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词条 Ben 10: Alien Swarm
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Production

     Development  Filming  Effects  Music 

  4. Future

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox television
| show_name = Ben 10: Alien Swarm
| image = Ben 10 Alien Swarm poster.jpg
| caption = Promotional poster and Australian theatrical release poster
| genre =
| creator =
| based_on = {{based on|Alien Force|Man of Action}}
| writer = John Turman
James Krieg
| director = Alex Winter
| starring = Ryan Kelley
Galadriel Stineman
Nathan Keyes
Alyssa Diaz
Herbert Siguenza
Barry Corbin
| narrated =
| theme_music_composer = Michael Wandmacher
| country = United States
Canada
| language = English
| executive_producer = Alex Winter
| producer = Gideon Amir
| cinematography = Anghel Decca
| editor = Scott Richter
| runtime = 69 minutes[1]
| company = Trouper Productions
Cartoon Network Studios
| distributor = Warner Bros. Television Distribution
| network = Cartoon Network
| first_aired = {{Film date|TV=y|2009|11|25}}
| last_aired =
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
| website =
| image_upright = 0.81
| image_alt =
| screenplay =
| story =
| budget =
}}

Ben 10: Alien Swarm is a 2009 Canadian-American science fiction action television film directed by Alex Winter. It is based on the Cartoon Network animated series Alien Force and a sequel to 2007's Race Against Time. The film stars Ryan Kelley, Galadriel Stineman, Nathan Keyes, Alyssa Diaz, Herbert Siguenza, and Barry Corbin. The film premiered on Cartoon Network on November 25, 2009,[1][2][3] where it was watched by 4.02 million viewers.[4] The events of the film take place between the second and third seasons of Ben 10: Alien Force.

Plot

{{Long plot|date=October 2016}}

The film opens as Ben, Gwen, and Kevin are negotiating with a group of black market dealers at a mill, who are attempting to sell them alien nanochips, which are causing interference with the Omnitrix. One of them reveals herself to be Elena, a childhood friend of Ben and Gwen and a fellow Plumber's kid. Elena explains that she had set up negotiations to lure Ben out into the open, and explains that her father has been abducted and that she needs their help to find him.

Just as Ben agrees to help her, the insect like chips suddenly spring to life and attack, while the group sees that they are being controlled by a man on a catwalk. Kevin sees it as a double cross, though Elena insists that she is not responsible. While the dealers escape, Ben gets far enough from the chips to allow him to transform into Big Chill and fight off the swarm of flying chips along with Gwen and Kevin until the man in the rafters escapes. Elena escapes in the confusion, further justifying Kevin's suspicions. Though Gwen quickly sides with Kevin, Ben is not as easily convinced.

Arriving at their headquarters underneath the Bellwood auto repair shop, the trio, along with Grandpa Max, study one of the chips salvaged after fighting the swarm, learning that they are Techno-organic material/a hybrid of organic and technological components. Elena, having followed the trio, breaks in and Max orders her to leave, explaining that Elena's father, Victor Validus, was an apprentice of his who was dishonorably discharged after stealing the original chips. Ben refuses to believe that Elena is like her father, and breaks ranks with his grandfather and teammates to help her.

While Max is away, Gwen and Kevin hack into the computer files relating to Victor Validus and discover a video of Max interrogating Victor, in which Victor insists that "the Hive", the hive mind intelligence behind the chips, is coming to take over the planet, the chips being revealed to be able to enter and possess people. It is revealed that Victor stole the chips to further research them because he realized that they were a threat, as well as that they were dormant instead of dead, as the Plumbers believed. Realizing that Max's anger towards Victor's betrayal may be clouding his judgement, Gwen and Kevin decide to aid Ben as well.

Meanwhile, Ben and Elena arrive at Victor's old laboratory. It has been cleared out by the Hive, but they left Ship-It order slips behind. Other discarded files indicate that Victor was studying and upgrading the chips. Elena reveals that her father became erratic and he stopped returning home. He also appears to be the man from the rafters controlling the chips. A mob under the control of the chips ambush Ben and Elena, forcing them to retreat. The Omnitrix again experiences interference around the chips and keeps Ben from transforming around them, but Ben utilizes a scanning function on it to temporarily repel the mob and allow him and Elena to escape. They head to the Ship-It building to investigate further, though Ben is now somewhat suspicious of Elena himself, realizing the mob expected him and Elena to go to the lab and set a trap for them. Ben finds an order slip made out for that day, when Elena claimed that Victor had already been missing for weeks.

