What makes a human human? What is the soul? Are we just a
collection of memories and a conglomeration of our past experiences? Or is
there something else? Some spark of individualism or wisp of consciousness that
makes us more than just a sack of blood, guts and impulses? This is the central
question behind the visionary and disquieting film Dark City. This is not
the only big question tackled by this stylish, bold film. Writer, director Alex
Proyas wears his influences (German Expressionism, 1940’s film-noir and the
classic era of Sci-Fi and Horror) on his sleeve and with the bold, almost
over-the-top themes of self-determination and individualism he has created a
film that sits comfortably next to the classics it pays homage to while pushing
the genre forward.
The film begins with
protagonist, John Murdoch (Rufus Sewell) waking up naked and disoriented in an
unfamiliar, dingy hotel room. Things get immediately worse as he discovers a
dead and mutilated woman in the room with him, and soon finds himself being
pursued by police (in the person of an icy cold William Hurt) and even more
ominously, a group of pale, trench-coated “aliens” known only as The Strangers.
The film propels forward at a breakneck speed in a dizzying series of ominous
revelations. Giving away any points of the plot would destroy the momentum the
film so beautifully builds, but rest assured that, in spite of an initial sense
of confusion in the viewer, all is revealed by the time it reaches its satisfying
conclusion. An ambitious plot with heady themes and an intellectually honest
attempt to address “the big questions” puts Dark City ahead of the pack to start, but the most
exhilarating aspect is the endlessly changing and fascinating visual style it
achieves.
The un-named, yet
familiar city inhabited by John Murdoch is an ever-changing conglomeration of
facades cast in a pallid nighttime glow. Like Metropolis, Blade Runner or
Brazil before it or The Matrix
and Inception after, an environment free of specific time
and place references yet all too familiar exists, making us simultaneously
comforted and disoriented. It is that dream-like quality of “seems like I’ve
been here before” similar to deja-vu experiences that make Dark City
unforgettable. Rarely has a film gotten
the look so right. As though stepping into an M.C.Escher painting, stairways
exist and we have an intuitive sense of how they work, but in this dream the
laws of gravity, time and space have been recalibrated so that the familiar is
changed, our past experiences prove to be a broken compass pointing somewhere
unknown. Landmarks and institutions that should provide clues to what is
happening just reinforce the sense of being lost.
I realize all of
this description gives you no idea what the movie is really about. Simply put,
it is science fiction of the polemic, revelatory school, like a big budget,
grown up version of Star Trek
or The Twilight Zone. There are special effects, themes lifted from mythology, beings from
other planets, revocation of the laws of physics and ultimately a cosmic battle
for the very soul of man. It is a hugely ambitious film that succeeds on many
levels. At points during the finale it might veer a little too much into the
hands of the special effects wizards, although in its favor is the fact that
being filmed in 1998 almost none of the big action is CGI; however the
conclusion is satisfying by a fairly rigorous intellectual standard. The idea
that mankind is a rare and wonderful animal whose very existence would drive
other species to jealously covet what we alone have: our humanity is a theme
that can be endlessly and creatively explored. Alex Proyas’ Dark City
is an essential entry into the canon.
- Paul Epstein
1 comment:
Brilliant film. Severely under-appreciated.
Roger Ebert said that Dark City is a better film than similar reality-mind-fu*k film favorite The Matrix. And I completely agree with him.
Excellent review!
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