|
NOTICE:
The page below has been permenently FROZEN as of January 2000.
Due to resource limitations,
this section of our website is no longer maintained,
so some links may not work and some information may be out of date.
We have retained this page for archive reference only,
and we cannot vouch for its accuracy.
Broken links will not be repaired,
and minor errors will not be corrected.
You are responsible for independently verifying any information you may find here.
On this page:
Local Documents
| Articles
| Reviews
| ID4 Synopsis
Independence Day
A Curmudgeon's Guide to America's Most Overhyped Movie
|
"As I watched the alien invaders in Independence Day zap the
White House and pretty much everything else on the face of the
earth, I tried my best to suspend disbelief, and succeeded in the
wrong way. In a summer of aggressively dumb big movies, I do believe
this one is the dumbest....
Despite anything you may have heard or read in
the past few days, this movie is an overlong, insultingly clumsy
compendium of B-movie clichés, with accordingly cheesy special
effects."
-- Wall Street Journal, July 5, 1996
|
The earth is nearly destroyed in this big budget remake of War
of the Worlds. "Area 51" is the setting for
about a third of the movie, but it in no way resembles the real thing.
This page provides a synopsis and critical reviews.
Related Topics: War on the E.T. Highway | Area
51
Local Documents
Articles
- 7/17/96: Post, CERT(sm) Advisory CA-96.13, "ID4
virus, Alien/OS Vulnerability."
- 7/10/96: Article, The Toronto Star, "Independence
Day no hit with believer in extraterrestrials."
- 7/9/96: CSETI press release
criticizing the portrayal of extraterrestrials in the film Independence
Day.
- 7/4/96: Article, Invasion
Of The Pod People! Am I The Only One Left Who Sees The "Independence
Day" Conspiracy?," by Glenn Campbell. Groom Lake Desert Rat.
- 6/30/96: New York Times, "Computers
Now, Apocalypse Coming Right Up," by Bruce Newman.
- 4/19/96: Newspaper article, Las Vegas Review Journal,
"Hollywood invades the E.T.
Highway: State officials, movie stars and directors help dedicate
a stretch of road with an
alien-themed title", by Shaun McKinnon. Report on E.T. Highway
Unveiling.
- 4/14/96: USENET post, "Independence
Day" Exploits UFO Community.
- 3/30/96: "Doubletalk
on the E.T. Highway." As the Research Center prepares for war
on the "E.T. Highway," a Fox publicity manager responds to requests
about their movie and its involvement with the
state. From DR#35.
- 3/29/96: Announcement
of ID4 Web Site.
- 3/22/96: Email, excerpt
from Fox Memo regarding military participation in making of ID4.
- 3/22/96: News Article, Las Vegas Review Journal,
"Miller, 'aliens' To
Converge: Stars of a new alien film will be on hand when the governor
dedicates the Extraterrestrial Highway." Report on upcoming unveiling
of Alien Highway signs in Rachel.
- 3/20/96: AP Wire, "Nevada's
New "Extraterrestrial Highway" Gets Hollywood-Style Launch With 20th
Century Fox's "Independence Day"; Gov. Miller, Film's Stars To
Attend Unveiling And Dedication Ceremony."
Reviews
- 7/8/96: Newsweek, "'Earth,
You Have a Problem': Kaboooom!." Aliens invade the Land of the
Free. By David Ansen.
...Which brings us to "Independence Day." Unless you were sharing
a cabin with the Unabomber, you already know what it's about (space
aliens invade the planet, Earth fights back). So does it live up to
the hype? Well, if I were a 10-year-old boy, I'd probably think it
was the coolest movie going. Actually, I saw this movie when I was
10, for it turns out to be a reincarnation of a cheeseball '50s B
science-fiction flick, albeit a B movie that cost $70 million and
comes with a PG-13 rating, which means its ideal audience needs Mom's
and Dad's consent. (Give it.)...
- 7/5/96: Wall Street Journal, "ETs
Bomb U.S.; Travolta Turns Sweet," by Joe Morgenstern.
As I watched the alien invaders in "Independence Day" zap
the White House and pretty much everything else on the face of the
earth, I tried my best to suspend disbelief, and succeeded in the
wrong way. In a summer of aggressively dumb big movies, I do believe
this one is the dumbest....
- 7/3/96: Time, "Critic's
Choice," by Brandon Judell.
"Independence Day" is more than a film. It is an event, one hatched
by the savvy 20th Century Fox publicity department and a media in need of
such hoopla. So well have these two forces accomplished their tasks,
that there was an actual buzz of excitement among the usually very jaded
movie-goers attending an advance unspooling of this epic-wannabe. Then,
when the opening credits first appeared, there was great applause and
even cheers....
- 7/3/96:
Raleigh News & Observer, "After
special effects, 'Independence Day'falls flat,' by Bill Dupre.
No, we are not alone - there's this horrible, horrible thing out there
called "Independence Day." Meanwhile, the search for intelligent life
continues....
- 7/2/96: New York Times, "'Independence
Day': Space Aliens and Chance to Save Planet," by Janet Maslin.
For months we've been told that "Independence Day," the latter-day
"War of the Worlds" in which extraterrestrials set their sights on 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue, would be the mother of all this year's summer
action movies....
- 7/1/96: Washington Post, "`Independence
Day': Fireworks but No Sparklers," by Rita Kempley.
"Independence Day," the eagerly anticipated alien juggernaut, is fueled
not by cosmic imagination, but by plain, old-fashioned ballyhoo. An
overgrown hybrid of disaster epic, can-do combat adventure and '50s
sci-fi movie, this craft has visited our world many times before.
