Plot
Zane, an astronomer discovers intelligent alien life. But the aliens are keeping a deadly secret, and will do anything to stop Zane from learning it.
Release Year: 1996
Rating: 6.2/10 (14,435 voted)
Director:
David Twohy
Stars: Charlie Sheen, Lindsay Crouse, Richard Schiff
Storyline Zane Ziminski is an astrophysicist who receives a message that seems to have extraterrestrial origins. Eerily soon after his discovery, Zane is fired. He then embarks on a search to determine the origins of the transmission that leads him into a Hitchcockian labyrinth of paranoia and intrigue.
Cast: Charlie Sheen
-
Zane Zaminsky
Lindsay Crouse
-
Ilana Green
Richard Schiff
-
Calvin
Shane
-
JPL Guard #1
Ron Silver
-
Phil Gordian
/
Mexican Guard
Teri Polo
-
Char
Phyllis Applegate
-
Mrs. Roosevelt
Alan Coates
-
Terraformer
Leon Rippy
-
DOD #1
Buddy Joe Hooker
-
DOD #2
Javier Morga
-
Co-worker
Tony T. Johnson
-
Kiki
Catalina Botello
-
N.C.A.R. Woman
Georg Lillitsch
-
Computer Tech
David Villalpando
-
Cabbie
Taglines:
For centuries we've bee watching the skies, when we should have bee watching our backs.
Release Date: 31 May 1996
Filming Locations: Grove Street, Bishop, California, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $25,000,000
(estimated)
Gross: $14,048,372
(USA)
(18 August 1996)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Goofs:
Miscellaneous:
The large black scorpion above the light switch in Llana's room has no stinger.
Quotes:
[right before he kills an alien]
Zane Ziminski:
Do you want to see the ruins, my friend?
User Review
A very intense film
Rating: 8/10
What makes The Arrival so good is that it's paranoia could be real. Where
as scientists tell us that global warming is the result of smokestacks and
deforestization and factories, this film has other ideas. And the ones
that
are in here are a little more frightening than what the scientists think.
Think for one second all that has happened over the last decade or so.
Think of all the ecological changes that we are facing right now. These
crisis are all a result of our greed and our industrializaton, which in a
way can be a euphanism of greed. And this film takes all that we know
about
ozones and animal extinction and global warming and such and puts its own
little spin on it. What if a species that is greater than us has looked
at
what we are and decided that we are too stupid to take care of our own
planet so they will take it away from us. After all, according to the
theories that this movie subscribes to, we are wasting and destroying this
planet anyway, why not speed up the process?
Charlie Sheen stars as an astronomer who thinks he hears a definitive
signal
from outer space. But when he brings it to his boss he learns that due to
budget cut backs his department is being eliminated. So his signal theory
falls on deaf ears. But from here on out the movie becomes almost
Hitchcockian in the way that you have a character that knows something
that
no one will believe, not his superiors, not his girlfriend, not even his
friends. And so it is up to him to try and find a way to convince
everyone
that he is not crazy and that he is telling the truth. And what makes
this
film work so well is two things really. The first being the story that
was
written David Twohy. He also wrote The Fugitve so we know right away he
is
a good writer. Here he has some excellent characters and crisp dialogue
for
them to speak. The script is a real positive here. But the second thing
about this film that really makes it work is the portrayal that Sheen
gives
of Zane. Sheen always looks confused and amazed at the same time. He
can't
believe what it is that he has uncovered and his expressions and his
mannerisms really do his character justice. I can honestly say that the
last time I saw fear like this from anyone that saw aliens first hand was
in
James Cameron's incredible 1986 film Aliens. It has taken ten years for
someone else to get an actor to show true fear when it comes to the
subject
of ETs. Most films have the stars crack clever jokes about the aliens
that
they are meeting for the first time. They rarely show fear but in The
Arrival, Sheen is always afraid. He is never shown as anything more than
a
normal human being that has uncovered an ugly truth about the true agenda
of
what the aliens are realy up to. His performance is one of the best
things
about this film.
The Arrival is intense. It doesn't stop for a breather too often and it
is
very intelligent. It has interesting opinions and it also makes you
question our own intentions when it comes to the well being of our planet.
Most people passed this one over when it came out because Independence Day
came out a mere month later, but as good as ID4 was, this is a different
kind of movie. It is more serious and has an opinion on some very
political
issues. It never runs out of steam and it is very entertaining. I highly
recommend that you give it a chance.
0