Cast: Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Sharlto Copley
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Announcing his arrival as an exciting, original voice with his terrific 2009 debut, the breathtaking sci-fi blast District 9, South African director Neill Blomkamp returns with 'Elysium', another intelligent action movie with a social message nicely woven in.
Set in 2154, a polluted and overpopulated Earth has been left to the poor by the rich, who now live in a paradise-like space station orbiting our planet. Up there in 'Elysium', sickness, crime and poverty do not exist. So when Max (Matt Damon), a reformed car thief, is injured in a radioactive accident, he becomes desperate to travel to 'Elysium' to cure himself. Too bad he has to get past a psychopathic assassin first (Sharlto Copley), and then there's that frosty defender of the rich world (Jodie Foster).
Echoing similar themes of social inequality and the high-handedness of the privileged class that he addressed in District 9, Blomkamp even adopts the same gritty shooting style, particularly for the Earth portions. Yet there's a tidy contrasting elegance to the Elysium-set scenes that is until spaceships come crashing into landscaped lawns, and Copley and Damon get down to some serious ass-kicking!
These two men in fact, are the film's most interesting characters, and 'Elysium' seldom misses a beat when it's focusing on them. But a predictable final act, involving a valiant sacrifice and an aborted romance, slacken the film's pace.
I'm going with three and a half out of five for 'Elysium'. The budget's bigger and the special effects are slicker, but this is a blockbuster with a brain. Best enjoyed with a big helping of popcorn.
Rating: 3.5 / 5
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Announcing his arrival as an exciting, original voice with his terrific 2009 debut, the breathtaking sci-fi blast District 9, South African director Neill Blomkamp returns with 'Elysium', another intelligent action movie with a social message nicely woven in.
Set in 2154, a polluted and overpopulated Earth has been left to the poor by the rich, who now live in a paradise-like space station orbiting our planet. Up there in 'Elysium', sickness, crime and poverty do not exist. So when Max (Matt Damon), a reformed car thief, is injured in a radioactive accident, he becomes desperate to travel to 'Elysium' to cure himself. Too bad he has to get past a psychopathic assassin first (Sharlto Copley), and then there's that frosty defender of the rich world (Jodie Foster).
Echoing similar themes of social inequality and the high-handedness of the privileged class that he addressed in District 9, Blomkamp even adopts the same gritty shooting style, particularly for the Earth portions. Yet there's a tidy contrasting elegance to the Elysium-set scenes that is until spaceships come crashing into landscaped lawns, and Copley and Damon get down to some serious ass-kicking!
These two men in fact, are the film's most interesting characters, and 'Elysium' seldom misses a beat when it's focusing on them. But a predictable final act, involving a valiant sacrifice and an aborted romance, slacken the film's pace.
I'm going with three and a half out of five for 'Elysium'. The budget's bigger and the special effects are slicker, but this is a blockbuster with a brain. Best enjoyed with a big helping of popcorn.
Rating: 3.5 / 5
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