Enemy Mine (1985) Poster

(1985)

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7/10
A film that almost never was
CuriosityKilledShawn16 November 2007
I hate being nostalgic about movies, but I do remember a time when imagination was evident in every part of a production, when film posters were dynamic, visceral and iconic, when films looked like they were shot on film and not an HD camera with a sunset tint, when scores were done by orchestras instead of synthesizers and death metal guitars and, most important of all, when the lack of CGI technology forced the filmmakers into achieving visual effects through more practical means. The 1980s were filled with such movies and, looking back, I am glad that I grew up in that decade. Children now are exposed to altogether soulless movies.

Set in the late 21st Century, Enemy Mine has humans reaching out into the depths of space after achieving world peace. But a rival species, the alien race of the Drax, don't take to kindly to humans poking about the galaxy and an interstellar war kicks off. A human pilot (Dennis Quaid) and a lone Drac (Louis Gossett Jnr.) crash land on a remote desert planet and learn, the hard way, to stick together if they want to survive. Despite their ultimate conflict they discover that they are not all that different from each other and neither yet both are to blame for the war.

Enemy Mine suffered from severe problems during production. Apparently the original director, Richard Longcraine (Wimbledon, Richard III), shot the entire film on location in Iceland before being replaced by Wolfgang Petersen who re-shot the whole film all over again but changed the story somewhat in the process. So, in reality, there are two completely different versions of Enemy Mine. One which was released into cinemas that has become a classic in its own right and another that only exists in the vaults of Twentieth Century Fox. I would love to see this alternate cut.

The fantastic photography and production design look very, very good for a film from 1985. Some of the effect shots and matte paintings are simply gorgeous and the cutting between desert locations and desert sets is almost seamless. This isn't like an episode of the original Star Trek series in which the cast simply take a half hour drive to a bit of desert outside of LA, the desert locations with the matte painting backgrounds look utterly authentic.

If you like the look and feel of films like The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth then you'll appreciate the fantasy of Enemy Mine. I know I am going to sound like an old coot but they just don't make films like this anymore. Everything these days seems to be geared towards the average ASBO teenage boy. In ten years time I honestly think that films will be no more than a test card that offends and stimulates no one.

I will consider myself lucky that films like this were once made and that they were a part of my formative years.
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7/10
Agreeable and honest space-opera with enjoyable performance by Luis Gossett Jr.
ma-cortes29 October 2008
This outer space-opera buddy movie deals about earthlings and aliens facing a fierce fight . Two futuristic contenders a Draconian(Louis Gossett Jr) and a human(Dennis Quaid) dogfighting over the skies in their aircrafts .When the mortal space enemies are gunned down, they are stranded together into a faraway barren planet. They're forced to become friends and rely on one another in order to survive. The enemies, earthman and reptilian alien survive on hostile world facing enslavers foes(usual nasty Brion James).

This warmhearted Sci-Fi story packs noisy action, intrigue, space battles and good feeling . The cuddly story relies heavily on the continued relationship the two protagonists, however is quite amusing. Sensational and perceptible acting by Louis Gossett in spite of the mask and makeup by Chris Wallas(The fly), furthermore he must speak with purring. Spectacular production design by Rolf Zehelbauer(Cabaret, Odessa file, and he's Fassbinder's usual). Colorful and appropriate cinematography by Tony Imi. Wonderful music score by Maurice Jarre, though uses synthesizer, he's a classic musician and habitual of David Lean(Laurence of Arabia,Dr. Zhivago,Ryan's daughter). The motion picture is directed with sensibility by Wolfgang Petersen , a German working in Hollywood who achieved many hits, before(Das boot,Neverending story), like after( Troy, Perfect storm,Airforce one,Outbreak). Rating: Good, above average.
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7/10
Truth is truth.
Hey_Sweden13 April 2018
"Enemy Mine" takes place in the future, when humankind no longer wages war among its own, but now does battle with an alien race called the Dracs. Dennis Quaid is Davidge, a fighter pilot who crashes on a remote planet while engaged in battle with a Drac (Louis Gossett, Jr.). The Drac has survived its own crash landing, and the two opponents are initially hostile and mistrustful towards one another. But they realize that they will have to rely on each other in order to continue surviving. Over time, they become friends.

