Sci-Fi In July: Sphere (1998)

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I’ve previously mentioned how The Silence of the Lambs helped me to become a lifelong reader. Well, Michael Crichton was no small slouch in that regard either. He became the first author that I really followed. I have fond memories of a couple of friends and me discovering his books and fighting over who would get to check one of the books from the school library first and who would have to wait.

The first book of his that I read was The Andromeda Strain – about an alien virus that crashes to Earth aboard a satellite and the scientists that study it. I loved it. I loved its realism and attention to detail. Just now I’m realizing that the Hannibal Lecter books by Thomas Harris and the stories of Michael Crichton appealed to me in the same way. Harris dug into the details of forensic and behavioral science – why serial killers behave the way they do and how the F.B.I. catch them. Crichton also leans heavily into his science background. Both authors lay out science in an organized and detailed manner. That appealed to me in some way.

I don’t remember much about Sphere. I remember reading it on the bus – slouched down, knees on the seat in front of me. But I don’t remember much of the actual story. Except that, I was disappointed in it.

I was even more disappointed by the movie which took quite a few liberties with the book, though again my memories are fuzzy.

But it has been many years since I saw the film, and sometimes movies I was disappointed with as a college kid become better with age. Since this is Sci-Fi in July and that film stars Dustin Hoffman, Samuel L. Jackson, Sharon Stone, and Liev Schreiber I decided to give it another try.

Friends, it has not gotten better with age.

The basics of the plot are pretty good, especially in the beginning, but then it does a deep dive into stupidity and never recovers.

So, a ship is discovered at the bottom of the ocean. Several inches of coral have grown over it. Coral grows at a specific rate which indicates the ship has been down there for three hundred years. Since humankind didn’t have spaceships 300 years ago it is determined that this ship is extra-terrestrial in origin.

A few years prior psychologist Dr. Norman Goodman (Hoffman) was tasked by the Bush administration to write a paper detailing what should be done if aliens were discovered on Earth. He filled in some procedures and proclaimed you’d need an astrophysicist (Schreiber), a mathematician (Jackson), and a marine biologist (Stone).

That’s a very Michael Crichton setup. He loves putting together a crack team of smart people to solve a crisis. But in this story (or at least this adaptation of this story) Goodman half-assed that paper. He needed the money and didn’t think anyone would read it. All of the scientists he claimed they’d need were just people he knew. Some of these folks are super smart, but they aren’t exactly the elite group of people one might actually ask for.

The military has already established a sea station on the ocean floor next to the spaceship. Our heroes take a sub down and investigate. Inside the ship they discover a few things I won’t spoil but also a large CGI sphere. It reflects everything around it except for the humans suggesting it is an intelligent life form.

One of the characters later goes inside the sphere but when he comes out he can’t remember anything. Soon after strange things start happening like the base station is attacked by a giant squid and strange sea snakes come out of the sink. Meanwhile, up above a huge storm has rolled in causing the Navy ships to have to leave for a few days, stranding our heroes down below.

At some point, the alien starts talking to our heroes through text messages on the computer. It is friendly at first and then it begins acting like a petulant child. Luckily, our psychologist knows how to talk to angry children. For a little while at least

For a little while I enjoyed the film. The basic setup is solid and I like the actors, but the longer it rolled the sillier it becomes. And stupid. As I said one of the things I liked about Crichton is that he took science seriously. He loved to get into the details without letting the story get bogged down. He probably made some stuff up, but he did it well. The film takes a lot of shortcuts with the science and it makes the film worse.

Director Barry Levinson is known for his character-driven dramas and he is clearly out of his depth with this blockbuster-fueled science-fiction horror story.

Sometimes it is best to remember that a movie is bad, and not try and prove those memories as faulty.

The Week In Movies: February 26 – March 04, 2023

the big trail poster

I watched eight movies this past week only one of which I’d seen before. Most of them were pretty good. Also, I did really well writing about a lot of these movies as I watched them. I’m proud of myself.

El Dorado (1966): I mentioned this one last week as it worked well as a double feature with Rio Bravo (1959). It follows a very similar plot structure as that movie with John Wayne playing a gunfighter for hire who teams with a drunk, a young buck with something to prove, and an old codger who stand against a villainous crew. It moves quicker than Rio Bravo and is funnier, but I’d give the earlier film a slight advantage.

Welcome to the Sticks (2008): A very silly, very funny comedy from France. I wrote about it here.

The Cariboo Trail (1950): A not particularly great western with Randolph Scott. I wrote a review which you can read here.

The Naked Spur (1953): A fantastic western with James Stewart, Janet Leigh, and Robert Ryan. I wrote about it here.

Sleepless (2001): Dario Argento’s late-career work has been fairly spotty, but this is a good one. I wrote about it in my Friday Night Horror column.

Looker (1981): I loved Michael Crichton’s books when I was a teenager. His method of blending slightly futuristic science with a very human story was right up my alley. As a director, his stories have remained interesting, but stylistically they tend to be pretty dull. Looker is my favorite of his films that I’ve seen so far.

I wrote a spoiler-y review of it on my Letterboxd.

Dark Phoenix (2019): I’d been putting off watching this film because the reviews have been generally terrible and I love the original comic. It wasn’t as bad as I expected, but yeah, it is not good. It has been so long ago that I read the comic that I don’t have much to say about how faithful it is, except that it clearly added quite a bit of stuff. Which I get because the comic isn’t exactly cinematic.

I didn’t actually mind the story while watching it. Thinking back on it now there is a lot of stuff in it that doesn’t make much sense, but in the moment I followed along alright. But the direction, especially the many fight scenes, is just bad. It was directed by Simon Kinberg who has a long career as a writer/producer but had never directed a movie before. And it shows. The action is muddled and flat and really hard to follow.

The Big Trail (1930): Nine years before John Ford made him a movie star John Wayne got his first starring role in this Raoul Walsh western episode. I will be writing a full review soon but for now I’ll just say that while the story mostly didn’t work for me, Walsh’s use of the wide screen format and his depth of field is simply astonishing.