Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

Movie Review: 'Transcendence' - stylish off-beat film

Troy Ribeiro IANS, 18 Apr, 2014 12:49 PM
  • Movie Review: 'Transcendence' - stylish off-beat film
Cast: Johnny Depp, Rebecca Hall, Paul Bettany, Cillian Murphy, Kate Mara, Cole Hauser, Morgan Freeman, Clifton Collins Jr. and Cory Hardrict
 
Director: Wally Pfister
 
Rating: * * *
 
A tragic love story, constructed on the foundation of, "heal the planet for a better future for all of us", "Transcendence" gives an insight of what would happen to the primitive organic life or "the soul after death". In other words, it is the scientific and technological interpretation of life after death.
 
Seriously, bordering on ethical issues, this futuristic science-fiction film is laced with romance and political nuances. It is thought-provoking and at the same time a daunting film, suggesting that the internet and technology have irrevocably transformed our relationship with reality in ways, we have only begun to understand.
 
The plot, in a Silicon Valley scenario, portrays a successful, experimental scientist Will Caster (Johnny Depp) who works alongside with his wife and colleague Evelyn (Rebecca Hall). They delve on Neuro Engineering for the possibilities of transferring intelligence to the digital realm. This they do in order to create a "super-intelligent computer" that would possess the combined intelligence of all the people who have ever lived on Earth. It is like, "Create God, your own God!"
 
This proclamation is not taken kindly by an anti-technology outfit called RIFT- Revolutionary Independence from Technology, which is led by Bree (Kate Mara).
 
This extremist faction attacks the scientists and their labs. Will Caster is seriously injured by a poisonous dart and is on his deathbed.
 
 
So, he begs his wife to upload his consciousness on his newly invented machine PINN (Physically Independent Neural Network.)
 
Desperate to keep him around, Evelyn obliges and manages to transplant his consciousness to the network - "cloud", moments before his death.
 
But when the late Caster's voice emanates from a hard drive, Evelyn's colleagues are wary of the situation wondering if it is really her dead husband, or just a digital representation of him.
 
Convinced that their lives are in danger in California, Evelyn migrates to a non-descript town in the middle of the desert called Brightwood. Here, with the help of Will, she sets up BDC, Brightwood Data Centre, where with the technology; they "target damaged cells, repair and regenerate them," thus creating "hybrids. This escalates the conflict, reminding you of the theme in "Invasion of the Body Snatchers".
 
The film struggles to be compelling. With some lyrical imagery created by neat computer generated images that seamlessly merge with cinematographer Jess Hall's artistic frames, the viewing is tedious, because the narration drags and the action graph is not dramatic enough for the adrenaline rush.
 
 
The first forty minutes of the film is a dispassionate heavily loaded montage, that include abstract and cliched indistinct code scrolling across various screens. The film only gets interesting once you hear Will, when he helps Evelyn escape her tormentors.
 
With Johnny Depp morphing into a digital phantom for most part of the film, the emotional quotient is negligible but he exhibits a strong magnetism to his character's arc.
 
Rebecca Hall is not as effective as Depp. Nevertheless, she offers her best. With an awkward ease, she portrays the quiet idealist as well as an enthusiastic hardcore supporter, which gets confusing at times.
 
Of the others, Paul Bettany as Will and Evelyn's fellow researcher and colleague Max Waters, Morgan Freeman as mentor, Professor Tagger, Cillian Murphy as FBI agent Buchanan and Kate Mara are wasted as flat-stock characters.
 
This is cinematographer Wally Pfister's maiden directorial venture which by modern criteria is a stylish off-beat humourless film with an atmosphere of a noir film.
 

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

Movie Review: Sunny Leone's 'Ragini MMS 2' is hardly spooky

Movie Review: Sunny Leone's 'Ragini MMS 2' is hardly spooky
Watching "Ragini MMS 2" is like playing Russian Roulette with the lights off. You know someone is pulling the trigger and trying to fire random shots at unidentified victims. Every trick from the horror genre is brought into use

Movie Review: Sunny Leone's 'Ragini MMS 2' is hardly spooky

Movie Review: '3 Days To Kill' cliched plot with unconvincing graph

Movie Review: '3 Days To Kill' cliched plot with unconvincing graph
Overall, with respectable action scenes and good production quality, the visuals are well laid and edited. Director McG has managed to put up a good show, but the film lacks the wow factor. 

Movie Review: '3 Days To Kill' cliched plot with unconvincing graph

Movie Review: 'Battle of the Damned' hackneyed zombie film with no flesh

Movie Review: 'Battle of the Damned' hackneyed zombie film with no flesh
To watch "Battle of the Damned" is like rotting in hell with zombies, killer robots, obtuse-damned survivors and an overdose of innate absurdity that is prevalent in the film.

Movie Review: 'Battle of the Damned' hackneyed zombie film with no flesh

Movie Review: 'Bewakoofiyaan' Is Just Frothy Fun

Movie Review: 'Bewakoofiyaan' Is Just Frothy Fun
Rishi brings to the characters a cornocupia of "cool". Seldom in his any other recent film except "Do Dooni Chaar" has this brilliant actor expressed such pleasure in putting forward his character's point of view.

Movie Review: 'Bewakoofiyaan' Is Just Frothy Fun

Movie Review: 'Gulaab Gang' is Chick Flick With A Social Conscience

Movie Review: 'Gulaab Gang' is Chick Flick With A Social Conscience
The film has its heart in the right place. It portrays rural oppression of women with honesty. But the brutality is brittle and sometime laughable. 

Movie Review: 'Gulaab Gang' is Chick Flick With A Social Conscience

Movie Review: '300: Rise of an Empire' is a mediocre vengeance drama

Movie Review: '300: Rise of an Empire' is a mediocre vengeance drama
After half an hour of watching the film, you feel the film rambles and gradually it becomes monotonous and wearisome

Movie Review: '300: Rise of an Empire' is a mediocre vengeance drama