An unfortunate box-office flop in its time, this charming, likeable film can be seen as an 80s sci-fi update of the 1968 classic "Hell in the Pacific". Its themes come through loud and clear: we should at least try to appreciate each other, and celebrate our differences, and not be quick to make judgments. The story can be seen as a metaphor for any sort of bigotry, and the path to understanding. Ultimately, it can't help but become a little too precious; still, it's solidly entertaining as it manipulates the emotions and delivers the thrills.

Quaid and Gossett play this superbly. Reunited two years after "Jaws 3-D", they share a great chemistry all the way down the line. They make their scenes alternately tense, touching, and also humorous. Yes, the film does have a light touch at times, especially when the Drac (whom Davidge nicknames "Jerry") is led to believe that Mickey Mouse is some great mind back on Earth!

Wolfgang Petersen does a commendable job with the direction, as he follows up his smashing North American debut feature, "The NeverEnding Story". But the two gentlemen who really need to take a bow are production designer / art director / matte artist Rolf Zehetbauer and makeup effects creator Chris Walas. Zehetbauer creates an amazing look for this production; filmed both in German studios and on location in the Canary Islands, it actually looks like it's taking place on another planet. And Walas' reptilian-like makeup is most impressive.

With soaring music by Maurice Jarre, a typically fun supporting performance by notable screen heavy Brion James, two cool creature species (one predator, one prey), and excellent widescreen photography, this makes for quite an engaging show. At least it did manage to find an audience later on video.

Seven out of 10.
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One of the Ten Best "Forgotten" Sci-Fi Classics
Headshot4 June 1999
A funny thing happened to me on the way to the video store...I ran across a sci-fi film that didn't rely on space battles, incredible special effects, or magnificent sets and costumes. Instead, it relies on a touching and compelling human story of survival, hate and conflict - and of bitter enemies becoming unlikely allies and, eventually, close friends.

"Enemy Mine" is one of the ten best "forgotten" sci-fi classics - those rare little gems that got overlooked on their initial release, but live on in video release.

Practically abandoned at the box office, "Enemy Mine" found new life on video among fans of the kind of science fiction we only read about as kids - stories that expanded our horizons and made use look at the world in a whole new way, not just wowing us with their dazzling effects.

It is the story of hotshot starfighter pilot Willis Davidge (Dennis Quaid) who, after a dogfight with the reptilian, alien Drac, is stranded on a hostile planet with one of the enemy. At first blinded by their hatred of each other, the pair soon learn that they can only survive by working together. By doing so, they develop a strange friendship that helps break the wall of distrust between enemies.

If you get the chance to check out "Enemy Mine", give it a chance. It's not likely to go down in history as the best sci-fi movie ever made, but it does have heart.
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7/10
One Of The Better Sci-Fi Movies From The 80's
sddavis6316 August 2013
I saw this movie way, way back then - in the "before" time. Before there were computer generated special effects that took over everything and anything about a sci-fi movie. When I watched it then, I really enjoyed it. Having just watched it again, I still enjoy it. It's a well done piece of sci-fi. In fact, it certainly has to rank among the better sci- fi movies of the 80's if only because it's so different from most, and much more thoughtful. Outer space movies tend to be be heavy on inter- stellar battles between space ships, and futuristic weapons - and usually it's at the expense of story. "Enemy Mine" limits those and focuses much more heavily on story line and character development and becomes much more satisfying as a result.

The two leads are great. Dennis Quaid is the lead character, as Willis Davidge - he's a space fighter pilot who crash lands on a strange world after a battle and finds himself stranded with one of his opponents - a lizard-like Drac named Jeriba, played by Lou Gossett, Jr. Humans and Dracs have been at war with each other ever since humans started exploring the galaxy, and discovered the Dracs already there. Davidge and Jeriba are hostile to each other at first, seeking to capture and/or kill each other, but gradually they realize that to survive in this hostile environment, they're going to have to learn to co-operate, and eventually co-operation turns to friendship between them. You really couldn't ask for better performances than those given by Quaid and Gossett.

Set in the late 21st century, the movie nevertheless alludes to older problems. You think of racism as you see human "scavengers" enslaving captured Dracs, and there are clear shades of the Cold War (this was the 80's, after all) in the idea of two resolutely opposed individuals trying to learn to get along with each other. "Enemy Mine" is sometimes sad, but almost always hopeful, as it demonstrates that even between the fiercest and most seemingly dissimilar of foes, there's usually not that much difference. Truly a must-see from the 80's. (7/10)
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7/10
A Story of Friendship, Love and Cross-Species Adoption
gavin69423 September 2007
Wolfgang Petersen (acclaimed director of "Das Boot" and many others) brings us the story of a future where Earth no longer battles itself, but must fight other entities (the Dracs) in order to get resources from unclaimed planets. After one dogfight, a human and Drac land on the same planet and aren't sure whether to help or destroy each other.

