Reminiscence (3/10)
by Tony
Medley
116
minutes
PG-13
I would
rate this movie R, which under the Medley scale stands for Rotten. From
the outset it is hard to swallow. In the first place it is set in the
dystopian future somewhere that is already flooded all the time by the
rising sea levels due, I guess, to the woke theory of human-caused
global warming. It is sort of a pseudo noir with Nick Bannister (Hugh
Jackman), some kind of “Private Eye of the mind,” narrating.
The
problem is that the script by Lisa Joy, who also directed, is banal to
give the best of it. Mae (Rebecca Ferguson) is the doll with whom Nick
is infatuated. The fact that Ferguson is no Jane Greer (Out of the
Past, 1947) or Mary Astor (The Maltese Falcon, 1941) or
Barbara Stanwyck (Double Indemnity, 1944) is just one of the many
defects of this movie.
The
premise is infuriatingly absurd. Jackman has some kind of water filled
crypt that his patients lie in with something strapped to their brains.
They go into some sort of a sleep and Nick prods them to think about
certain things from their past which is then projected as holograms onto
some sort of platform with incidents from their past played out in
physical reality. It is beyond ridiculous.
The
McGuffin is, who is Mae and why did she run away from Nick. Why Nick
cared for Mae is difficult to comprehend, but then the entire movie is
so counter real life, why shouldn’t his obsession be any different?
It
reminded me of another film based on a ludicrous premise, Leonardo
DiCaprio's Inception (2010), in which Leonardo and his crew
personally invaded someone's dreams. Preposterous as it was, it did well
and made money.
The best
thing in the movie, though, is
Thandiwe Newton’s
performance as Emily “Watts” Sanders, Nick’s devoted assistant, that,
while not enough to save it, does give the film one plus. Her
performance was perhaps enhanced because Joy did not give her any of the
hackneyed lines that Jackman and Ferguson were required to mouth.
With a
different premise and a different female lead, this might have been a
good movie. But it is so dark, the script is so
clichéd, the
setting and premise so phantasmagoric, I thought it would never end. In
fact, it took me 3 sittings to get through it because I couldn't take
much more of it than 1/2 hour at a time.
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