninvolving. Ultimately,
Cloverfield,
with its spectacular effects brilliantly woven
into a home-video look, is a celebration of infinite possibilities in this age of accessible, digital media.
--Tom KeoghPrice: $29.99
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