The Darkest Hour (film)

The Darkest Hour is a 2011 science fiction action film[5] directed by Chris Gorak and produced by Timur Bekmambetov. It depicts an alien invasion. The film stars Emile Hirsch, Max Minghella, Olivia Thirlby, Rachael Taylor, and Joel Kinnaman as a group of people caught in the invasion. The film was released on December 25, 2011 in the United States.

The Darkest Hour
Directed byChris Gorak
Produced byTom Jacobson
Timur Bekmambetov
Screenplay byJon Spaihts
Story byLeslie Bohem
M.T. Ahern
Jon Spaihts
StarringEmile Hirsch
Olivia Thirlby
Max Minghella
Rachael Taylor
Music byTyler Bates
CinematographyScott Kevan
Edited byPriscilla Nedd-Friendly
Fernando Villena
Production
company
Regency Enterprises
Bazelevs Company
New Regency
Jacobson Company
Distributed bySummit Entertainment (US)
20th Century Fox (international)
Release date
  • December 22, 2011 (2011-12-22) (Russia)
  • December 25, 2011 (2011-12-25) (United States)
Running time
89 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
Russia[2]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$34.8 million[3]
Box office$64.6 million[4]

Plot

Americans Ben and Sean (Max Minghella and Emile Hirsch) travel to Moscow to sell their social networking/party locating software. As they approach the airport, their plane short circuits due to an electrical storm but regains power. After arriving, they find their Swedish business partner, Skyler (Joel Kinnaman), has betrayed them and already made a deal with the Russians, using a knockoff application. They go to a nightclub and meet Natalie (Olivia Thirlby), an American, and her Australian friend Anne (Rachael Taylor). The lights go out in the club and everyone heads outside. There, they witness what appears to be an aurora. Balls of light fall from the sky and then fade away. When a policeman investigates he is quickly disintegrated. The invisible entities begin hunting and killing people, sending them into a panic.

Ben, Sean, Natalie, Anne, and now Skyler hide in the club's storeroom for seven days. With most of their food gone, the group plans to go to the American Embassy. They find the city full of scorched cars and cinders, but empty of people, except for a wary old woman who warns them of "the ghosts". Ben and Sean search for supplies in a police car near Red Square while the others hide in the nearby GUM department store shopping mall. While they are searching the car, a barking dog discovers and confronts an alien, but is killed. Ben and Sean successfully hide under the car as the alien moves closer, causing the car's lights and siren to turn on. The alien moves on and the men run to the mall. Sean realizes that light bulbs and other technologies give the aliens away. The group takes shelter in one of the mall stores. Sean and Natalie go to look for clothes and almost run into an alien who cannot see them through a glass wall. Sean theorises that the aliens can only see their electrical charge, but not through glass or other insulators.

The group finds the American Embassy gutted and lifeless. All except Skyler go to the roof to get an aerial view. They find a logbook telling them that the invasion is worldwide. They also find a radio broadcasting a message in Russian, and hear gunfire. Ben and Sean go outside to help Skyler, but he is killed. The others see a light in a nearby apartment tower and go to investigate, bringing the radio they found. They find a young woman named Vika and a man named Sergei, an electrical engineer. Sergei has made his apartment into a giant Faraday cage that hides everyone from the aliens. He has also developed a microwave gun that weakens an alien's force field, so that it can actually be seen and killed. Vika and Sergei translate the message, which says that the nuclear submarine K-152 Nerpa is waiting in the Moscow River to take survivors to safety.

As Sergei shows the men the microwave device, Vika, Natalie, and Anne go to other apartments to gather supplies for the submarine journey. An alien senses them outside the Faraday cage and gives chase; Anne hesitates following Vika and goes another way, causing Natalie to follow her back inside. When they get to the apartment, Natalie is unable to close the door and the alien gets inside. Sergei shoots the alien with his gun and finds that it is only stunned. The alien kills Sergei while the others get out by the fire escape. Anne hesitates again and is killed while trying to escape. Natalie sets the apartment on fire as they climb down and meet up with Vika.

They meet up with a Russian police team with improvised armor led by Matvei who manage to wound an alien with conventional weapons. Sean collects a piece of the alien's body. The small police band were also able to build another Faraday cage at the Russian State Library. Boris and his men eventually agree to help the remaining four to get to the submarine. The policemen believe that the aliens are strip mining for conductive metals since giant light columns can be seen drilling all over Moscow. As they move through the subway, an alien discovers them and they escape on the tracks. Vika hides behind a pillar, unable to join the others without being seen. Ben helps her climb down to the tracks, but is killed by the alien.

