Low-budget sci-fi schlock, The Alpha Incident contains a storyline that might have passed
muster as, say, an episode of The Six
Million Dollar Man. Stretched to feature length, bereft of a colorful hero,
and inexplicably burdened with a bummer ending, The Alpha
Incident galumphs from start to finish, so the most memorable thing about
the picture is the laughable special-effects sequence depicting a man’s head
exploding. If only the movie could provoke that dynamic a response from
viewers. The movie proper begins on a train, where federal agent Dr. Sorensen
(Stafford Morgan) is tasked with protecting mysterious cargo. After pestering
Dr. Sorensen with questions, nosy train worker Hank (George “Buck” Flower),
tampers with the cargo, which just happens to be dangerous material from outer
space. Dr. Sorensen subsequently halts the train at a small station, ordering
the station quarantined until authorities decide how to resolve the incident. Cue
close-quarters melodrama involving Dr. Sorensen and the workers at the train
station. That’s pretty much all that happens until the very end of the film,
when folks start dying in horrific ways. (Despite his star
billing, screen veteran Ralph Meeker delivers a lifeless performance in an
inconsequential role yet another station worker.) Throughout most of The Alpha Incident, folks simply hang
out, explaining how nervous they are without showing their feelings in
dramatically interesting ways. Even the head-exploding bit is anticlimactic,
and when you can’t make a combustible cranium exciting, you know you’re doing
something wrong.
The
Alpha Incident: LAME
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