Friday, July 20, 2007

Sunshine quietly opens

By Claudia Puig, USA TODAY

The imminent fading out of the sun is an intriguing premise for a sci-fi film and the ambitious and visually arresting Sunshine draws us in, even if it ultimately flames out in the final act.

Drawing upon genre classics like 2001: A Space Odyssey, Alien and Solaris, the futuristic tale centers on the interactions of a group of astronauts on a perilous mission to save the planet. These eight scientists are humanity's final hope for survival.

Director Danny Boyle (28 Days Later) creates a dreamlike atmosphere that suits the cosmic subject matter. Boyle's style is intimate, even claustrophobic at times, and awe-inspiring at others. For the first hour or so the mood is contemplative: The characters fascinate us, and the special effects are mesmerizing. Then things grow bizarre, even a bit unfathomable, and a plot twist leads to the movie's devolving into a generic and overblown thriller.

The story was conceived by Alex Garland, who wrote the novel The Beach, which also was made into a movie by Boyle. While venturing further into deep space, the scientists also plumb the depths of their own psyches and even delve into the spiritual realm. Meanwhile, the crew is carrying a critical payload: a bomb that they plan to shoot into the sun to reignite it.

Cillian Murphy plays Capa, a physicist and the only crewmember who knows how to operate the complex bomb. His fellow explorers and would-be heroes include a medical officer (Cliff Curtis) a biologist (Michelle Yeoh), an engineer (Chris Evans), a navigation officer (Benedict Wong) a pilot (Rose Byrne), the captain (Hiroyuki Sanada) and his second in command (Troy Garity) in quarters that occasionally look cramped and other times seem to stretch into vastness. The astronauts are chafing under the confinement and anxiety about their mission.

2 comments:

Octopunk said...

Dang, this isn't even showing in Berkeley. I'm going to have to haul my ass to the city if I want to see this. The SF Chronicle's capsule review isn't too encouraging:

"A half-dozen nitwits you wouldn’t trust to fly a passenger plane are entrusted with saving the earth, in a mission to revive the sun. It’s cooling off, see? The story is almost impenetrable; the dialogue ridiculous and the filming deliberately confusing and faux poetic. By the time this thing is through, the idea of the earth freezing and all life perishing doesn’t sound as bad as it normally might have. "

JPX said...

jeepers!

Salem's Lot 1979 and Salem's Lot 2024

Happy Halloween everybody! Julie's working late and the boy doesn't have school tomorrow so he's heading to one of those crazy f...