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After Earth


I saw After Earth, the Will Smith/Jaden Smith movie directed by M. Night Shyamalan that releases June 2013.
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I saw After Earth, the Will Smith/Jaden Smith movie directed by M. Night Shyamalan that releases June 2013.

About the Movie:

It was a fun science fiction movie that is meant for a teenage audience. The environments are great to look, I'm not talking Avatar quality but the rough scenes that I saw were very pleasing. The story is a nice mix of a survival/scifi/monster movie with a "coming of age" dusting on top. Will Smith is in a supporting role and Jaden has the majority of the screen time. I don't want to spoil too much so if you would like to know specifics about the plot or Shyamalan just ask me.

About the Process:

The whole event was set up at a local theater in Phoenix and was run by Nielson with help from the movie theater staff. Those that showed up were all placed in a line and then the teenagers or families with teenagers were picked to go in and check out the flick. I was one of the last people to go in just to fill random seats that were still left open. We had an introduction by a kind lady who told us that we were the first audience to ever see the movie and that we were going to have to use our imaginations on some scenes because the special effects/color balancing/sound balancing had not yet been finalized. Then the movie started and afterwards we filled out a survey about the movie with questions pertaining to movie pacing, acting ability, story, action, soundtrack, and others. All in all it was an interesting experience.


'After Earth' landing with luggage: the movie actually stars Jaden Smith with a small role from dad Will and director M. Night Shyamalan's name is missing from promotional previews, billboards & posters.
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Jaden Smith asked to be emancipated from his parents at 15 years old following the critical and box office failure of After Earth
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Jaden Smith asked to be emancipated from his parents at 15 years old following the critical and box office failure of After Earth
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Jaden Smith asked to be emancipated from his parents at 15 years old following the critical and box office failure of After Earth
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Official Discussion Thread: After Earth [Spoilers]
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Official Discussion Thread: After Earth [Spoilers]

Hello everyone,

In order to curb the overabundance of discussion threads for recent films, we've decided each week we'll post an official discussion thread for major film releases so everyone can focus their discussion in one place. This is an open spoiler zone, so please note that before entering. Feel free to discuss anything about the film whether you loved it or hated it.

Be civil and be honest.


Synopsis: A crash landing leaves teenager Kitai Raige (Jaden Smith) and his legendary father Cypher (Will Smith) stranded on Earth, 1,000 years after cataclysmic events forced humanity's escape. With Cypher critically injured, Kitai must embark on a perilous journey to signal for help, facing uncharted terrain, evolved animal species that now rule the planet, and an unstoppable alien creature that escaped during the crash. Father and son must learn to work together and trust one another if they want any chance of returning home.

Director: M. Night Shyamalan

Screenplay by: Gary Whitta, M. Night Shyamalan

  • Jaden Smith - Kitai Raige

  • Will Smith - Cypher Raige

  • Isabelle Fuhrman - Rayna

  • Sophie Okonedo - Faia Raige

  • Zoë Isabella Kravitz - Senshi Raige

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 13%

Metacritic Score: 31


Box Office Report: Will Smith's 'After Earth' Loses to 'Now You See Me' in Major Misstep
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After Earth (2013) Trailer
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I got to see After Earth a while ago and wanted to post my thoughts. No Spoilers.
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I got to see After Earth a while ago and wanted to post my thoughts. No Spoilers.

I saw the movie a few months ago at an early screening and talked about it on reddit (← has spoilers). Since the movie is releasing this week I wanted to recap a few things.
 
After Earth is being marketed as a movie starring both Will Smith and Jaden Smith but I think people should know that it's primarily a Jaden Smith movie. Since he is the star the theme and tone of the movie are focused on adolescent issues. I wanted to point this out since some of M. Night's earlier work had strong adult themes and After Earth has had an odd marketing campaign were they have not come out and said it's a movie meant for Tweens.
 
That being said I found it to be enjoyable because of the sci-fi elements and fun landscapes. The movie itself though is definitely not 5 star quality nor is it a return to the acclaimed work of Shyamalan's past. As a matter of fact you wouldn't even be able to tell he directed it.
 
If anyone has any other questions or wants more juicy details just let me know. Thanks!


