OBLIVION by Tom Cruise (Reviews)
Film review: Lovely view, but haven't you and I already met on another planet?
- Twelve years ago, Cameron Crowe took an offbeat Spanish psychodrama, Open Your Eyes, and remade it as Vanilla Sky, a big and glossy Tom Cruise vehicle. Oblivion
has a similar feel. It's not a remake of a specific film (although some
might disagree – more on that later), but it does come across as a
brain-teasing indie oddity that's been super-sized by Cruise's
involvement.
- It's set on a devastated future Earth. The aliens who did the
devastating, the Scavengers, were routed, but they left the planet in
such a post-apocalyptic mess that the human race cut its losses and
moved to a colony on one of Saturn's moons. Cruise plays Jack Harper
(just three months after he played Jack Reacher), one of the few people
remaining on Earth. His job is to repair the heavily armed metal spheres
(anyone else remember Gerry Anderson's Terrahawks?) which zoom
around our poor irradiated world, picking off any lurking Scavengers.
Every evening he reports back to the chic, minimalist headquarters he
shares with his girlfriend, Victoria (Andrea Riseborough). And she in
turn gets her orders from the icily genial Sally (Melissa Leo), who
oversees their operation from an orbiting pyramidal mothership. But then
another spacecraft crash lands nearby. One of its surviving passengers
is a woman (Olga Kurylenko) Jack recognises from his dreams. Could there
be something about his past – and the past of the whole planet – that
Sally hasn't told him?
- This, you might think, is pretty epic
stuff, what with its aliens and spaceships and its fate-of-humanity
story. And in a way it is. I saw Oblivion on an Imax screen and it
looked phenomenal, from the peerless CGI, to the black-sanded canyons of
Iceland, where it was filmed, to the pristine technology that might
have been styled by Apple. It's directed by Joseph Kosinski, who made TRON: Legacy, and no one fashions sci-fi films that are more lustrously beautiful.
- But in other ways, Oblivion
is a small-scale drama. There are just six speaking parts in total, and
the first hour consists of Cruise and Riseborough getting on with their
maintenance job, with nary a suspicion that things aren't what they
seem. Oblivion has less in common with Star Wars, then, than with the thoughtful pre-Star Wars science fiction of Silent Running and Solaris. But it has even more in common with a recent cult favourite which those films inspired, Duncan Jones's Moon. I'm not saying that Oblivion is a refashioning of Moon, of course ... but some people might.
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