Gwen and Kevin, having reached the building first, are too late to stop the distribution of the chips. Instead, they are met by one of the Ship-It employees, who is also under the chips' control. He summons another larger chip swarm, now capable of forming solid, weaponizable shapes, to attack Gwen and Kevin, which eventually wreck Kevin's car (a modified Dodge Challenger) during a lengthy chase. Ben, overhearing the commotion and following them, uses Humongousaur (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker) to defeat the swarm, completely demolishing Kevin's car in the process.

By the time they return to headquarters, the chips have spread across the globe, and number in the millions. Gwen realizes the swarm's new ability is a sign that they can adapt to threats and become smarter. The group also deduces the chips have a queen (voiced by Wendy Cutler), as the chip's hosts have mentioned her. They believed that they can stop the chips by destroying her, but during their search for the Queen, one of the active chips they were studying possesses Max and leaves with him. Pulling together, the group notice that while world population centers are all infected, the relatively remote Barren Rock, Missouri, has the highest concentration, an apparent anomaly in their distribution. The town is home to the central headquarters of Ship-It. With Kevin's car out of commission, Kevin reveals that he has built a black and green car for Ben (a heavily modified Mazda RX-8), called DX Mark 10 (confirmed by Bandai and Dwayne McDuffie) as a "late birthday present."

Infiltrating the factory, populated by multiple infected, including Max, the group discovers that the Queen infected Elena's father, and his body is being used as a hive to rapidly mass-produce the chips. Possessed by the Queen, Victor is also the man from the mill controlling the chips. Elena admits that she knew her father was infected, but didn't tell them because she feared they would believe she betrayed them, just as the Plumbers did to Victor. Gwen and Kevin reluctantly suggest killing Victor to stop the Hive, but Elena and Ben refuse to consider it. Fearing being possessed by the chips while in his alien forms, Ben uses the Omnitrix to transform into a new alien that he calls "Nanomech" (voiced by the film's director Alex Winter), which was created by scanning the DNA of the chips, with Ben realizing that this was the cause of the apparent interference in the Omnitrix. He flies into Victor's head and battles the Queen, who briefly tries to assert her hive mind on him, though he resists, while Gwen, Kevin, and Elena fight the infected. As the dormant chips in the factory begin to activate, Nanomech uses the chips ability to adapt to overwhelm and destroy the Queen, and all of the other chips, freeing everyone from their control.

In the aftermath, Max, after personally apologizing to Victor, decides to retire and leave his position as leader to Ben, but Ben refuses to allow him to do so. The film ends as Ben, Gwen, Kevin, and Elena drive home.

Cast

{{Cast listing|
  • Ryan Kelley as Ben Tennyson
  • Galadriel Stineman as Gwen Tennyson
  • Nathan Keyes as Kevin Levin
  • Alyssa Diaz as Elena Validus
  • Herbert Siguenza as Victor Validus
  • Barry Corbin as Max Tennyson
  • Dee Bradley Baker as Big Chill, Humungousaur (voice)
  • Alex Winter as Nanomech (voice)
  • Wendy Cutler as The Queen (voice)
  • Joyce Kurtx as Computer (voice)
  • Patrick Cox as Big Ed
  • Jeremy Decarlos as Helio
  • Eric Mendenhall as Fitz
  • Tony Larkin as Ship-It Clerk
  • Aaron Munoz as Psycho 1
  • Justin Welborn as Psycho 2
  • Michelle Wang as Molly
  • Wilbur Fitzgerald as Financial Guy In Suit
  • Deborah Calloway Duke as Nurse
  • Nicole "Park" Krausen as International Plumber 1
  • Shankar N. Mahadevan as International Plumber 2
  • Brian Beegle as Genaro
  • Leroy Winter as Zombie Boy
  • Cesar Aguirre as Mechanic Zombie
  • Grace Baine as Alien
  • Stephen Bise as Robe-Wearing Zombie, Factory Worker Zombie 1
  • Erin Leigh Bushko as Factory Worker Zombie 2
  • Jon Gould as Stand-In, Factory Worker, Mechanic
  • Travis Grant as Zombie College Student (1st time)
  • Jevocas Green as Assembly Line Zombie
  • Ashley Harvin as Factory Worker Zombie 3
  • Roger Herrera as Forklift Driver
  • Barry Hopkins as Factory Worker Zombie 4
  • Shawn Knowles as Zombie Street Hoodlum
  • Micheal Leath as Zombie College Student (2nd time)
  • Candace Mabry as Factory Worker Zombie 5
  • Lynn McArthur as Waitress Zombie
  • Katherine Neslund as Zombie Assembly Line Worker
  • Bill Pacer as Factory Worker Zombie 6
  • Timothy Douglas Perez as Forklift Operator 1
  • Tammy Luthi Retzlaff as Zombie Mom
  • Lauren Rothermel as Business Woman
  • Sean M. Sellers as Factory Worker Zombie 7
  • Jimmy Shaw as Zombie Worker
  • Sonya Thompson as Factory Worker Zombie 8
  • Joe Walsh as Mind controlled Zombie
  • Steve Warren as Factory Worker Zombie 9
  • Ken R. Wheeler as Forklift Operator 2
  • Erika J. Wood as Factory Worker Zombie 10, Factory Chasing Zombie

