Copy Creature: Kren’s Sophomore Feature a Hybrid Derivative
At a remote weather station in the Alps, Gerald (Gerhard Liebmann), a curmudgeonly technician serves an unprecedented fourth tour in the isolated mountaintops which serves his introverted behavior quite well. Sharing a work station with three scientists and his pet dog Tinnitus, they discover a strangely retreating glacier secreting a reddish liquid substance that contains some kind of freaky deaky compound affecting the genetics of the local flora and fauna in terrifying ways. Any DNA mixed with the compound creates hybrid creatures that randomly develop as a mix of whatever it has come into contact with. Really, this discovery is bad timing because a local government minister is on the way to the station for an official visit, so the scientists hope to keep this little doozy a secret so the minister won’t inform the public and cause a furor. But just as the minister and her crew arrive, bringing with them Tanya (Edita Malovcic), a scientist who had a past romantic relationship with Gerald that didn’t seem to end on good terms, all hell breaks loose.
Kren and screenwriter Benjamin Hessler get a lot of mileage out of creating a host of characters that are distinct in their own bitchy ways, and The Station manages to coast along without any major missteps, the kind of film people love to call “old-fashioned” or with a “classic” narrative. These are merely euphemisms to describe the majority of a film that treads familiar territory but still manages to keep one’s attention. There are a few gross out scenes, but more spectacular flourishes directly borrow from The Thing and even Alien. Brigitte Kren manages to be a delightful scene stealer in the film’s second half as she morphs from clinically cold minister to ultra-effective killing machine, but even as it features likeable, believable, and real looking characters, it’s not enough to compensate for the tired concept. While the film’s monster is a hybrid of whatever it comes in contact with, so is Kren’s film a hybrid of what’s come before.
Reviewed on September 6 at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival – Midnight Madness Programme.
93 Mins