The casting of this film was by far the best part. Science fiction films in general often suffer because they are harder for an audience to believe and accept. But Louis Gossett Jr. and Dennis Quaid are both actors who are able to make anything seem plausible. Gossett is particularly amazing, going so far as to manipulate his speech and appearance to the point of being unrecognizable. I will say that any actor who does well when we can't even tell it's him is a man to be respected.

There are some flaws with the film. I, for one, found it unusual that a peace-loving Earth would be so quick to fight other aliens, rather than pursue some diplomatic relationship. But I guess I shouldn't assume humans are logical. I shared a concern with Roger Ebert, who said that the film "gives us an alien that is too human, too familiar. It takes that amazing planet and gives it food, water, gravity and atmosphere that are suitable for both humans and Dracs... Why couldn't the Drac be truly alien in this film?" I don't mind that the planet was an M-class planet, but I did find it sad the alien was so humanoid in nature, particularly after they explicitly stated there's nothing human about them. Ebert, in his review, actually goes on about this concern for some time, referencing other science fiction stories (which I will not do here).

Ebert also ponders, "As the slavers stood over their captives with whips, I found myself wondering how cost-effective it would be to transport manual laborers millions of light years. Surely a technology capable of arriving at the planet Fyrine IV would have figured out a better way to mine its ores?" I guess he thinks about this sort of thing far more than I do, as I had no real problem with the slave traders or any of the subplots. The film was a "buddy film" at heart, and a commentary on racism. But it was also an action film, and any good action film requires some senseless fight scenes and killing. Action movies are generally not Oscar-worthy in their writing, but that's because they cater to the primal urges and not the mind, which isn't always a bad thing.

Ebert's last concern is that this "is a movie that made no compromises in its art direction, its special effects and its performances - and then compromised everything else in sight." I have already addressed why the action scenes work for me. And yes, I suppose their was a cheesiness to raising an alien child to like American football. But this wasn't an Asimov or Crichton science-rich story -- it was a fun story. And it was a 1980s film, for goodness sakes.

He is right about the art direction and everything he praises. The directing, acting and scenery were amazing. I forget where this was filmed, but it serves very well as an alien landscape. My only bother with the art was that I felt the film had a bit much influence from "Star Wars". I know this is a film from the same era, so it's hard not to be influenced. But there is a creature that is very much like a Sarlacc, and the spacecraft shown in this film had George Lucas written all over them. Maybe I'm just picky, though.

All in all, i really enjoyed this film. It was at a good pace, it had great acting from two of the better performers out there, and it comes from Petersen, who refuses to make low-quality pictures. Ebert might be overly concerned with the technical aspects of this universe, but for all the shortcomings this film had in that regard, it more than made up for with sheer pleasure.
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8/10
Not a Sci-Fi fan, but this one was awesome!
Capucine4 May 2002
I loved it! It came on AMC and there was nothing else I cared to watch, so I left it on, thinking to go to bed shortly. I ended up watching the whole thing. It kept me rivited from beginning to end. Dennis Quaid is one of my favorite actors and I didn't know Lou Gossett was the lizard, but I guessed it from his voice. When I checked the credits at the end, I was right! He was soooo good. I can't describe it, you have to watch it. I shed a few tears toward the end. Won't tell you if they were happy or sad tears tho! You'll have to see for yourself!
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6/10
Nostalgia is Not Needed to Enjoy this Film.
sammykinz-973355 April 2020
While nostalgia can be the main reason for most people to enjoy this slightly cheesy 80's sci fi film. Having just watched this for the first time today, i can assure you there are many more reasons to enjoy the film. While it has a few crucial errors keeping it from being great, the interesting costume design, odd alien interactions and visually engaging set design. Enemy Mine is still very much enjoyable to this day.
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10/10
I can't believe this isn't shown more often...
lindacooper6115 July 2002
This is a sci-fi film with a heart as big as all outdoors. It also (refreshingly) sticks very closely to it's source material (a short novel with the same title by Barry Longyear.) The plot synopsis gives the broad outline of the film, but what I really love about this film is how it deals with the issues of the insanity of war, and prejudice. It is this that raises it above most other sci-fi films, good as they may be. If you like intelligent sci-fi, watch this (or try reading it!!)
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7/10
Great movie but the original is better.
bacety16 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This is a remake of Hell in the Pacific with Lee Marvin and Toshiro Mifune (1968). Both these actors served their respective countries in the Pacific Theater during World War II. I believe they brought something personal to it. There is very little dialogue in the original as neither character can understand the other. It's just another great war story told in a different theater in a galaxy far far away.
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3/10
Some childhood memories are best left as they are
elgronko4 May 2010
This is one of those films that I loved as a kid, and which I jumped at the chance to view again on DVD the other night - although my fiancée groaned, she relented as there was nothing else on. I remembered a quirky, dry situation movie with a strangely brutal finish.

