In a theater on New York's East Side, Colette Mann Hydecky—a feature columnist for Entertainment Weekly and a respected film critic—rubbed his chin thoughtfully as he watched the screen.
Even from just the opening twenty-some minutes, it was already clear: this film was anything but ordinary.
To Colette, what Martin had done with the alien depiction was extraordinary. It completely subverted the usual Hollywood tropes. These aliens weren't powerful invaders with superior tech or overwhelming strength. No, they weren't the conquerors—if anything, they were the conquered.
Martin had astonishingly portrayed them as impoverished refugees, viewed by humanity as pests and parasites. They lived in squalor, locked away in slums, eating garbage and cat food, feared and reviled.
In District 9, humans treated them without shame as test subjects, zoo exhibits, commodities. The film laid bare the darkest depths of human nature.
Clearly, this was no summer blockbuster designed solely to entertain. No—this was something else.
At the very least, in terms of artistic ambition, it had already far surpassed Martin's earlier film Iron Man.
Then the story took an even more surreal turn.
During a raid on a shack, Carl—Robert Downey Jr. character—was sprayed with a strange black fluid from a device that alien Christopher Johnson had spent twenty years secretly assembling.
At the time, Carl felt only slight discomfort. He carried on with his mission, unaware that this random incident would soon upend his entire life.
At another rickety tin-roofed shack, a small alien child was playing outside.
"You see this?" Carl said to the camera, gesturing. "Little prawns everywhere."
His tone was casual, like pointing out puppies or stray cats.
"That's exactly why I wanted to burn those eggs earlier."
"Let's just shoot those damn thing," muttered a soldier behind him.
"No, not yet," Carl said, pulling a lollipop from his pocket. Like tossing a treat to a dog, he threw it at the alien child. "Here. Candy for you."
Then he turned to the camera with a proud grin. "Candy always works. Never fails."
But unexpectedly, the alien child smacked the lollipop right back—straight at Karl's eye.
"Fuck you!" Carl roared. "You almost took out my eye!"
A soldier raised his gun toward the child.
"Am I not being nice enough, huh? You little bastard!" Carl snapped.
Whatever goodwill the audience had gained for Karl when he spared an alien earlier vanished in an instant.
Just then, an adult green-skinned alien emerged from the shack.
"Is that your brat?" Carl barked, pointing.
"Inside, now!" the alien father said, ushering his child in, then bowed to Carl. "I'm sorry, sir. Deeply sorry."
"This little shit has no manners," Karl muttered.
He pointed at the adult alien and ordered, "Thomas, get him out here."
The alien was dragged out and forced to kneel.
Carl stormed inside, intending to flush out the child and evict them both.
Inside, he discovered an unusual array of electronics.
"Thomas, aim your weapon—this guy's a criminal," he declared, then turned to the camera with mock amazement. "It's like a damn tech shop in here. Look at this! He's decked out the place with stolen computers. Clearly unregistered."
Suddenly, Carl doubled over in nausea and rushed outside, vomiting against the wall.
He brushed it off as fatigue or the foul stench of the slums. But on the way back to headquarters, his head began to spin—and then his nose started bleeding black.
Back at MNU, things only got worse.
While trying to write a report, he pressed the pen too hard and—pop—a bloodied fingernail fell off.
Panicked, he stumbled to the restroom, only to find his teeth loosening.
"Oh God!"
"This is terrifying!"
Gasps filled the theater.
There wasn't any gore—but this creeping, parasitic transformation had a visceral, skin-crawling horror that made the audience shiver.
Staggering home, Carl was greeted with a surprise party—organized by his wife, the daughter of MNU's director.
She brought him good news: he'd been promoted.
But the tragedy was, just as he should've been celebrating, he collapsed.
When he awoke, he was in a hospital bed.
"I had black liquid coming from my nose," he told the doctor. "I even coughed up some black… thing. I don't know what it was…"
As he spoke, the doctor silently began to unwrap the bandages around his arm.
Then came the horror.
Three slimy, insect-like alien tentacles shot out from under the gauze.
"Aaaagh! What is that?! Fuck—fuck—what's happening to me?! My hand! Doctor?!"
The doctor recoiled. "What the hell is that?!"
The whole theater erupted.
"Aaah!"
"Oh my God!"
"He's turning into an alien!"
Colette Hydecky's pulse raced—his heart was pounding.
Kafka's "Metamorphosis"... melded with alien DNA—what genius!
Back in the Grand Theater in L.A., Leon was sweating bullets. For the first time, he realized you didn't need buckets of gore to make your skin crawl.
As for Robert Downey Jr.—he couldn't help but grin smugly as he watched his own performance. Even though he'd seen it before during internal screenings, this scene still made him feel like a badass.
He was badass. And Martin's direction? Incredible.
Kevin Thomas scribbled furiously in his notebook:
"Unimaginable plot twist. Tragic fate of the Prawns elicits outrage, while the racist, prejudiced Carl—of all people—develops a flicker of humanity… and is now becoming the very creature he loathes. Whatever's next, it'll be spectacular."
"This isn't just a sci-fi movie," whispered James Cameron, eyes wide. "This is so much more than a damn sci-fi movie."
Onscreen, the story took an even darker turn.
Through Carl's perspective, viewers finally saw the horrific truth: the human government had been secretly experimenting on the aliens all along.
Incomplete bodies. Severed limbs. Grotesque, inhumane trials.
The audience's popcorn suddenly lost all flavor.
Carl was about to be dissected—and the one who gave the order?
His own father-in-law.
MNU's top executive.