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The special effects spectaculars of my younger days were ‘event’ movies. Special summer must sees that provided experiences that mere mortals couldn’t emulate. It seemed that fantasical visions were the sole property of shadowy figures, working in the semi-darkness in the Industrial Light & Magic bunker.

CGI, with the increasing power and cheapness of home computers, is no longer the soul preserve of large entertainment corporations. When Pixar first introduced cinema audiences to computer animated angle poise lamps in 1986, it was a breakthrough moment and when Dinosaurs were finally brought to life in Jurassic Park without the need to superglue a horn on an Iguanas forehead, cinema audiences exhaled a collection gasp of astonishment but. like all technologies, as prices fell, it became more democratic.

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Convincing CGI creations are now routinely found in TV shows and with the aid of an Apple Mac, filmmaker Gareth Edwards manages to create a realistic world in the midst of a potential apocalypse with technology available on the high street and software downloadable by all. I’m not saying that talent isn’t a massive factor because of course it is. When a similar revolution in music tech caused a flowering of dance and electronic music in the 90s, it resulted in a lot of innovative music and a lot of poor quality, functional party muzak. Likewise in film, having the tools doesn’t mean you can build a shed. What easy access to convincing CGI offers is an open canvas for ideas. Easy access to special effects software allows the imagination free reign to create which, at a time when mainstream film is suffering an acute bout of sequelitus and remake fever, can only be a good thing.

For me the most amazing thing is how far it’s all come. I know some people decry CGI, especially when it comes to the gorier end of horror FX, but at the end of the day, as the means to paint what the imagination sees becomes available to anyone with an interest, the power to tell stories is closer to really creative people instead of accountants. When Jurassic Park was realised, the giant lizards blew me away. Now they look a little Playstation 2. What will a filmmaker be able to create on a laptop next year, let alone in five?

Monsters (cert. 12) will be released on DVD (£17.99) and Blu-ray (£19.99) by Vertigo Films on 11th April 2011. Special Features include: audio commentary by Gareth Edwards, Scoot McNairy and Whitney Able; Behind the Scenes featurette; Editing Monsters featurette; Monsters VFX featurette; “Factory Farmed” – short film by Gareth Edwards.

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Monsters (cert. 12) will be released on DVD (£17.99) and Blu-ray (£19.99) by Vertigo Films : 11.04.11

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Aliens have always served as an easy metaphor for social issues in movies. In the paranoid paradise of 1950s America, those buying into the Norman Rockwell illustrated idyll of white picket fences and consumer convienience were bombarded with ‘red under the bed’ propaganda in the form of various insidious invasions by cosmic interlopers standing in for card carrying Communists. At around the same time that Ronald Reagan started reporting to the FBI about the left leaning activities of his movie contemporaries, one of the best examples of alien as enemy within was released , Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

It portrayed communism as a creeping virus that slowly infected freedom loving Americans until they became part of a hive mind without the ability for individual thought. The metaphor in the movie was so needle sharp and exact that it’s been ressurrected to make new points ever since, with the 70s, Donald Sutherland led remake retooling the film to attack the selfish, naval gazing, Me Generation.

A less subtle use of Aliens is as replacement target. In the lull between the Cold War and the War on Terror, Hollywood struggled for an enemy to point their CGI missles at. In the new climate, lombing cinematic bombs at the Russians wasn’t so popular anymore and endless war-orgy movies based in the Middle-East were still on the horizon, so when Independence Day came along, with it’s handy non-human enemies, the alien invader allowed the film producers to stage an all out war without offending any profitable markets…

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So, is there a metaphor in Monsters? personally, I see the creeping tentacles as us or rather the damage we’ve left in our wake. The films setting in a no man’s land decimated by the invaders, where the local population who can are fleeing while those too poor to move either bed down and wait out the worst or get shifted from pillar to post by the authorities could surely be read as an allegory for the displacement of vast populations caused by war and environmental disasters.

The road blocks and warning signs, abandoned vehicles and ravaged buildings all mirror the wartorn images we see on rolling news coverage everyday.

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