The survivors make it to a powerless patrol boat on the river and drift downstream to the waiting submarine. The boat nears the submarine but runs aground. As they attempt to push free, a new light beam destroys a large apartment building right next to the river, causing the boat to capsize. Sean and the policemen swims towards the submarine but upon reaching it discover Natalie is missing. They see a flare fired from Natalie's flare gun in a railway and bus yard near the river. Sean is determined to get her, possibly missing his chance to escape. The policemen agree to help him rescue her. The Russian submarine crew, after expressing doubt about the rescue, assist by building another microwave gun with stronger batteries.

After the team manages to destroy an alien, Sean finds Natalie on a bus while the policemen and Vika destroy three more aliens using the microwave guns and water. As Sean is about to get off the bus with Natalie, an alien climbs on board, locks the door, and sends the bus speeding around the bus yard. It grabs onto Natalie's leg, but Sean blasts the alien's shield with the microwave gun. He then discovers the alien's weakness when he throws a piece of the wounded alien he had collected earlier, and it destroys the unshielded alien. The two stop the bus and narrowly avoid a collision.

After returning to the submarine, the police team decides to stay and fight for the city, and Matvei tells them that now the war has begun. Sean, Natalie, and Vika plan to spread what they learned about the aliens - the microwave guns and their vulnerability to pieces of other dead aliens - to the rest of the world. Sean and Natalie, the only survivors of the original group along with Vika, nearly share a kiss on the submarine. In a post-credit scene, as the submarine cruises through the Caspian Sea, they learn that survivors in Paris managed to destroy an alien mining tower.

Cast

Production

The Darkest Hour was directed by Chris Gorak and produced by Timur Bekmambetov. While most films about alien invasions are centered in the United States or have an international scale, Bekmambetov's involvement ensured the premise to be an alien invasion from Russia's perspective.[6]

With a production budget of $34.8 million, filming with 3D cameras began in Moscow on July 18, 2010.[7] Production used resources from the Russian-based company Bazelevs, owned by Bekmambetov.

Filming was temporarily suspended three weeks later due to the 2010 Russian wildfires affecting the city and its vicinity with their smog. By September 2010, filming had resumed. In April 2011 the release date was changed to December 25 due to filming conflicts in Russia.[8]

Release

The Darkest Hour was released on December 25, 2011, in the US in 2D, 3D and RealD 3D. The DVD release date was April 10, 2012, by Summit Entertainment. In the UK, it was released theatrically on January 13 and on DVD on May 21.

Reception

Rotten Tomatoes gives a score of 12% based on reviews from 59 critics, with an average score of 3.16/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Devoid of believable characters or convincing visual effects, this may be The Darkest Hour for the careers of all involved."[9]

The Hollywood Reporter criticized the film for having a "flatlining screenplay and the absence of even a single compelling character",[10] and The New York Times wrote that it has "a depressing failure of imagination".[11] Writing for Slant Magazine, Budd Wilkins called it "a dimwitted 3D sci-fi travesty" and wrote, "Indifferently structured, Jon Spaihts's lame-brained script knows no narrative contrivance it doesn't love and, what's worse, blows its expositional load in the first 10 minutes, bringing together a quintet of cardboard cutout leads."[12] Joe Leydon of Variety called it a "modestly inventive and involving variation on a standard-issue sci-fi doomsday scenario".[2]

gollark: To clarify, it is a software implementation.
gollark: I *have* a parser.
gollark: No.
gollark: How should it work? I have a basic parser but I don't know what an actually good way to make the calculator language work would be.
gollark: It is in Rust.

References

  1. "The Darkest Hour (12A)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 2011-12-03.
  2. Leydon, Joe (December 25, 2011). "The Darkest Hour". Variety. Retrieved March 7, 2012.
  3. Lang, Brent (March 9, 2011). "The Secret Summit Prospectus: $1.2B Projected for 'Breaking Dawn'". The Wrap. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  4. The Darkest Hour at Box Office Mojo
  5. "The Darkest Hour (2011) - Chris Gorak". AllMovie.
  6. White, James (March 5, 2010). "Chris Gorak Faces The Darkest Hour". Empire. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  7. "Emile Hirsch Joins The Darkest Hour". ComingSoon.net. CraveOnline. April 10, 2010. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  8. Kozlov, Vladimir (September 16, 2010). "Shooting resumes on 'Darkest Hour'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 16, 2010.
  9. https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_darkest_hour/
  10. DeFore, John (2011-12-25). "The Darkest Hour: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  11. Catsoulis, Jeannette (2011-12-26). "'The Darkest Hour,' Directed by Chris Gorak - Review - NYTimes.com". Movies.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2012-01-13.
  12. Wilkins, Budd (December 27, 2011). "The Darkest Hour". Slant Magazine. Retrieved January 23, 2013.
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