Film Reviews
9
- Rating:

- Director: Shane Acker.
- Starring: Elijah Wood, Christopher Plummer, John C. Reilly, Jennifer Connolly.
- Details: US / 79mins (12A).
Just when you thought animation couldn't get any better, 9 comes along and ups the ante. However, with all the attention on how it looks, plot is given the elbow.
9 (Wood) awakens in a world where war has devastated the planet. Not sure what he is, or where he is, the 6-inch tall rag doll 'thing' (director Acker calls them 'stitchpunks') moves out into the post-apocalyptic landscape where he happens across 2 (Martin Landau). Before 2 can answer any questions, however, he's taken by an animal/machine creature that seems to exist only to hunt and kill. Moving on, 9 finds a clan of his ilk headed up by 1 (Plummer) who advises the ever-dwindling group to lay low and forget about rescuing 2. 9 and 5 (Reilly) ignore this order and during their search-and-rescue mission they inadvertently awaken 'the machine', the mother of all evil machines. With the help of the feisty 7 (Connolly), 9 and co. hope to shut it down before all hell breaks loose.
The animation will be the first and last element of 9 the audience will remember. All the effort, all the blood and sweat went into making the film as visually impressive as it can be - and it was time well spent. 9, with its gloomy colours and detailed universe, is as good as animation gets. The action sequences are spectacular and boast a threat that other animations lack; Acker has no qualms about killing off whom he likes, when he likes. There's an inherent danger to the proceedings, with death and disaster lurking around every corner. For a first time filmmaker, Acker knows what he's doing with regards to how his film look - by making his heroes so tiny and the villains so massive, the audience is automatically on the little guys’ side. He also indulges in the old animated hero mainstay - make the eyes as big as possible to tap into the 'aw' factor.
If only the story matched the visuals, though. Acker failed to expand his award-winning short to feature length successfully. 9's plot is very thin on the ground and, once the world the story takes place in is established, the plot is reduced into a run-fight-run-fight-hide extended action sequence. The story raises too many unanswered questions, too: why was 'the machine' shut down in the first place? Who did it? And why? The message gets a little messy towards the close, too, as Acker, with help from Pamela Pettler (Corpse Bride, Monster House), try to meld science and religion together. It's a tad confusing.
If you're wiling to forgive the lack of story, 9 is an action-packed spectacle.
Review by Gavin Burke
DVD Reviews
Footloose (2011)

Differentiating itself from the recent slew of dance flicks by having an actual plot - all be it a regurgitated one - this remake of the 1984 Kevin Bacon starrer manages to (mostly) compliment the... [more]
One Day

Based on the much loved novel by David Nicholls (who adapts his own book), An Education director Lone Scherfig is in charge of this innately complex tale of the development of a relationship over the... [more]
Midnight in Paris

Woody Allen goes whimsical, while Owen Wilson gives his best performance in years (granted, that's a low bar) in this slight but amusing romantic comedy which features a barrage of classic cultural... [more]
Crazy Stupid Love

You wait all year for a Ryan Gosling film to come out then two come along in the same day. In this hugely enjoyable, if somewhat disjointed, romantic comedy/drama, the talented leading man gets to... [more]
Your Comments