Sunday, March 16, 2025

Enemy Mine (1985)


 ☆ ☆ ☆ ½

Enemy Mine (1985) – W. Petersen

Never saw this unforgettable sci-fi film back in the day and didn’t know enough about it before screening it with Amon.  For those who think it’s a buddy film in space, that’s only half correct (bromance would be the better term and I can’t think of another mainstream genre film from this era with such a barely hidden gay subtext). Dennis Quaid (channelling the later Jack Black persona) is a space pilot on the front line in the human war against the reptilian Dracs.  After a vicious dogfight, he crash lands on a deserted planet but soon discovers a Drac (Lou Gossett Jr.) has also crashed there.  In order to survive the harsh environment, they have to team up … and eventually become friends.  Months or years go by (making Quaid even more Jack Black-like) and, although the pace of the film does drag, it is anything but predictable and soon gets quite weird. I won’t spoil it here but by the end of the film, Quaid is on a rescue mission to get some Drac slaves out of the grips of some evil human miners.  This latter scene is the only explanation for the film’s title – unless you just accept that it is really meant to be “my enemy”.  Ultimately, taken as a film that desires to take on big issues, such as cross-cultural acceptance and anti-racism, in a sci-fi genre context, my feeling is that it pretty much succeeds without being too heavy-handed.  As a sci-fi film, perhaps it drags, though the old-school special effects (and especially set design) are pretty cool.

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