In the future, everyone can hear you scream......On television!In the future, everyone can hear you scream......On television!In the future, everyone can hear you scream......On television!
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Invasion Ireland is a refreshing Indie film that breaks new ground, running an entire film as if it unfolds in real time. The acting is good with quirky characters popping up throughout. Two thumps up.
I really did not know what to expect when I watch the trailer for this film. But I must say that you will be hooked on this film early on. The movie is a Sci-Fi Comedy film that is totally in your face and will definitely give you a lot of laughs. I really give the production team a lot of credit for making a film with limited resources that really has a lot of good qualities. If you are a fan of aliens and robots that are on a mission, then you will really enjoy this film.
Invasion Ireland was a solid sci-fi gem. A story about a Martian holding several persons hostage in his attempt to get off Earth & back to his planet. Director Ciaron Davies did a great job working eith his cast & crew. The scrolling ticket on the bottom of the film was also hilarious. It has some really funny lines. All of the actors did well. The music, editing, & camera work were on point.
What could be better than Ireland and Aliens with a comedic twist. We took a night off from Hollywood's big budget super heroe flicks and horror and took a chance on an Indy film. I enjoyed the quirky silliness of this film and look forward for more from this production team and director!!
While leaning on sci-fi as a delivery mechanism, that space helmet director-screenwriter Ciaron Davies encases himself in proves instead to be the hat of the eviscerating satirist, worn with terrific efficacy and purpose in the endearingly ramshackle, "Invasion Ireland."
In Davies' indie film world, proverbial Little Green Men are actually Little Blue Men fresh off the space boat from Mars. Their invasion of our planet and of our sad little status quos provide earthlings with yet another non-white populous to deride. Self-appointed world leadership reacts by holding out the olive branch to these threatening immigrants, securing peace by offering gainful employment, and much to the chagrin of "First World" populations fearing disruptions to their delicate socio-economic ecosystems. Of course it's all a salacious metaphor for the massive uprooting of real-world Middle Eastern populations we seem to enjoy endlessly bombing -- at least until naturally resulting immigration patterns evoke nationalist outcries from our newly "invaded" homelands.
Like only the best satires know how to do, "Invasion Ireland" eschews selectivity of targets and instead takes its hilarious flamethrower to all earth-bound populations that demonstrate a complicit and collective stupidity. With its searing indictments gleefully packaged in an offbeat, slapstick, and surrealistically lighthearted wrapper evocative of '80s British sitcom "The Young Ones (1982)," this hour-long film from Ireland again shows that the most authentic satirical voices are rarely hear from the mouths of major studios. - (Was this review of use to you? If so, let me know by clicking "Helpful." Cheers!)
In Davies' indie film world, proverbial Little Green Men are actually Little Blue Men fresh off the space boat from Mars. Their invasion of our planet and of our sad little status quos provide earthlings with yet another non-white populous to deride. Self-appointed world leadership reacts by holding out the olive branch to these threatening immigrants, securing peace by offering gainful employment, and much to the chagrin of "First World" populations fearing disruptions to their delicate socio-economic ecosystems. Of course it's all a salacious metaphor for the massive uprooting of real-world Middle Eastern populations we seem to enjoy endlessly bombing -- at least until naturally resulting immigration patterns evoke nationalist outcries from our newly "invaded" homelands.
Like only the best satires know how to do, "Invasion Ireland" eschews selectivity of targets and instead takes its hilarious flamethrower to all earth-bound populations that demonstrate a complicit and collective stupidity. With its searing indictments gleefully packaged in an offbeat, slapstick, and surrealistically lighthearted wrapper evocative of '80s British sitcom "The Young Ones (1982)," this hour-long film from Ireland again shows that the most authentic satirical voices are rarely hear from the mouths of major studios. - (Was this review of use to you? If so, let me know by clicking "Helpful." Cheers!)
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