Director: Danny
Boyle | Starring:
Cillian Murphy, Michelle Yeoh
Released: 2007
| Runtime: 107m
| Rating (out of 5):
*** |
|
I seem to be doing a
lot of doubling up of late. First I had my whole Bourne
Trilogy run, followed by yet another Matt Damon in the CIA movie,
The
Good Shepherd. And now I've followed up 28
Days Later with another Danny Boyle directed, Cillian Murphy starring
film in Sunshine. These coincidences are completely coincidental,
but not uninformed. Whatever the case, it's just a little weird.
It's even clearer after watching this film that Danny Boyle really
puts his films on the backs of his young, male stars. First he had
Ewan
McGregor in Shallow
Grave and Trainspotting,
and now he has the equally charismatic (and skinny) Cillian Murphy
in 28 Days Later and Sunshine. He is fascinated
with their faces, focuses attention on them and chews them up whole.
Starring along with Cillian in this film is his nemesis, the sun.
Yes, the sun. And what good sci-fi movie, which this is in the purest
2001:
A Space Odyssey kind of way, doesn't have some sort of metaphorical
and religious and gigantic meaning of life overtones? This one is
chock full of deeper meanings and the face of humanity, etc.
Not surprisingly, the film looks cool as hell. And unlike a lot of
sci-fi movies both past and present, it didn't look cheap. Too many
times movies rely on stage pieces or inordinate amounts of CGI to
fill in the creative holes, but Boyle manages to show us just enough
in every frame to not ruin our sense of place, he doesn't overwhelm
our senses with technology or cold/grimy aesthetics (a favorite of
sci-fi), letting the story and characters come forward. Sure, there's
some cool stuff, including the holograph room that allows these astronauts,
on their deep space journey to kick-start a dying sun, to recharge
by experiencing simple Earth activities. And the ship itself looks
like a giant eye, but otherwise Boyle plays it relatively straight.
There are no robots and shit, in other words.
So the story goes that these astronauts, all with different skills,
have been sent out on the second Icarus mission (the first was lost
without any communication) to shoot a bomb into the sun in an attempt
to get it working again. You see it seems the sun is dying, which
of course means the extinction of the human race. It's a very noble
mission, and sounds a little silly when you think about it. There
is talk of dropping the payload and flying back to Earth, but somehow
I think they all know that this is a suicide mission.
So they're way the hell out in space, flying towards the sun and some
bad stuff happens. Things start to break, fires start in the ship,
and people start to die. This starts infighting, near-mutinies and
all sorts of whatnot. The thing has elements of every more cerebral
disaster movie of this type you can think of, including 2001,
The
Abyss, Alien
and a bunch of others that I'm blanking on, but you get the idea.
Meanwhile the crew gets themselves into a real pickle trying to complete
their mission. After all, the fate of the entire planet is in their
hands, and they need to deliver that bomb into the sun no matter what.
That is even if some bizarre malevolent entity has invaded their ship
in an attempt to rectify what it feels is cosmic balance. This is
where the movie goes off the rails a bit, turning into a weird mixture
of slasher film and neo-philosophical jumble. Whatever the case, I
didn't hate the shift entirely, but was just a bit surprised. Funny
enough, I told a friend I had rented this thing, and he warned me
that the first three quarters of the movie were great, but that the
last 15 minutes or so ruin everything. So I was expecting something
really, really bad. What I got was a bit of a mess, but not completely
beyond help.
This movie barely made a peep at the box office (like one of the worst
totals I've ever seen). I wouldn't be surprised if it didn't get a
second life on DVD. After all, with people buying all these Blu-ray
DVD players and big screens, they're going to be clamoring for gorgeous
films like this one, regardless of plot. As tends to happen with rented
DVDs, there were several places in the disc that were filthy enough
to actually stop the thing. I had to pull it from the player, clean
it as best I could and forward to the scene on which it staggered.
And then towards the end of the film when the aforementioned malevolent
entity enters, Boyle uses one of his strange filmic techniques where
the thing basically burns the lens and causes the film to stutter
and skip and do all sorts of things that made me wonder if in fact
my DVD was screwed, or if he intended the effects I was seeing. To
this day I have no idea what was intentional and what was mechanical
failure. Whatever you think of the movie, it will, in the words of
Ms. Hipster, stick with you. [DVD]
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