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Southern California is the battleground for a new sci-fi action film that pits US Marines against unfriendly visitors from outer space. Here's a look at Battle: Los Angeles.
"These things are everywhere. There's one off the coast of 20 countries."
At first, it seems that Earth has spun2 into the path of a meteor swarm3 with fiery4 objects plummeting5 into the sea near coastal6 areas. But as news reports begin to come in from around the globe, a much more ominous7 picture develops.
"It appears that there is something like shadowy figures !"
The "meteors" are in fact landing craft: the first wave of a global invasion. At the sprawling8 Camp Pendleton Marine1 Base on California's coast, troops are readied for a battle none of them ever trained for or even imagined.
"At 14:46 Pacific standard time, 12 different locations across the globe were breached9 in what appears to have been a coordinated10 attack by an unknown enemy. This is a textbook military invasion. We are the last offensive force on the west coast. We can not lose Los Angeles."
Watch the trailer:
Battle: Los Angeles follows one platoon of Marines on a mission to rescue stranded11 civilians12 and keep the west coast metropolis13 from being destroyed by the technologically14 advanced enemy.
Director Jonathan Liebesmann says the nameless, faceless extraterrestrial enemy in the story gave him the freedom to make a modern war movie without having to justify15 the use of military force.
"My goal was to make a war movie with aliens and what that allows me to do is not get into political reasons for why we are fighting this war, Is this a good war or a bad war?" explains Liebesmann. " I just wanted to watch guys who put their lives on line, how they bond and what they do for us. That kind of stuff is what I was interested in."
Sony Pictures
Scene from "Battle: Los Angeles"
There's a long history of science fiction films taking aim at Los Angeles. It seems that Hollywood-based filmmakers find destroying well-known landmarks16 in America's second-largest city almost impossible to resist. However, South Africa-born Liebesmann chose to make Battle: Los Angeles about door-to-door combat that could be in any city besieged17 by space aliens.
"To an alien or to someone who is not from America, I think that you don't know what is supposed to be a landmark," notes Liebesmann. " I didn't want the Capitol Records [tower] or the Hollywood sign. Obviously, you've seen that kind of stuff done before in $200 million movies. There's no point in trying to outdo that, so I just do it on a much more grounded, visceral level."
Director Liebesmann and the script by Chris Bertolini borrow elements from both classic sci-fi films and war movies dating to the beginnings of the genre18. For instance, the platoon at the center of the story is made up of Marines from a variety of ethnicities and social backgrounds: a microcosm of American society led into battle by a crusty, war-weary sergeant19 played by Aaron Eckhart.
Richard Cartwright / Columbia Tristar
Aaron Eckhart as Staff Sergeant Michael Nantz in "Battle: Los Angeles"
"I tried to actually fit the stereotype20 of the archetypical leader," Eckhart says, " the salty leader that I think audiences have always enjoyed and always has a place in cinema. I think that we remember the best of them - Clint Eastwood, Lee Marvin, and Paul Newman - that salty guy who has been through it, who is sort of jaded21 yet he goes back and saves the day."
Michelle Rodriguez co-stars as the sole survivor22 of an Air Force reconnaissance team who brings the Marines vital intelligence about the enemy. A veteran of the surreal TV series "Lost" and the blockbuster film "Avatar," Rodriguez says she has no trouble with the science fiction in Battle: Los Angeles.
Richard Cartwright / Columbia Tristar
Michelle Rodriguez in a scene from "Battle: Los Angeles"
"I just feel like that's part of the whole manifestation23 process of being human and figuring out what the future of society is going to look like," Rodriguez says.
Aaron Eckhart believes that beneath all the action and special effects, it's a story about human nature.
"I think the film sets itself apart because it has a documentary feel to it and it's about Marines bonding together and surviving," Eckhart says. "It is an alien movie, so it is entertaining, but it's difficult to make a movie in this genre that finds its own place. I think what is required is a heart and I feel this movie finds its heart in the younger Marines in the film."
Battle: Los Angeles also features Ramon Rodriguez as the fresh-out-of-training Lieutenant24; music star Ne-Yo plays a corporal putting his life on the line; and Michael Pena and Bridget Moynahan are civilians caught up in the fray25.
Ironically, much of the movie was shot in the southern state of Louisiana where the filmmakers could take advantage of generous tax credits.
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