
The world of 9 is a post-apocalyptic one populated by pint-sized sack people with numbers for names and predatory machines that hunt them in a gritty game of cat and mouse. For younger viewers who this concept might resonate with, it's a plus they've yet to sit through too many cookie-cutter Orwellian tales of a bleak future, but anyone who's familiar with more than one dystopian tale will find no big surprises in 9's plot. In typical end-of-the-world fashion, mankind's reliance on technology eventually yielded super-powered, independent-thinking machines that turned on their makers and left the earth a barren hellscape. Survival is now the only order of business, but this time, rather than humans it's enchanted voodoo dolls that are fighting for tomorrow.
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9, based off the short film of the same name, is created by first-time full-length director Shane Acker and produced by Tim Burton and Timur Bekmambetov, director of Night Watch and Wanted. The voice acting is unremarkable despite a decent lineup, but visually the movie shines with eye candy aplenty. The gang of dolls sport ultra-crisp textures, and war torn backgrounds look photo realistic.
The film's biggest fault is a colossal fumble near the end with some mystical mumbo jumbo of Matrix Revolutions-sized proportions that serves as a dumb conclusion to what could have been a thrilling PG-13 ride from start to finish. 9falls just short of a full recommendation because of this but is otherwise an entertaining experience that may help tide over fans of Burton-esque dark fantasy until 2010's Alice in Wonderland.
--Eric Pulsifer