What I got was a sappy, immature and poorly-paced piece of sci-fi schlock with a payoff that's really too violent for the under-twelves market the storyline appeals to. What a shame. It did have its plus-points - the matte backdrops were wonderful and such a pleasant change from the CGI tosh we've all grown accustomed to, and Dennis Quaid is actually a good actor - but the script was appalling, with a mix of bad jokes and the pretentious over-seriousness that generally hampers the sci-fi genre (including all the STAR WARS films and the STAR TREK series bar the originals).

The racism metaphors were both obvious and unambiguous; the death scene interminable; the acting, for the most part, abysmal. The final scene, which features a hammy voice-over struggling to compete with what sounds like four or five people gargling mouthwash, was laugh-out-loud ridiculous. Some childhood memories are best left as just that ... memories.
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8/10
Don't let this be forgotten
bowmanblue10 April 2018
I always forget that Dennis Quaid was in this. Possibly because he seems to have been born to play gruff, middle-aged characters and I sometimes forget he was ever young! Just like a lot of people seemed to have forgotten about 'Enemy Mine.' I know that a sci-fi film without wall-to-wall light-sabre action doesn't always appeal to the masses, but I'm hoping there are enough people out there who still appreciate this - quite uplifting - character-driven piece.

In the far future us humans are having one hell of a war with an alien species about who owns what in the cosmos. Casualties run deep on both sides and our plucky young space pilot, played by Quaid, ends up shooting down a rival alien on an uninhabited planet, only to find himself stranded there, too.

What follows is effectively a two-man show, Quaid portraying the 'good guy' and Louis Gossett Jr heavily made-up in full reptilian garb as the alien. However, seeing as there's no way off this rock, the two of them are going to have to do their best to work together in order to survive. Both actors play their part in elevating this film from just a run-of-the-mill sci-fi B-movie into something much deeper. You'll get to know the two people and learn that our enemies aren't always the bad guys.

Besides the delight in seeing great (alien) make-up and practical effects, there's a decent enough amount of humour which comes in the form of 'banter' between our two culturally-opposed leads. This humour never feels forced and comes from the natural misunderstandings that arise between them and lightens the tone enough for you to enjoy the film without feeling it's making light of their situation.

There are a few plot points I won't go into in case you haven't seen this, but if you don't mind a less action-packed film which relies on character over set-pieces, definitely don't let this one pass you by.
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6/10
An unofficial remake of Hell In The Pacific, set in space.
barnabyrudge16 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Hardly anyone seems to have noticed that Enemy Mine is virtually a space-age remake of Hell In The Pacific. Instead of an American and a Japanese soldier marooned together on a remote island, we have a human and an alien marooned together on a remote planet. Nonetheless, Enemy Mine is a nicely done film which features some pretty amazing sets and locations, awesome lizard-man make-up, and a fairly thoughtful (albeit sentimental) storyline.

In the future, the nations of Earth have finally found peace with each other and begun to channel their energies into the exploration of space. However, whilst navigating the star systems claiming planets and moons as colonies, the Earthlings discover that another race exists in the universe known as the Dracs, from the planet Draco. It isn't long before the humans and the Dracs are engaged in a full-scale space war. The film opens with a spaceship battle between a squadron of human fighters and their Drac opponents. Human pilot Davidge (Dennis Quaid) crashes his spaceship on a desolate, uninhabited planet whilst pursuing one of his foes, but before the crash he manages to cause enough damage to the other spaceship to make it crash also. Eventually Davidge and the Drac, Jeriba (Louis Gossett Jr), find each other on the surface of their new temporary home planet. Initially, they hate each other and spend most of their time trying to kill each other. But as it becomes clearer that they are stranded, with no apparent help en route to rescue either of them, they realise that they must put aside their differences in order to survive. After several, years, the Drac (being of an asexual species) gives birth to a baby son, but dies during the labour. Davidge is left to raise the baby Drac, Zammis (Bumper Robinson), but things take a turn for the worse when some cruel human scavengers arrive and set up an illegal mine on the planet, using captured Dracs as slave-miners.

