Sunday, September 9, 2018

Kin: When Brothers Help Each Other in a War Zone

Some movies, it would seem, are not really meant to draw an audience regardless of their merits. Despite being somehow snuck into theaters and occasionally boasting a surprisingly stellar cast, these types of movies tend to range from forgettably fun (Monster Trucks) to trying-too-hard wastes of time (The November Man) and, unfortunately for said movies, this tends to lead not only to lackluster returns from audiences (both of the aforementioned movies failed miserably at the box office) but even prevents the opportunity for cult-status due to lack of any clearly redeemable aspect (only Monster Trucks has had any kind of limited fandom since its release). Now, with The Baker Brothers' first attempt at feature length science fiction with Kin...maybe these young directors should take some courses in advertising.
To be nice, Kin is a fun, if flawed movie with enough humanity to bear its heart and enough flair to keep you interested for its nearly-bearable run time. Myles Truitt is fun as the young lead Eli, Jack Reynor and Zoe Kravitz acquit themselves nicely as surrogate parents of the moment to the kind of wayward youth, its message about how good is always the hardest choice borders on charming and, yes, the actual effects centered around the weird space gun Eli finds is both cool and intelligently implemented for the best audience-pleasing effect possible at this kind of price range. Throw in yet another creepily sleazy turn by James Franco and heartfelt blink-and-you'll-miss-it performance by Dennis Quad and you even have some better named actors giving it their all despite not really needing to considering this movies prospects. It was a movie meant to fail and those involved tried their hardest anyway. That would be inspiring if it weren't so depressing.
Unfortunately, while the human aspect of the movie aims for the stars and comes just short, the actual twist to the movie is both forgettable and poorly implemented. Sure, its always fun to watch Eli blow holes in walls with an alien ray gun, but the actual reasoning for it existing where he found it to begin with feels cheap and forced. And, while its easy to get behind Franco's angry gangster working through his losses with really bad behavior and Quad's stoic father figure trying desperately to protect his youngest son from falling in with the bad side of the world, the rest of the bigger-named cast feels tacked on and forgettable. Seriously, how do you manage to snag Carrie Coon and Michael B. Jordan for the equivalent of five minute cameos and have them feel so blasé?
As for watching it, wait this one out for a few months. Television is where this movie should have begun and is likely where it will (hopefully) find an appreciative audience. Still reeling from an absolutely dead August and wishing September would just get better faster? Well...Peppermint comes out next week and it seems pretty cool? Patiences is a virtue?
Jonathan and Josh Baker graduate from short sci-fi with what would be expected with Kin, an at-times brilliant movie about family with an alien ray gun thrown into the mix that never really gets beyond that due to budgetary constraints and obvious first film jitters. While attempting to scavenge abandoned buildings in Detroit for copper wires, wayward teen Eli (Truitt) stumbles upon a group of dead alien-or-future soldiers and promptly steals one of their weapons, setting off an extended chase sequence across half the country involving a violent street gang after his older ex-con brother Jimmy (Reynor), a stripper from Nebraska named Milly (Kravitz) and lots and lots of wonky sci-fi explosions that culminate in epic-for-its-budget shootout and a lackluster ending you wish you saw coming an hour earlier. I've had worse times with no-budget sci-fi.
My score: 6/10. Is it weird that the dialog in this script seemed to be aiming for an R-rating but, when it came time for violence, stuck strictly to the PG-13 angle? It often confuses me when a movie with this much swearing acts scared to show any blood. 

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