Jay Park, Will Smith, Jaden Smith interview at "After Earth" red carpet premiere + "I Like To Party" preview
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Jay Park, Will Smith, Jaden Smith interview at "After Earth" red carpet premiere + "I Like To Party" preview

"After Earth" and the future for M. Night Shyamalan
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"After Earth" and the future for M. Night Shyamalan

I have a weakness for Sci-Fi films and probably just special effects in general, but I do try to reference rotten tomatoes if at all possible. "After Earth" has a dismal score on the site, but this review intrigued me, especially the statement, "M. Night Shyamalan isn't quite back in top form here, but After Earth is certainly the best movie he's made in years." I have to admit, I still have hope that M. Night will recover from this...odd period he is in. "The Sixth Sense", "Unbreakable", "Signs", and "The Village" are all personal favorites of mine. I saw both "Signs" and "The Village" with friends that absolutely hated those films, but I feel that they wanted those films to be something that they were not. "Signs" worked for me as an examination of faith and human interactions, and not simply an alien invasion storyline. "The Village" is a very engaging love story to me, but really doesn't work as a creature feature. Those factors allow me to enjoy the films without focusing on the suspension of disbelief (naked aliens hurt by water? no fly zone over a forest preserve?).

However, this all came crashing down hard for me, as well as a lot of other M. Night fans, with "Lady in the Water". I believe I saw an earlier post that mentioned this film as the worst film he had ever seen. His reasons echo mine. The film is a giant middle finger to critics; it pretends to be deep without really saying anything, and it casts M. Night himself as a world savior who will save the world through his writing. I feel like the idea of this film was to make a movie that is unable to be criticized by movie critics (because they are literally and figuratively the enemy in this film), but instead it made a movie that is insulting to anyone that enjoys films.

I remember reading "The Man Who Heard Voices" before this film arrived to theaters. In Bamberger's book, he describes how M. Night was able to get the funding for this film. If you'll notice, Shyamalan's "The Village" was produced by Disney, and "Lady in the Water" was produced by Warner Bros. Bamberger describes how this change of production studios occurred. M. Night presented the script for "Lady in the Water" to Disney executives, and in a meeting, the higher-ups told M. Night that they just "didn't get it". Shyamalan is incredulous. He was the director that gave them "The Sixth Sense". No one believed in that film. He has a track record, and they need to trust him on this script and his vision for it. The Disney execs are unconvinced, and the script is shopped to Warner Bros. where production begins. The book presents a narrative that sets M. Night up as the underdog who is going to show the close-minded producers at Disney how wrong they are. They'll be eating their words soon enough; they really just didn't "get it".

I find this book to be even more interesting in restrospect. "Lady in the Water" was a financial and critical disappointment. Apparently the Disney executives actually DID "get it". M. Night's script was self-serving, pompous, and most of all, boring. They were wise to pass on it. You are forced to read the subtext of the book, as it appears that M. Night was not the visionary genius who knew that "Lady in the Water" would be a success. Instead, he was arrogant, and way off track, needing someone who was not a yes man to tell him to reevaluate.

I find this fascinating, because I think "Lady in the Water" is where M. Night went completely off the rails. This isn't a director who made one bad film and then returned to form. Or a director who got lucky on one good film, and then his following films reveal him to be mediocre. Instead, he went from very well thought of, making movies that were generally well-received and financially viable to critically ravaged films like "The Happening" and "The Last Airbender". It forces me to look back on "The Man Who Heard Voices" and characterize M. Night as a delusional filmmaker and writer who decided to make a film simply to show how insecure he was about criticism of his films (honestly, who creates a movie critic character that is savagely gored to death as he attempts to characterize his death as "cliche" and "woefully underwritten"?)

This brings me back to "After Earth". There are numerous problems with this film. The acting is questionable, the special effects are subpar, and the backstory is not fully fleshed out to be really engaging. However, I see some of the old M. Night in this film (I realize this film was a collaboration). He uses a unique backdrop, in this case a solar system which contains a post-cataclysmic earth to examine a very common emotional issue, the relationship between a father and son. In the same way that "Unbreakable" uses the Superhero backdrop to examine a failing marriage, I believe that this film is using the same technique. Does it work here as well as "Unbreakable"? Certainly not, but I do think that it is a promising return to form. Using a supernatural backdrop to examine issues of faith, family, love, loss, etc. is a very interesting idea to me. This is why I think "The Happening" failed so spectacularly. Despite it's monumentally stupid premise, the film does not have a deeper theme. You might say the love that Wahlberg finds for Deschanel, but that is neither an overarching theme, or particularly compelling. Instead, the film is completely about this plant attack, and that in and of itself is not particularly compelling. Nor is it effective as a fictionalized, "Inconvenient Truth", in forcing us to wake up and become conservationists.