The best part of the film is the exploration of Quaid and Gossett's relationship, how they initially hate and distrust but gradually come to appreciate and understand each other. The make-up used to transform Gossett into this lizard-like alien is absolutely incredible. Later, when Gossett's character dies and his baby son takes his place, the bond between human and young alien becomes genuinely touching. The film is less enthralling during the more action-orientated scenes, as well as the scenes set aboard the human space station. The opening spaceship battle is stilted and unconvincing; the scenes where Davidge is reunited with his fellow humans after years stranded on the unfamiliar planet are done too hurriedly and make little impact on the story. The film's climax, in which Davidge tries to rescue his young Drac friend from the scavengers has flashes of gruesome excitement but is another scene that seems to have been put together in great haste (the ending feels really sudden and under-developed). However, purely for its lovely middle section - which has more to do with issues like tolerance and teamwork than science fiction - Enemy Mine remains a commendable film.
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2/10
Ebony and ivory live together in perfect harmony
iago-617 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I had seen this movie when it came out (I was 13), and thought it was totally awesome and extremely thought-provoking. And I love cheesy sci-fi of all varieties, so I thought I'd revisit it. And how I suffered as a result.

Now we all know that people are the same wherever you go. There is good and bad in everyone. And as we learn to live, we learn to give each other what we need to survive, together ali-hi-hive. Ebony and ivory live together in perfect harmony side by side on my piano keyboard. Oh Lord, why can't we? These are the questions I was forced to ask myself as I watched Enemy Mine. In the movie there's the humans and the Dracs, and they're at war because the Dracs have asserted "squatters rights" to parts of the universe they have taken over. Uh, squatters rights? Is this the way to start a racially-sensitive drama? Why not say that they're tooling around the universe in galactic Cadillacs at the human's expense? Regardless, we start off with a tepid space battle in which Drac ships seem to be just passing through (they all just fly straight, barely acknowledging the enemy), and no one shoots without immediately hitting its target. Anyway, through Dennis' psychotic obsession with killing the Drac that killed his friend, he crashes on a rocky planet, along with a Drac ship. Dennis soon enough finds the ship, is captured by the Drac, and they are forced to coexist. Soon enough they're learning each other's language and hunting together and shootin' the shizz around the campfire.

Around this time I was thunderstruck by a sudden thought: "Wait a minute!" I said, "Could this entire thing be seen as a metaphor for racial relations right here on Earth? A metaphor seemingly conceived of by a sensitive sixth-grader?" Imagine my shock and awe to discover that INDEED it is.

Some may be moved by this. I found it unendurably tedious. The whole thing is handled at such a middle school "racism is wrong" level that it just made me want to puke. It would be one thing if the script could come up with something decent for these people to say or a situation that we haven't seen 300 times before, but that is not to be. You can write the script yourself just from what I've told you so far, and it would go: Scenes of them fighting, scene in which one saves the other's life, the first word of common language, blabbing by the fire, a fight (based on their love for each other!), etc. It was all so banal I was really clawing my eyeballs out.

Halfway through there's a turn in the storyline, welcome but equally cloying, leading to an annoying resolution in which a giant step for intergalactic racial relations is made. It's so beautiful.

Dennis Quaid is terrible, but he has the most painfully phony dialogue to work with. Lou Gossett actually manages to bring some dignity to his role. The score by Maurice Jarre is about fifteen miles over the top with its old-time adventure themes and wholesome family drama motifs. And then you think—this was directed by Wolfgang Peterson! The guy who rocked us with Das Boot, and still somehow retains some cachet, has been turning out "premium" garbage like this ever since, hasn't he? Troy? The Perfect Storm? And I just saw a preview for his remake of The Poseidon Adventure. How is it he is somehow lumped with Ridley Scott as a director who delivers interesting films? Anyway, I hated every minute of it. I guess it is to be applauded by essentially setting an intimate drama in a sci-fi setting, but… so what? You're gonna have to write it at above an sixth-grade level for it to work.

