At TEDxVancouver a few months ago, our region’s best working filmmaker, Neill Blomkamp (now an Academy Award-nominated writer, ya heard?) was featured as a headlining speaker.
Now as if this fact wasn’t enough to get me excited (the newspaper I read about it in was unfortunately printed after the conferences registration deadline; of COURSE print is going to surviveā¦), it was his topic and the way he presented it that left me pretty amazed.
The basic premise of his talk? The aliens in District 9 are nothing like how he believes real aliens are/would be. Fair enough, one would go on to expect 13 minutes about Weta and the impracticalities of non-humanoid creatures in a narrative film. This does not happen.
What he does, rather, is take advantage of the medium of a pre-recorded talk (he was out of town during TEDx) to edit together and narrate a captivating, theoretical science-driven vision of our universe, life on other planets, and the future of human civilization in a way that most of us probably haven’t ever thought of.
I know the man has his passions, but his level of research and knowledge on this topic is still surprising. I can’t help but feel that he might be using at least part of this as his next film, another sci-fi piece that he seems incredibly excited about in other interviews and spaces.
If it isn’t part of his next film, it’s still a fascinating quarter-hour to watch. If it is, however, we’re in for a mind-bending treat once his second film is unleashed in cinemas in the next couple of years.

