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Independence Day (film)

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Independence Day (or ID4) is an American science fiction movie about an attempted alien takeover of Earth. The movie features several scenes of major landmarks being destroyed by the aliens, such as the First Interstate World Center, the Empire State Building, the White House and the Statue of Liberty. The film's success was partially credited to an extensive marketing campaign which began with a dramatic commercial during Super Bowl XXX. The movie was scheduled for release on Wednesday, July 3, 1996, but due to the high level of anticipation for the film, many theaters began showing it on the evening of July 2, the same day the action in the film begins.

Plot

The world is in shock on July 2 as an alien ship stated to be about one quarter the mass of the moon and over 550 kilometres in diameter enters the Earth's orbit and deploys several dozen smaller ships, each one over fifteen miles in diameter, that settle over many of the world's major cities. (In the United States, the ships appear over Los Angeles, New York City, and Washington D.C.) Using advanced technology, the aliens destroy these cities along with millions of people. Conventional missiles and nuclear weapons are useless against them, as the alien ships are strongly shielded by impenetrable force fields. The President of the United States, a veteran fighter pilot of the Gulf War, leads the human resistance from Area 51, where the military has kept an alien fighter spacecraft that crash-landed in the 1950s, to ultimate victory over the invading aliens. The movie climaxes on July 4 as the humans use the alien fighter to infiltrate the mothership, activating a computer virus to disrupt the aliens' shields, and sneaking a nuclear missile aboard. The disruption of the shields opens a window of opportunity for humans to strike back and destroy the smaller alien ships and fighter craft. During the counterattack, an American volunteer pilot flies his jet into the path of an alien ship as it is deploying its primary beam weapon, which causes it to explode and crash. Task forces around the world use the same tactic to destroy the rest of the alien battleships while the nuclear missile detonates and destroys the mothership, ultimately saving Earth.

Characters

President Thomas J. Whitmore (Bill Pullman): President of the United States throughout the movie, Whitmore is a former Gulf War pilot who leads the resistance against the alien invaders.

Captain Steven 'Steve' Hiller (Will Smith): A U.S. Marine Corps F/A-18 fighter pilot, Hiller is the only person able to bring an extraterrestrial aircraft down in the first wave of the human counterattack. Hiller's ambition is to join NASA, and his dream to fly into space comes true when he flies the alien spaceship from Area 51.

David Levinson (Jeff Goldblum): Employee New York based, Compact Cable, Levinson is an MIT-educated chess enthusiast who discovers the aliens' plans to attack after stumbling upon their hidden satellite signal, and later suggests the idea of infecting the mothership with a computer virus in order to deactivate shields protecting the alien crafts.

Julius Levinson (Judd Hirsch): Jewish immigrant and father of David Levinson.

Constance Spano (Margaret Colin): White House Communications Director and David's ex-wife.

First Lady Marilyn Whitmore (Mary McDonnell): President Whitmore's wife. Was fatally injured while fleeing the destruction of Los Angeles.

Jasmine Dubrow (Vivica A. Fox): Exotic dancer, Steve's girlfriend and eventually his wife.

Russell Casse (Randy Quaid): Crop duster, claims to have been formerly abducted by aliens. He was ridiculed because of this. Although his eldest son doesn't think he is a very good father, when Casse sacrifices himself taking out the alien ship over Area 51 (by crashing his F-18 into the primary weapon of the UFO) - thus saving Earth - he becomes a hero.

General William Grey (Robert Loggia): Chairman of the Joint Chiefs.

Albert Nimzicki (James Rebhorn): Secretary of Defense.

Marty Gilbert (Harvey Fierstein): David's flamboyant boss.

Major Mitchell (Adam Baldwin): Security chief at Area 51.

Dr. Brackish Okun (Brent Spiner): Chief scientist at Area 51.

Miguel Casse (James Duval): Russell Casse's eldest son.

Alicia Casse (Lisa Jakub): Russell's daughter.

Troy Casse (Giuseppe Andrews): Russell's youngest son.

Captain Jimmy Wilder (Harry Connick, Jr.) Steve's friend and fellow Marine pilot.

Criticism

While a massive commercial success (it made over $300,000,000 in the U.S. alone), the film was ridiculed by some critics for its plot, predictable storylines and poor acting. Criticism of the plot included the claim that it would be impossible to cause the aliens' high-tech computers to malfunction by infecting them with a simple computer virus (cf War of the Worlds). Many outside the United States (and some within) also derided the film for what they saw as calculated pandering to excessive American nationalistic sentiment, as the film was released in the United States over the Fourth of July weekend and was explicitly titled Independence Day. Fans of the film counter that there is nothing wrong with nationalistic sentiment. While it might be true that only the planet's most powerful state would have the potential to stand against an alien invasion, fans acknowledge that it could alienate outside audiences. In fact the studio (given the scope and complexity of the film) worried that the filmmakers might not make their production deadline, and urged them to consider a later release date, though the promotional campaign depended almost entirely on the holiday tie-in. In the UK the film's PR campaign was based around the date "July 4th." rather than the name 'Independance Day'. The abbreviation ID4 was also used.

Advocates of the film point out that alien virus protection could have evolved to such a high level that archaic viruses might have passed under their notice due to a need to allocate processor power to more advanced scanning. They also suggest that the modern computers of the film may have been developed based on technology recovered from the Area 51 craft, thus making the two systems accidentally compatible. Another set of ideas suggest that the aliens had to modify their own computer systems to interface with the earth's satellite network, thus making them vulnerable to viruses. An idea that could conceivably explain a number of the plot holes is that the aliens are to a certain extent a hive-minded race; such an orderly alien society would have no concept of a malicious computer virus or of one of its fighters going "rogue." While the film posed no proof other than the seemingly psychic abilities of a captured alien to support the 'hive mind theory'; the official sequel novel, by author Stephen Molstad does mention the aliens having a hive-minded society.

Radio spin-off

In August 1996, BBC Radio 1 broadcast the 1-hour play Independence Day UK, produced by Dirk Maggs, a spin-off depicting the alien invasion from a British perspective.

Trivia

Errors and goofs

References

http://www.imdb.com

Independence Day: War in the Desert written by Stephen Molstad, created by Dean Devlin & Roland Emmerich and published by Harper Entertainment.

See also

External links

 


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