--- Check out other reviews on my website of bad and cheesy movies, Cinema de Merde, cinemademerde.com
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A Longtime Favorite
Skybright_Daye28 February 2003
Maybe I'm dating myself here, but this movie is more than just a movie for me -- it's a childhood memory. My dad (Who raised me on a steady diet of scifi) and I probably watched this movie eight times together before I turned nine, and so part of my love for it stems from the memory of those times together.

But "Enemy Mine" has a lot more going for it than just fond memories. Sure, the effects are pretty bad by *today's* standards (it was the 80's, 95% of Americans didn't even *have* personal computers yet, and by the standards of the day those effects were pretty darn impressive!) But the story of two people who were trained to be enemies slowly becoming not just friends, but brothers, rings true despite the passage of time. (As Jerry [Lou Gossett, Jr.] says, "Truth is truth.") Lou Gossett, Jr. and Dennis Quaid are delightful, as always. And the scenes of Davidge (Quaid) interacting with Jerry's "son" are priceless.

People tend to knock 80's movies, especially 80's scifi movies, as being frivolous, self-centered and silly (like the decade they came from). But "Enemy Mine" definitely doesn't deserve this fate. It is a well-acted, well-meaning movie with a message we could all benefit from listening to.

Skybright's Score: 7.5 out of 10
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6/10
Ain't mine cup o' tea
jgcorrea24 November 2019
If you are a sci-fi fan (I am), Enemy Mine is watchable, but it maintains an odd balance between the laughable and the melodramatic. There should be originally some pretense of a content message behind it, but what passes out is pure superficiality. More than US$33 million was spent on this futuristic version of Stanley Kramer's Defiant Ones - a much superior movie - with touches of John Boorman's Hell in the Pacific - also quite superior. Critic Gene Siskel, however, liked it and gave it his thumbs-up. His partner Roger Ebert gave it thumbs-down arguing that it had the potential to be a truly great space thriller with a mind and a heart, but instead only gave us an alien that was too human, and too familiar... Director Petersen always created films without an identifiable style or subject of his own. He was able to keep up with the suspense in The Boat, In the line of Fire and The Unending story, but had no epic vision (as Troy proved). This was a huge waste of money. Its anecdotal premise was older than old.
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7/10
Science Fiction metaphor of tolerance
rcharding12 March 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I first read Barry Longyear's riveting short story for a high school English class (I had a very progressive teacher). The original story had a blob-like creature versus a human with a force field between them. The movie version is more free form. Quaid is gung-ho, racist military pilot who engages a Drac (Lou Gossett), humankind's mortal enemy, in a dogfight. They both crash land on an isolated planet. At first, trying to kill each other, they learn to cooperate to survive and even respect each other. Gossett's performance as the alien is convincing, making his reptilian features ever more obvious through his snake-like speech.

Like all great science fiction, this story is not really about space but an extended metaphor for current human problems, in this case, racism.

The DVD faithfully reproduces the film as I remember it on cable in the mid-1980s.
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8/10
The first rule of war is know thy enemy!
Smells_Like_Cheese10 January 2004
Warning: Spoilers
When I was a little girl, I adored Sci-Fi, my dad and I could watch any science fiction movie you threw at me and one of my favorites besides Star Wars was Enemy Mine. I couldn't get enough of this movie, in fact I remember being in trouble for wearing out the VHS. Growing up without seeing the film for a while was weird, but by some miracle I found the film on DVD for five dollars and couldn't wait to see it again to bring back such great memories. I remember being so frightened by the sand creature, loving the make up effects, wanting to learn the Drac language and loved the relationships between Willis, Jerry and Zammis. I definitely did grow up because now I'm a little more picky about films, I'm actually a little surprised that I did love this movie as a kid. However, I still love this movie, not for the good memories, but for the great story that it had.

Willis E. Davidge and Drac pilot Jeriba Shigan engage in a spacecraft battle which results in both crash-landing on a strange, dark alien world with two moons, a breathable atmosphere, water, and bizarre animal life. After initial hostilities, the two eventually learn to cooperate in order to survive. They work together to build a shelter for protection against intermittent bombardment by meteorites, and to satisfy their needs for food, water, and warmth. Over a period of years, they learn to overcome their differences, become friends, and learn each other's languages and cultures. He then discovers that Jeriba is pregnant. He promises to take care of the baby drac and to take him back home, but it becomes difficult when humans crash on the planet enslaving dracs and now Willis must protect the baby from being captured.

