In Iron Sky we see the rise of the 4th Reich, who has been building war machines on the moon since 1945 and watching a massively abridged version of The Great Dictator to inform their growing generations of Hitler’s glory. When two astronauts (sent by the president as part of an elaborate voter campaign) land on the moon’s unexplored shady surface, they are accosted by a group of very stylish, gravity-defying space men. Washington, the first African-American on the moon, is assimilated into the Nazi co-op in an atrocious experiment and with the naïve Renate and ambitious Klaus – two Gen X moon Nazis vying the future of national socialism – they descend on Earth for a new holocaust.
Begun as a teaser trailer aired at Cannes, and then a viral sensation on YouTube, the warped brainchild of Finnish director Timo Vuorensola is an idea so extraordinary, its almost irresistible. It had a cult status before it started production, and is partly fan-funded. Shot in Finland, Germany, the United States and here in Australia – our little Down Under gets a share in the New World Order – yay! The special effects are great for its budget and the camp costume design is a marvelous mockery of the seductive SS uniform.
This feat of a team effort, 6 years in the making, does not necessarily vouch for the weak plot, babel performances or outdated politics. The president resembles Republican candidate Sarah Palin, but please – she is SO 2010. The Nazi jokes are likewise exhausted and surprisingly enough the holocaust isn’t really mentioned at all.
Where conspiracy/cult movies like The Celestine Prophecy, or Battlefield Earth have a kind of niche market or faith, Iron Sky, parodying conspiracy, didn’t dare take itself too seriously or as seriously as the kind of audience it might attract. It may have been funnier, if it had been a little more evangelistic and less like a really bad Hollywood spoof from 5 of the 10 writers of Date Movie. You will laugh though.
The true filmaholic hears a song from the soundtrack and knows
exactly where it comes in during the film. The last
thing you would want is to have your viewing dominated by an overlay large screen. There
are several cinema news website which update the photos and videos of
the wedding.