And while she's a beaut, the sticker on her titanium bumper reads:
"Been There, Done That, Beam Me Up, Scotty."....
- 7/1/96: Reuters, "Independence
Day," by Todd McCarthy.
HOLLYWOOD (Variety) - ``Independence Day'' is the biggest B
movie ever made, the mother of all doomsday dramas. A
spectacularly scaled mix of '50s-style alien invader science
fiction, '70s disaster epics and all-season gung-ho military
actioners, this airborne leviathan features a bunch of agreeably
cardboard characters saving the human race from mass
extermination in a way that proves as unavoidably entertaining
as it is hopelessly cornball....
ID4 Synopsis
- Plot: Uncredited remake of War of the Worlds.
Note: This summary is a "spoiler," since it tells you how the
movie comes out and might ruin the suspense. We publish it here because
Fox has left the arena of pure entertainment and entered state politics,
subjecting it to the normal rules of news reporting.
From original script...
FADE IN. After being detected by radiotelescopes on July
2, a huge alien ship approaches Earth and is at first thought to be
benign. It splits into multiple ships which hover above Earth's major
cities. Naive UFO buffs gather on rooftops with signs welcoming the
aliens, but a cable TV technician sees danger in the signals emanating
from the otherwise silent ships. He manages to alert the President,
for whom his ex-wife happens to be press secretary. Based on this
new information, the President immediately orders evacuation of all
the cities. Just then, the ships unleash the WALL OF DESTRUCTION
- the main character in the film. After many futile attempts to stop
it, the WALL decimates most of the world's metropolises.
Billions killed. The President and a few other survivors take refuge
at Area 51. In a final all-or-nothing battle, the cable guy joins
forces with a fighter jock to fly a captured alien scout craft back
to its orbiting mothership. The President, piloting a fighter jet,
provides air support. A computer virus, designed by the cable guy,
is delivered to the mothership. Mothership destroyed. Earth saved.
Heroines fall into arms of heroes, as pieces of the mothership rain
down in "Fourth of July" fireworks. FADE OUT. ROLL CREDITS.
- Setting: Worldwide, but many scenes at Washington D.C.
and Area 51.
- Time Period: Present day, culminating on the 4th of July,
hence the name.
- Cities Destroyed: From original script
- New York
- Atlanta
- Washington
- Chicago
- Los Angeles
- Philadelphia
- Edwards Air Force Base
- NORAD
- London
- Delhi
- Toyko
- Bonn (or Berlin)
- ... and many, many more.
- The Script: Written in four weeks by Dean Devlin and Roland
Emmerich
- Studio: Twentieth Century Fox.
- Selling points: Area 51, special effects, major cities
being destroyed.
- Weak points: script, characters, plot, lack of big-name stars
- Director: Roland Emmerich
- Producers
- Dean Devlin
- Roland Emmerich
- Ute Emmerich
- William Fay
- Actors
- Adam Baldwin
- Margaret Colin
- Harry Connick Jr. .... F-18 Fighter Pilot
- James Duval
- Harvey Fierstein
- Vivica Fox
- Jeff Goldblum .... David Levinson
- Judd Hirsch
- Robert Loggia
- Mary McDonnell
- Matthew Perry
- Bill Pullman .... President Thomas Whitmore
- Randy Quaid
- Will Smith .... Steve Hill
- Brent Spiner .... Scientist
- Filming Locations
- Los Angeles
- Washington
- Wendover, Utah
- ET HWY/ID4 Hotline: (310) 369-4217
- WWW
This page has been frozen.
New links are not allowed and broken links will not be repaired
+indicates documents stored on this server.
|
 Reader Comments |
Regarding "Independence Day" - Latest First
|
|
Air Force jet? Where do people get this idea?
Even if I had not payed attention to people calling Will Smith's character, "Marine", that he wore a Marine uniform, and that he was stationed at MCAS El Toro, the fact that he was flying an F/A-18 Hornet was quite a large CLUE that he in fact was a Marine...not Air Force. The attacks were coordinated by the USAF. Besides the flight scenes themselves, what was laughable was that El Toro hosted a T-38, and F-16s, which ARE AF aircraft. The movie is fiction, just for entertainment. Enjoy it for that aspect.
|
|
|
Gimme a break...
I liked the movie. Sure it was unbelievable. I don't go
to the movies for believable, I go to be entertained. The
furor this movie has produced is what is really unbelievable.
That you people would dedicate a website to denouncing this
piece of entertaining fluff is remarkable, and probably says
something about how starved for entertainment we all are.
-- Steve Winkler
3/8/98 (#43)
|
|
|
ID4 GOOD MOVIE BUT SOMEWHAT INACCURATE!@!!!!!!@#$%^&**(&&$@
ID4 was a good movie!!!but we all know that Hollywood can be extremely inaccurate sometimes!!!!so how many of you out there know that a f-18 fighter plane is not an air force
jet, but a U.S. NAVY JET??? I think that we all know that hollywood can do anything it wants to (just like the damn police)so you all get a life and quit complaining about
things you know that are wrong!!!!
-- coolernerdly
9/18/97 (#42)
|
|
|
My Movie
Independence Day was a horrible movie. I regret ever agreeing to be in it. How could anyone believe we would be attacked by aliens? A movie about some old guy cloning dinosaurs would be fantastic. That might actually happen.
- This comment was posted from aol.com.
|
|
View 37 Other Comments
This page has been frozen.
New comments are not allowed.
Created: 7/3/96
Last Modified: 12/8/96 tm.e
|