The reason I think I was just a little disappointed was due to the pacing of the film. I wished they had trimmed it a little more. There's also this very beautiful moment where Willis starts explaining to Jerry's son, Zammis, what his relationship was like with Zammis' father "You're father was my friend…" and then it cuts. I would've loved to hear a bit more about what he had to say about Jerry. You go through this incredible journey of these two creatures who just hated each other without even really knowing why, they then realize how silly they're being and actually find out they like each other. It's a wonderful story and it would have been a terrific to hear Willis' point of view on the story. However, the effects are still out of this world(no pun intended) fantastic. The sand creature still is as terrifying as I remember. The acting is very good, especially on Louis Gossett Jr.'s part. I still get teary eyed during some scenes between Jerry and Willis, their friendship was so powerful and I loved the way it ended with the Dracs coming to peace with the humans. It's still a great movie, just needed some better editing. But I would always recommend Enemy Mine.

8/10
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6/10
Unusual sci/fi with daring approach
gcd702 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Director Wolfgang Petersen was a brave man to tackle this sci-fi/adventure which daringly dabbles in human drama and conflict. Yet in a project which could have become completely farcical, he succeeds fairly admirably. While most films of this nature stick with high rolling action, thrills and spills, "Enemy Mine" crosses over to more serious matters and broaches such topics as our ignorance in hating our enemies and the separation of our sexes.

Barry Longyear's far fetched tale tells the story of Flight Commander Willis E. Davich, a human whose craft crash lands on a barren and seemingly uninhabited planet, and whose only company appears to be an arch enemy "Drak" which has also crashed in the same place. Davich determines to destroy his nemesis, but soon the two sworn rivals find themselves depending on each other for survival.

Dennis Quaid proves his versatility as the stranded Earth man who has had to learn to trust one he was raised to hate, and Louis Gosset Jnr., though completely unrecognisable, is quite convincing as "Jerry" the Drak.

Make-up, costumes, special effects (Industrial Light and Magic) and Art Direction are all eye-catching, but the main theme of the picture is always the two reluctant companions and their growing respect for one another.

Petersen's movie is never classic sci-fi, or classic anything I assure you, and there are one or two laughable scenes. It does however remain an acceptable entertainment thanks to its unusual focus and very different approach. Original score by Maurice Jarre.

Sunday, January 8, 1995 - Video
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10/10
A sci-fi gem -- one of the Great Unknowns of the genre
smokehill retrievers21 October 2001
Simply a masterpiece, and due primarily to the masterful FX on Lou Gossett and his inspired, magnificent performance. Most sci-fi fans have never heard of this one, but I've found very few who have seen it who weren't impressed.

This film is a perfect example of how totally bankrupt the film awards (every one of them) really are. Gossett should have walked away with Best Actor on this one, hands down, yet I doubt this film garnered even a single nomination.
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7/10
Castaways in Space
Coventry10 January 2010
"Enemy Mine" is a childhood favorite of mine and I try to regularly watch it again because it's one of the films that sparked my interest in Sci-Fi, horror and cult cinema. Of course, back when I was a kid the allegory on friendship and interstellar discrimination was completely lost on me and I simply stared at the screen because Louis Gossett Jr.'s make up looked so incredibly damn cool and because this was the film that featured the awesomely cool monster which emerged its eerie tentacle from the soil and dragged the victims underneath. I swear that monster deserves its very own horror spin-off and should be as popular as "Tremors". Nearly twenty years further on and through the eyes of an adult viewer, I'm somewhat reluctant to admit that these exact same elements are still the main trumps of "Enemy Mine". The typical "buddy" aspect of the screenplay is rather cheesy and mundane, and in practically every scene it is the bleak and depressing planet scenery that steals the show. During one of the many ongoing battles between humans and the Dracs, with the purpose of colonizing the galaxy, human fighter pilot Davigde and Drac warrior Jeriba crash-land their spaceships on the abandoned and uninhabitable planet Fyrine IV. The planet regularly suffers from meteor storms and homes some incredibly vicious monsters, so the competitive and patriotic men realize they need to put their differences aside and rely on each other for survival. The ordeal becomes even more significant when Davidge learns a thing or two about the Drac's method of reproduction and when they run into sleazy human mine explorers. The acting performances of both Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. are stupendous, but the situations and dialogs are too grotesque in order to evoke any real sentiments of compassion, sadness or sympathy. It may sound shallow, but the highlights of the film are undoubtedly the action sequences. Thank God the adrenalin-rushing finale, with B-movie regular Brion James as the sleazy Drac-hater Stubbs. "Enemy Mine" was the first US film of Wolfgang Petersen, whose "Never Ending Story" was another childhood favorite of mine. After this he only did mainstream productions.
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3/10
Enemy Mine...more like Enemy Don't Waste My Time!
erikbbergstrom24 January 2011
Boring and pointless, Dennis Quaid is only good for his unbelievable dialogue. His random freak outs are laughable, but not from a fun, campy movie-watching laugh-fest. Inner laughter. The kind where your brain is trying to tell your body to get up off the couch and turn the damn movie off! The story is the definition of 'contrived plot'. The movie didn't even last 30 minutes before the 'Enemies' were best friends, laughing and teasing, learning each other's language. I was bamboozled! There's no "Enemy" at all! Wait, maybe the "Enemy" is the side that you're on! WOAH! I usually only give 3s to movies that I didn't like but could tolerate. This is more of a faux-3, as I made it through, but shouldn't have in all the right circumstances. Don't waste your time with this one!
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10/10
An old favorite
geimanx25 May 2018
When I was a child I watched this movie with incredible fascination, I hadn't been exposed to the themes quite as regularly, the effects were par for the time, and of course the music is 80's.