}}

Production

Development

Major hurdles for film's initial production stage included the 2007-2008 Writers Guild of America strike as well as the threat of strikes by other guilds. Prior to a potential Directors Guild of America strike, Winter began creating animatics of action sequences featuring characters rejected for the 2007 film. This would allow animators to complete sequences if the Directors Guild of America went on strike in January 2008, which ultimately did not happen. Winter considered making a small project in between Ben 10 and its sequel, but decided against the idea, saying "you have your baby and you don't want someone else to take it".

Filming

Inspired by its use in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man, three action sequences in Ben 10: Alien Swarm were shot using IMAX cameras. Although screenwriters John Turman and James Krieg suggested that the IMAX footage would be 3D, Winter late said he found 3D too gimmicky. Winter added that shooting in IMAX was easier than using stereoscopic cameras.

Effects

Cartoon Network became more involved in the designs of the aliens than the company was for Ben 10. The company along with Boomerang, suggested to the filmmakers that combining aliens be the main draw for the sequel.

Music

The score to Ben 10: Alien Swarm was composed by Michael Wandmacher, who reunited with director Alex Winter to record his score with a 71-piece ensemble of the Hollywood Studio Symphony at the Sony Scoring Stage. The song "A Little Faster" by There For Tomorrow appears in the film.

Future

In December 2009, Warner Bros. Pictures and Cartoon Network are reportedly interested in fast-tracking a third Ben 10 film due to the second film's success. However, such plans have yet to be seen.

References

1. ^{{cite news |last=Shales|first=Tom |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/24/AR2009112403675.html |title=TV preview: Tom Shales on 'Ben 10: Alien Swarm' on Cartoon Network |work=The Washington Post |date=November 25, 2009 |accessdate=April 30, 2016}}
2. ^{{cite magazine |first=Brian|last=Lowry |url=https://variety.com/2009/tv/reviews/ben-10-alien-swarm-1200477332/ |title=Review: 'Ben 10: Alien Swarm' |work=Variety |date=November 22, 2009 |accessdate=April 30, 2016}}
3. ^{{cite news|title=Ben 10 Alien Creation Chamber|url=http://www.prlog.org/10421946-ben-10-alien-creation-chamber.html|work=PRLog|date=November 20, 2009|accessdate=December 30, 2013}}
4. ^https://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/sdsdskdh279882992z1/cable-ratings-nfl-college-football-monk-and-icarly-top-weekly-cable-charts/34996/

External links

  • {{IMDb title|1327701}}
{{wikiquote}}{{Ben 10}}{{Cartoon Network pilots, films and specials}}{{Alex Winter}}

20 : 2009 television films|2000s science fiction films|2000s action films|American films|Films set in the United States|English-language films|Films based on television series|Television films based on television series|Live-action films based on animated series|American superhero films|American sequel films|Ben 10|Films using computer-generated imagery|Films with live action and animation|Canadian science fiction films|Canadian films|Films set in 2010|Films directed by Alex Winter|Screenplays by John Turman|Canadian sequel films

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