Unfotunately, I can't say I really enjoyed "After Earth". The father-son dynamic unfortunately follows the infuriating movie cliche where the son needs to "prove" to his father that he's a man and can take care of himself. Jaden Smith's character actually blames his father for the death of his sister because he was "too busy working". I was almost choking on the horrific cliches here, and how much they ring false. The father-son relationship here is not handled with any of the nuance seen in other films, and we're obviously meant to cheer when Jaden's character directly disobeys his father simply to shove it in his father's face. An overcoming all odds story with very little realism (as much realism as can be expected in a film like this), it ultimately seems very hollow.

Sorry to rant for so long without really coming to a point. And obviously a popcorn flick like "After Earth" is not going to receive very much serious analysis, nor is it meant to withstand it. However, I think in context of M. Night's larger career, I think it is either a promising blip which shows a return to form, or it is continuous evidence that M. Night has lost interest in films completely is using his experience to become a "gun for hire".

TL;DR What did you think of "After Earth" in regards to M. Night Shyamalan's continuing career? Do you think there is any merit in the minority opinion that is shows a return to form for M. Night? Or have you closed the book on him and his films?


First Trailer for Shyamalan's "After Earth" with Will Smith
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Why was After Earth so poorly received?
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Why was After Earth so poorly received?

I saw the film when it was first released, and enjoyed it. My sole problem with it was the fake accent that Jaden Smith used throughout the film; its sounded stilted, stupid, and unnatural. Why did or didn't you like it?


IJW: After Earth (2013)
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IJW: After Earth (2013)

IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1815862/?ref_=sr_1

I won tickets to an advanced screening of the movie last night, and let's just say, at least it was free. Walking out of the theater, just about everyone was grumbling about how lousy it was. Will Smith is a great actor, but he really didn't do much in the movie. Will Smith's son is a horrendous actor, and he was by far the main focal point. Everyone had these weird deep south/british accents that made them sound like 5 year olds with speech impediments, and it made most of the dialouge difficult to take seriously. The plot had quite a few holes in it, and all in all its entertainment value was just poor.

Also, as for the whole scientology aspect of the film, I'd definitely say its an underlying theme, although due to my lack of knowledge on the subject, I only knew about it because of a thread I saw in r/fantheories.


'After Earth' Is Will Smith’s Love Letter to Scientology
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Will Smith's After Earth Apocalypse: Who Loses Most
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First batch of After Earth reviews
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First batch of After Earth reviews

Quite a few have appeared online. The general consensuses: not a very good movie. While I didn't expect much from the movie, it really is sad to see how far Shyamalan has fallen. Was kind of hoping this would be a comeback for him. Here are the first 4. Other then the IGN, they seem to all be 1 out of 5 star or less reviews.

http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/after-earth-movie-review/

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movie/earth/review/560053

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv-movies/earth-crashing-bore-article-1.1358131

http://www.ign.com/videos/2013/05/29/after-earth-video-review



After Earth... Disappointing [Spoilers]
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After Earth... Disappointing [Spoilers]

The aliens see via a sense of smell, they see us because we're afraid and they smell our pheromones. Will smiths character is an ultimate bad ass because he's not afraid.

Couldn't the entire Ranger squad wear space suits and be unstoppable?

Also, they land on earth 1000 years later, and there is zero sign of humanity? Even after a planetwide escape i'd expect something to be remaining.

And lastly... Birds, big cats, flying snakes and rats.. they exist, why would the air be suddenly toxic to humans? Even after 1000 years i wouldn't expect the atmosphere of earth to change that much.

Sorry, just suffered through it and can't believe that Shyamalan put out such a crappy movie.

The accents weren't needed and felt forced, and i'm sorry... will smiths son or not, that kid can't act.




Jesse Eisenberg beats Will Smith at the box office as 'Now You See Me' makes off with $1.5 mil. versus 'After Earth''s $1 mil. Who would've ever thought?
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