Evolution (2001 film)

Evolution is a 2001 American comic science fiction film directed by Ivan Reitman. It stars David Duchovny, Orlando Jones, Seann William Scott, Julianne Moore, and Ted Levine. It was released by DreamWorks Pictures in the United States and by Columbia Pictures internationally. The plot of the film follows college professor Ira Kane (Duchovny) and geologist Harry Block (Jones), who investigate a meteorite crash in Arizona. They discover that the meteorite harbors extraterrestrial life, which is evolving very quickly into large, diverse and outlandish creatures.

Evolution
Theatrical release poster
Directed byIvan Reitman
Produced by
Screenplay by
Story byDon Jakoby
Starring
Music byJohn Powell
CinematographyMichael Chapman
Edited by
Production
company
Distributed by
Release date
  • June 8, 2001 (2001-06-08)
Running time
101 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States[1]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$80 million[2]
Box office$98.4 million[2]

Evolution was based on a story by Don Jakoby, who turned it into a screenplay along with David Diamond and David Weissman. The film was originally written as a serious science fiction film, until director Reitman re-wrote much of the script. Shooting took place from October 19, 2000 to February 7, 2001 in California and Page, Arizona, with an $80 million budget, and the film was released in the United States on June 8, 2001. The film grossed $98.4 million internationally. A short-lived animated series, Alienators: Evolution Continues, loosely based on the film, was broadcast months after the film was released.

Plot

Wayne Grey (Seann William Scott), a trainee firefighter in Arizona, practices fire rescue and resuscitation in a shack near Glen Canyon, where a meteor lands in a cavern.

College professor Ira Kane (David Duchovny) and his colleague, geology Professor Harry Block (Orlando Jones), investigate, taking a sample of strange blue liquid that oozes from it. Ira discovers that it harbors extraterrestrial nitrogen-based life that condense millions of years of evolution within a matter of hours: the very next day, they take the science class to survey the meteorite site and find it already surrounded by evolved oxygen-converting fungi and alien flatworms that cannot breath oxygen. Ira and Harry discover that even the multicellular organisms reproduce through mitosis after seeing one of the flatworms they collected in a jar split into two.

The site is soon sealed off by the Army. Ira and Harry take General Russell Woodman (Ted Levine) and the clumsy CDC Dr. Allison Reed (Julianne Moore) to court for the right to be part of the research of their discovery, but their efforts fail when it is revealed Ira was discharged from the army after creating an anthrax vaccine that led to terribly debilitating side effects, which the soldiers dubbed "The Kane Madness". Woodman steals Ira and Harry's research, forcing them to infiltrate the base to get another sample; they find an alien rainforest teeming with life. They are caught by Allison as a mosquito-like alien gets inside Harry; they are forced to rectally remove the mosquito, which then dies.

Wayne arrives at the college and shows the two the dead body of an amphibian alien which killed a country club owner; they later investigate a dead dog-like alien in a woman's home and more dead flatworms. They find a valley behind the home filled with dead dragon-like aliens; Ira and Harry theorize the aliens are spreading through the caves connected to the main cavern. One of the dying creatures spits out a pod containing a newborn, which then hatches into an oxygen-tolerant alien. The alien attacks a mall, where it carries off a shopper until Ira, Harry, and Wayne shoot it down.

The positions of carbon and nitrogen relative to arsenic and selenium in the periodic table are referenced in the film.

Other alien encounters also make the news, forcing the Governor of Arizona (Dan Aykroyd) to demand answers. Allison explains that the aliens will engulf the United States in two months; and Woodman attempts to blame Ira, especially when Ira, Harry and Wayne arrive. When the governor demands a solution, Woodman suggests a napalm strike, despite protests from Ira and Allison that they don't know how the aliens will react. At that moment, primate-like aliens attack them, but are fought off; the shaken governor approves Woodman's plan. A disgusted Allison quits the CDC and leaves the site, procuring Ira's original research and samples for him.

At the college, Harry accidentally tosses a match into a Petri dish of alien liquid, causing an amoeba-like mass to rapidly grow from it. Ira realizes heat triggers the aliens' DNA, and the meteor crashing to earth activated it; Allison attempts to warn Woodman, but he ignores her call completely. Looking at the positions of nitrogen and carbon on the periodic table, Ira theorizes that selenium might be poisonous to the aliens as arsenic is to Earth's carbon life. Much to Ira's surprise, his dumbest students Deke and Danny Donald (Ethan Suplee and Michael Ray Bower) recall that selenium sulfide is the active ingredient in Head & Shoulders; this makes Ira award the two with A's, much to their excitement, and them to tag along.

Wayne procures a firetruck and the team fills it with the shampoo, with help from the college students. But just as the team arrives at the cave and prepare to use the fire hoses, Woodman's napalm strike goes off ahead of schedule. While the resulting mass begins mitosis, the team drives under it and finds what looks like a rectal hole to inject the shampoo into; Harry, intending to settle a score for his rectal incident, explodes the creature himself. The governor declares Ira, Harry, Wayne and Allison heroes; Wayne is made a fully credentialed firefighter, while Ira and Allison skip the festivities for sex in the fire truck.

Later, Harry, Ira and Wayne are shown promoting Head & Shoulders for both hair care and fighting the aliens.

Cast

Kyle Gass, Sarah Silverman, Richard Moll, Tom Davis, Jerry Trainor, Miriam Flynn, Caroline Reitman, Steven Gilborn and John Cho have smaller roles.

Soundtrack

The film's music score was composed by John Powell, conducted by Gavin Greenaway, and performed by the Hollywood Symphony Orchestra. A soundtrack album was released on June 12, 2001 and is available on Varèse Sarabande.[3]

TitleArtistWritten by
BombshellPowerman 5000Mike Tempesta and Michael Cummings
Out with a BangMatt MahaffeyMatt Mahaffey
Anyway the Main Thing IsPatty LarkinPatty Larkin
BorderlineBuckcherryJosh Todd, Jonathan 'JB' Brighman, Keith Nelson and Devon Glenn
Baby, Come On OverSamantha MumbaSamantha Mumba, Arnthor Birgisson and Anders Bagge
Work It OutBrassyMuffin Spencer, Stefan Gordon, Jonny Barrington and Karen Frost
Makin' WhoopeeWalter Donaldson, Gus KahnWalter Donaldson, Gus Kahn
Parking LotMorgan NaglerMorgan Nagler
You Are So BeautifulBruce Fisher, Billy PrestonBruce Fisher, Billy Preston
Play That Funky MusicWild CherryRob Parissi

Home media

The film was released on VHS and DVD on December 26, 2001.[4]

Reception

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 43% based on 136 reviews and an average rating of 4.94/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Director Reitman tries to remake Ghostbusters, but his efforts are largely unsuccessful because the movie has too many comedic misfires."[5] On Metacritic, the film holds a score of 40 out of 100 based on 32 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[6]

Television series

Evolution was made into an animated series called Alienators: Evolution Continues, which ran on Fox Kids from 2001 to 2002.

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See also

References

  1. "Evolution (2001)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved January 2, 2017.
  2. "Evolution". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved January 2, 2017.
  3. Evolution Soundtrack SoundtrackINFO. Retrieved Dec. 27, 2013
  4. Saccone, Melinda (December 7, 2001). "Rental Spending Down for Week Ended Dec. 3, But December Holds Gifts". hive4media.com. Archived from the original on December 23, 2001. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
  5. "Evolution". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 4, 2019.
  6. "Evolution". Metacritic. Retrieved January 14, 2014.
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