Today I found it and watched it again as an adult.and even though I've long since gotten exposed to all of the racial themes, and newer graphics, I can still put myself into the seat I sat in as a child and enjoy the movie for what it is.

I love the object lesson that was designed to teach beyond race, the themes and messages within still hold just as true today as they did back then, the movie for it's time was forward thinking, and I'm glad I watched it again.
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7/10
Still good, despite it's age...
Rob_Taylor28 June 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw this movie more years ago than I care (or am able!) to remember. Though not the most action-oriented movie, it stuck in my head then and stayed with me through all the intervening years.

Through the wonders of satellite TV I got a chance to watch this again recently and, with the benefit some thought, have drawn some interesting conclusions about modern film-making compared to "how it was back then".

Firstly, Enemy Mine is a character-driven movie. Even though its tagged as a scifi film, the futuristic setting is used simply as a device to convey the human (and non-human) drama unfolding. In other words, the story could have been set in any genre or era you might care to pick. It wouldn't make a difference. These days, everything seems more oriented around spectacle, rather than substance. Look at similar titles from the Enemy Mine era such as The Thing and you see the same thing. Character development and plot progression. Compare to the movies of today, like Transformers, or Wanted and you'll see a marked lack of development in characters or plot in favour of effects.

Why is this? Well, simply put, these days they have the ability to do things that were either impossible or hideously expensive back then. And, like a child with a new toy, film-makers are having endless fun playing with CGI and will continue to do so until the "newness" wears off. And whilst they continue to play with it, other elements of the movie making process are being neglected in order to placate the "Oooh! Ahh! Pretty!" brigade that values eye-candy over story.

Anyhow, Enemy Mine shows that a good story (unlike effects) can carry a movie despite other deficiencies in the film. In EM, the effects are looking very dated and primitive. The scene where the hero crash-lands on the planet isn't much more evolved from the old Buck Rogers serials, for instance. Yet despite these things, the movie works because of the interplay between the two characters. Nearly an entire movie with only two characters in it, mostly talking. That would be a hard pitch to put to any Hollywood studio today.

So if you haven't seen it, is it any good? That very much depends on what you want out of a film. If you expect the graphical techno-wizardry of Transformers you will be disappointed. If you expect heroes gunning down endless hordes of disposable enemies, you will be disappointed.

On the other hand, if you like a story that is independent of the setting, has some excellent acting, a true feel good factor about it that doesn't depend on the kill-count or effects and a decent amount of human interest, then you might just be in for a treat.
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5/10
It's the feel good outer space epic of the year!
JohnSeal28 March 2000
Enemy Mine is a decent sci fi epic that could have been a lot better. A little less schmaltz and a tad less goofy humour would have gone a long way. The film is absolutely terrific from a technical perspective, creating a convincing and beautiful alien world. Best appreciated in its widescreen format, Enemy Mine will entertain most and is decent philosophy for the under 10 set.
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