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        			   The arrival in New York's Central Park of a giant sphere from another world may have dire consequences for our planet.
 
 Photo credit: WETA.
 ™ and © 2008 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All rights reserved.
 
 
                    		  RATING: PG-13 for sci-fi disaster images and violence  RELEASE: December 12, 2008  GENRE: Science Fiction  STARRING: Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Connelly, Jaden Smith, John Cleese, Jon Hamm, Kyle Chandler, Kathy Bates  WRITERS: David Scarpa (screenplay); based on screenplay by Edmund H. North  DIRECTOR: Scott Derrickson  DISTRIBUTOR: Twentieth Century Fox    
								Please NoteIn providing movie reviews on our site, CBN.com is not endorsing or recommending films we review. Our goal is to provide Christians with information about the latest movies, both the good and the bad, so that our readers may make an informed decision as to whether or not films are appropriate for them and their families. Commentary The Day The Earth Stood Still: A Call to Change By Laura J. Bagby CBN.com Sr. Producer
 Like the original, the 2008 The Day The Earth Stood Still is really less about battling aliens  and spaceships and state-of-the-art technologies and more of a philosophical  and social commentary about the state of humanity and the crises we face.  “I loved the idea of being able to tell basically the same  story [as the original movie] but bring in these new social issues that we have  now, these new interesting messes that we have gotten ourselves into,” said the  movie's director Scott Derrickson (The  Exorcism of Emily Rose), when explaining why he decided to tackle a remake  of the 1951 sci-fi success. “We are uniquely recognizing that sometimes you have to get  yourself in a bind before you find the strength to rise above that and change  and become better than you were in the first place,” he said. And that strength to change happens in a microcosmic way  with scientist Dr. Helen Benson (Jennifer Connelly) who is dealing with the  death of her husband, her angry and estranged stepson Jacob (Jaden Smith), and the  global threat of annihilation by alien Klaatu (Keanu Reeves) and his robot  friend Gort if humanity doesn’t learn to curb their violent ways. Heavily  weighed down by personal and global responsibility, she begs with all  sincerity, “But we can change!” All this talk of internally motivated change points to just  how radically different this film is from so many other sci-fi thrillers. Instead  of blaming exterior things – like aliens and spaceships – for our global  predicament, the movie intentionally points the finger back at us. As the famous  saying goes, “We have seen the enemy; and it is us.” The struggle ultimately  then isn’t alien versus human. Rather it is man versus a greater global  existence, man versus himself, and even a bit of man versus the environment. But make no mistake: Though this movie is the first green  film produced by Twentieth Century Fox, Derrickson isn’t taking a strong stand  on environmental conservation. He isn’t saying to audience members, “Hey, go  green.”  “The earth matters to God, deeply. He is going to redeem it  – period – just as He is going to redeem my body – period. So I have to treat  it as a divine thing. What I certainly haven’t done publicly and haven’t done  with this movie is take any kind of position other than that.” No, the change the movie calls for isn’t so much  environmental as it is the call to change our character from a cold hardness to  an ability to show warmth and compassion once again, to end the fighting  amongst ourselves and live in peace with each other.  Klaatu ultimately recognizes that humans aren’t just bent on  destruction. They, in fact, are much more complex and loving than he had first imagined.  And it is this understanding that convinces the alien to save the Earth from  destruction.  Perhaps if there is one lesson to learn from The Day The Earth Stood Still, it is  this: not only do we have the power to change once we recognize the depth of  the predicament we are in and take personal responsibility for it, but if we  want to succeed as a species, we absolutely must change for the better. Speaking of changing for the better, want to know more about  the parallels between Klaatu and Jesus? Read Klaatu as Christ Figure.  Visit the official movie site for The Day The Earth Stood Still. For more stories like this one, sign up to receive Entertainment News from   CBN.com in your email every Friday.  
 Comments?   Email me  More articles by Laura Bagby on   CBN.com   
							
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