PREDESTINATION (2014)

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“It’s never too late to be who you might have been.”

Directed and written by The Spierig Brothers (Michael and Peter) and filmed in Australia, this time travel adventure will undoubtedly rattle your brain and get you thinking but not without totally entertaining you. Based on the short story ‘All You Zombies’ by the famous sci-fi writer, Robert A Heinlein, this adaptation sticks very closely to the source material.

Ethan Hawke is The Barkeep who works for the temporal bureau, an agency that stops crimes before they happen; he has a mission that becomes clear as the film progresses. Sarah Snook is The Unmarried Mother who meets Hawke in a bar and begins to tell him her story. The joy in experiencing this story is the in the viewing, so no more plot for you, needless to say time travel is involved.

This sits comfortably with the Primers and Coherences of this world; low budget, whip-smart and very well written and realised.

This film belongs to Snook, who is given a chance to show off her range as a talent that we shall be definitely seeing more of. Hawke is, as usual, dependable and grounds the film with his acting skills and experience. Noah Taylor plays Mr Robertson, Hawke’s boss who keeps his cards close to his chest.

Predestination is a welcome addition to Australian film showing that with a little bit of intelligence, talent and skill, there is a place on the world’s cinema stage for the antipodeans. Of late, the Australian’s have failed to light up the world with anything other than local fare. Filled with American accents, this feels like an American film, albeit without the studio money behind it.

It should only be a matter of time before the big American studios take notice of the sibling directors, and Miss Snook will surely get a look in as well.

If you’re interested in an intelligent film that will both entertain and brush the cobwebs off your brain, then this one’s for you.

4/5

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CHAPPIE (2015)

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In 2004 Neill Blomkamp made a short film called Tetra Vaal, about a weapons corporation who make police robots. It was smart, innovative and it looked incredible.

 

This short gave birth to the idea of Chappie, a robot designed to be law enforcement whose maker, Deon Wilson (Dev Patel) discovers a way to give Chappie artificial intelligence. And so, Chappie is born, learning very quickly under the guidance/parenting of Wilson, Ninja and Yo-landi Visser (the South African hip hop outfit, Die Antwoord) and Yankie (Jose Pablo Cantillo from The Walking Dead), Chappie grows into an amalgam of moral sense and street-smarts.

Wilson works for the company Tetra Vaal, which is a weapons manufacturer run by Michelle Bradley (Sigourney Weaver) as does Vincent Moore (Hugh Jackman sporting a haircut from the bogan barber). Wilson is an engineer at heart and wants to advance his research with the A.I. but is stopped by Bradley as she feels it is not worth the companies money. He goes ahead anyway downloading the consciousness into a robot headed for the scrap heap and fun ensues.

I was looking forward to this film a lot, having avoided Elysium due to poor reviews, I was excited about the prospect of Blomkamp revisiting his original story.

It is a fun film that isn’t amazing but manages to entertain. The problem is the script that is just not tight enough. There are holes and leaps that defy logic, and I’m not talking about putting consciousness into a machine, that, I can suspend my disbelief for, it’s more about the composition of the story-telling. It doesn’t quite gel. Jackman is uninspiring, not terrible, he can act, maybe he’s miscast or more likely, his role is not fleshed out enough, a stereotypical villain role.

The effects, like in District 9 are great, seeing Chappie go to work is a joy.

It is strange that Ninja and Yo-landi are ostensibly playing the characters they utilize in Die Antwoord and using their own names, an unnecessary choice on behalf of Blomkamp. It was fun seeing them do their thing, though.

The problem with Blomkamp’s work to date is the scriptage. D9 was so different that any qualms were quashed by the journey but here it feels that he has work to do. There is potential, masses of it, but it falls just a tad short.

Worth a watch if you are into sci-fi, robots and big concepts.

3/5

BUY THE BLU RAY DVD HERE

DOWNLOAD THE FILM ON iTUNES HERE