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CHILDREN OF MEN (****) |
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Movie Review by:
Jim "Good Old JR" Rutkowski
Directed by: Alfonso Cuaron
Written by: P.D.James, Timothy J. Sexton, Paul Chart. Adapted from
P.D.James II’s novel: "Children of Men"
Starring: Julianne Moore, Clive Owen, Michael Caine,
Running time: 174 minutes,
Released: 12/25/06.
Rated R for strong violence,
language, some drug use and brief nudity. |
"While it is still
early in what is sure to be a long career, this
could possibly turn out to be director Cuarón's
masterpiece..." |
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Alfonso
Cuarón's exploration of a world in chaos, Children of Men is
a film of simple power and powerful simplicity. The film is
the best kind of science fiction in that it doesn't consider
itself science fiction and instead concentrates entirely on
the human elements of the story. Cuarón, who has had some
noteworthy accomplishments before this film but never
achieving this sort of magnitude of vision and execution,
shows himself a master storyteller here. He takes the
conceit of the plot and hits the ground running. Children of
Men is an immersive, transporting experience, both
devastating and hopeful, and a film that is emotionally,
intellectually, and viscerally exhilarating. Cuarón and his
fellow screenwriters take the basic structure of a thriller,
weaving ideas of contemporary and universal relevance
seamlessly throughout, and bend the clichés and formulas
just enough to give the sense that anything could happen.
With his technical crew, he creates a futuristic
world—sometimes inspiring but mostly haunting—that is
completely believable. As our central character is immersed
in the world of the story, that world slowly reveals itself
without lingering too long on any specific element but
giving enough of a glimpse to make an impact. And the film's
final impact, one of hope in the face of utter despair, is
tangible.
The year is 2027; the city is London. A newscast tells
informs that all women throughout the world are infertile
and delivers sad news to those who have survived the chaos
that has ensued since: The youngest person alive has died.
People are devastated, but in a local coffee shop, Theodore
Faron (Clive Owen), a government beuoracrat, hears the
breaking news and only stops long enough to get his coffee.
A long tracking shot follows him outside, and as he prepares
his drink, the shop explodes. Terrorism throughout the
country begins to escalate, and Theo is kidnapped on the
street and thrown into a van. In a makeshift interrogation
room, he is confronted by Julian Taylor (Julianne Moore),
his ex-wife and leader of a terrorist group whose focus is
the rights of immigrants, all of whom are illegal in
England. She wants him to help get transport papers for
someone to get them through the country without any problems
from the authorities. As it turns out, the person is a young
girl named Kee (Claire-Hope Ashitey), who somehow is
pregnant. The idea is to try to get her to The Human
Project, a mysterious organization that Theo's journalist
friend Jasper (Michael Caine) says might not even exist.
The screenplay by Cuarón, Timothy J. Sexton, David Arata,
Mark Fergus, and Hawk Ostby based on the novel by P.D. James
almost boils down to the formula of a road trip movie.
Essentially, Theo travels the country and encounters
different groups and people who help shape the picture of
this futuristic society. A contact named Nigel (Danny
Huston) who can help Theo get the papers necessary to
transport Kee has Michelangelo's David and Picasso's
Guernica as part of his collection of saved artwork, and a
young boy also present at the meeting is playing a
holographic game at the table. While a small detail, it
shows Cuarón's attitude toward the film's presentation of
futuristic technology: Show it, but don't focus on it.
People are able to order anti-depressants and suicide kits
(the slogan: You decide when), but Jasper woes that
marijuana is still illegal. Billboards throughout London
encourage citizens to report any kind of suspicious
behavior, especially if it involves immigrants. Jasper's
wife is near-comatose, the result of some kind of government
torture, as we learn from Cuarón's camera panning over
newspaper clippings to give us a quick history of how
England and the world at large came to this point. How it
all happened is not important, of course, and the screenplay
concentrates on how the upheaval has affected and continues
to affect those living in it.
Theo and Julian lost a child, throwing their marriage into
its own upheaval, and the pain is still just under the
surface, as is shown in a scene between the two on a bus
that quickly turns into an argument. While the script seems
to be heading in a certain direction with the two, one event
fairly early in the film shatters multiple expectations as
to what it will be about. The screenplay shatters a few
other expectations—the plot's multiple double-crosses leave
a lot in doubt—and plays with formula. There's an ingenious
scene where Theo, Kee, and Miriam (Pam Ferris), another of
Kee's helpers, attempt to make a getaway in a car that won't
start. Before that, there's an ambush sequence—seen entirely
in a single, long take from the interior of a car—that pans
out in unexpected but realistic ways. The high point in
terms of action comes in an extended scene in an urban war
zone. Cuarón and cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki shoot from
the hip in this sequence, giving it a frightening, almost
documentary style (blood spattered on the camera just
lingers there), and while the shot is divided by a few cuts,
it amazingly plays like one, long seamless take.
Thematically, the film is simple but immensely poignant.
Cuarón's inclusion of the immigration issue is timely, and a
scene where Theo and Kee find their way into a "refugee
camp" for undocumented immigrants is particularly
unsettling. The film is wise in the way people enter or
reenter our lives suddenly for no apparent reason and
ultimately leave them with unresolved finality. Jasper
raises the concept of faith and chance at play in the world,
and while certainly a clichéd idea, it holds relevance
within the story. The central theme, as corny as it sounds,
is hope. The film doesn't needlessly ponder any of these
ideas, instead marrying them directly to the story. The
central concern, whether or not the child is born, is not
the end of the film, and once the child's fate either way is
sealed, the film starts affecting the spirit instead of the
brain. For one long moment at the climax of the urban battle
scene, everything comes to a standstill, and the emotional
impact of that moment is overwhelming. Clive Owen is film's
emotional center as Theo's apathetic shield slowly
deteriorates as the world goes further to hell. A scene late
in the film where Theo recalls a simple parenting technique
is absolutely heart-wrenching.
While Cuarón's technical mastery in composing these images,
choreographing organized chaos, and creating this world is
astounding, it's his ability to elicit deeper significance
and emotional weight out of these that remains long after
the film is over. While it is still early in what is sure to
be a long career, this could possibly turn out to be
Cuarón's masterpiece, but however that turns out, Children
of Men is a cinematic powerhouse. |
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CHILDREN OF
MEN ©
2007 UNIVERSAL Pictures.
All Rights Reserved
Review © 2007 Alternate Reality, Inc. |
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