Children of Men [author:Monica Public time:Sep 7, 2006] |
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An often grippingly realized portrait of a not-so-futuristic Blighty in which fascism and infertility have become uneasy bed partners, Alfonso Cuaron's "Children of Men" is a fine but flawed exercise in dystopia. Much more effective when it's a down-and-dirty actioner than when trying to grapple with the multitude of personal and political issues raised, pic suffers from Clive Owen's cold lead playing but gains some heart and soul from a kudosworthy, wonderfully eccentric perf by Michael Caine. Skedded for a fall rollout in Europe and a December release in the U.S., this film looks likely to reap comfortable mid-range business.
Set only 21 years in the future, in November 2027, pic -- based on the 1993 novel by British writer P.D. James, better known for her murder mysteries -- posits a world racked by infertility and social chaos in which terrorism is the norm. The U.K., however, is a relative haven of peace -- "The world has collapsed; only Britain soldiers on," trumpets Brit TV propaganda -- and as a consequence, immigration is out of control.
Cuaron clearly got to know Blighty when shooting "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban." He portrays a grungy, Orwellian country of perpetual security announcements, prowling armed police, garbage in the streets and illegal immigrants in cages -- not so different from the U.K. today, and far more believable in every respect than in the feeble "V for Vendetta."
Main difference from the present is that, due to a sudden outbreak of female infertility, there have been no births in the world since 2009.
In a surprising demo of what's to come on the action front, the opening sequence sees activist-turned-bureaucrat Theo Faron (Owen) almost blown to pieces by a terrorist bomb in central London. Using that as an excuse to take time off from his boring ministry job, he travels out of town -- in a riot-protected train -- to visit his old friend, onetime political cartoonist Jasper (Caine), who grows his own pot in the forest in which he lives.
As soon as Theo gets back to London, he is kidnapped by the terrorist group Fishes, which campaigns for equal rights for all immigrants. Its leader turns out to be Julian Taylor (Julianne Moore), with whom Theo was a student activist 20 years ago and had a kid that died. She offers the broke and heavy-drinking Theo a sizable sum to get transit papers for an illegal refugee, Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey), whom they're smuggling out of the country.
Before he knows it, Theo is on the run with Kee -- from both the authorities and renegade members of Fish -- as Kee turns out to be eight months pregnant with the first child on Earth in 18 years. It's finally left to him to smuggle Kee to shadowy offshore organization the Human Project, a group of scientists dedicated to finding a cure for global infertility.
Posted By DEREK ELLEY
Source: http://www.yahoo.com
Printed From:http://www.free-press-release.com/news/200609/1157648164.html Source:Free Press Release
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