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Sci-Fi Short Film Spotlight: RAKKA By Neill Blomkamp Starring Sigourney Weaver

June 15, 2017 by Rod T. Faulkner in Science Fiction, Short Film

RAKKA is the first, highly-anticipated project from director Neill BlomKamp's (District 9, Chappie) new production studio/idea incubator Oats Studios.

Co-written by Blomkamp and Thomas Sweterlitsch, RAKKA is set in Texas in the year 2020.

The earth has been invaded by sinister reptilian-like extraterrestrials.

We lost.

The planet is now under full occupation. The aliens have begun destroying earth's ecology in order to make the planet more habitable for them. 

The world has become a blasted ruin with humanity on the brink of extinction.

The aliens also perform obscene experiments on captive humans such as vivisection, breeding, being used as living incubators, and mind control.

Listen to our EYE ON SCI-FI podcast episode featuring RAKKA!

A rag-tag resistance - led by military commander Jasper (Sigourney Weaver) - desperately seeks any advantage against the invaders, including working with Nosh (Brandon Auret), an unstable bomb-maker and pyromaniac.

However, the key to the resistance's ultimate success lies with Amir (Eugene Khumbanyiwa), a rare survivor of the alien experimentation.

While alien invasion has been a recurring theme in science fiction since, well, forever, RAKKA stands out due to the distinct vision Blomkamp brings to the genre.

Similar to District 9, this short film features a sci-fi setting not sleek and pristine in any way.

Instead, RAKKA is an extremely dark, disturbing, gritty, gory, and unsanitary spectacle. It is the stuff of nightmares.

It is also completely mesmerizing.

The bleakness works to lend the short film a kind of verisimilitude.  If advanced hostile aliens were to invade our world, it would probably look far more like the one RAKKA depicts instead of Independence Day.

In an interview, Blomkamp revealed one of his main motivations for creating Oats Studios: to foster more maverick filmmaking, unfettered by the constraints of commercial productions.

If more creative, out-of-the-box genre films like RAKKA are the result, I sincerely hope Oats Studios is a smashing success.

Watch RAKKA in its entirety here ...

Here is a brief video of Oats Studios employees describing the firm and what it's like to work there ...

Visit the official Oats Studios website to discover more about this intriguing new venture, and how you can support its mission.


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June 15, 2017 /Rod T. Faulkner
rakka neill blomkamp, rakka oats studios, rakka steam, steam oats studios, rakka sigourney weaver
Science Fiction, Short Film
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