This
science-fiction film reminded me of a cross between “Groundhog Day” (1993),
“Inception” (2010) and “Starship Troopers” (1997). Set in the near-distant future, an asteroid
has crashed onto Earth and a spider-like alien life-form has begun inhabiting
the soil of the crash site in western Europe, seeking dominion over the human
race. An international task-force has
assembled in
This
is not a spoiler alert: the alien species, called Mimics, end up obliterating
the humans that day on the beach, except for the fact one of its alpha creatures
spills its alien blood on a dead Tom Cruise, whose character is Major William
Cage. This blood transfer has now
granted Cage the ability to live the same day over and over again every time he
dies.
The
movie feels like watching someone play a video game and they have an unlimited amount
of lives to figure out how to beat a seemingly impossible level. And to be honest, it is fun to watch. The character development and the story itself
unfolds the more we see Cage repeat each day.
During this single day, Cage lives, dies and repeats countless times and
gets to know a character named Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), who in a previous
battle with the Mimics also experienced Cage’s gift and curse.
I
hope the Casting Director realized this, but Time itself comes to the forefront
as the major character in this film.
Unfortunately Time only works well with Cruise and Blunt’s
characters. The audience meets other
characters in this story but it’s as if they are not affected by the new
created pathways of Major Cage and thus are not capable of new actions
themselves.
The
cleverness of this adapted story is its invitation to be grateful for the
real-life warriors whom have spilt human blood for our sake. Not only was this film released on the
anniversary of D-Day and visually and thematically alludes to its horror, but
one scene depicts a group of old war veterans naming cowardice where they see
it. Being courageous and living in the
present moment go hand-in-hand.
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Shakespeare
was wrong. At least that’s the suggested
claim in the title of film adapted from Josh Green’s 2012 fiction novel. The title references Act 1 Scene 2 of “Julius
Caesar” where Cassius says to Brutus:
The fault dear Brutus, is not in our stars
But in ourselves, that we are underlings.
The
movie, set in present day Indiana, is about two teenagers, one dying of cancer
and the other in remission, who meet at a support group, fall in love and
wrestle with the beauty and cruelty of their affliction.
Seventeen-year-old
Hazel Grace Lancaster, whose thyroid cancer has spread to her lungs, is convincingly
portrayed by twenty-two-year-old actress Shailene Woodley. She meets eighteen-year-old Augustus Waters, a
basketball star whose osteosarcoma led to the amputation of one of his
legs. Augustus is played by
twenty-year-old Ansel Elgort.
A
wide variety of emotions are on display in this film, where the target audience
is built-up only to be overwhelmed by the inevitable fate these two have
together. It is evident the delight and
pleasure Hazel and Augustus share with one another inspires courage to its
audience on how to live in the present moment.
Hazel as narrator of the film forewarns her audience this story is not
sugarcoated because of the prescribed ending.
What
unfolds is a deeply touching tale of the necessity to meet pain with kindness
and not violence. The narrator helps us
see examples of a world where there is a great disconnect between body and soul,
where disillusionment reigns and narcissists reject the power to truly bless.
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Wednesday, June 18, 2014
'Edge of Tomorrow'; 'The Fault in our Stars'
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