109 minutes
Rated R for strong bloody violence and language throughout
TriStar Pictures
Article first published as Movie Review: 'Elysium' on Blogcritics.
If there’s any film with a huge burden of being a director’s sophomore effort, it’s Neill Blomkamp’s Elysium. Just how do you follow up a film as original, brilliant, and out-of-nowhere as District 9? While District 9 featured a well-mixed blend of sci-fi and political allegory, this time, Blomkamp is setting his sights almost a little too high by tackling current social issues —think the 99% — just to name one. Elysium isn’t quite the narrative triumph that District 9 was, but it still takes to the skies with jaw-dropping effects and a badass attitude.
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When Max is exposed to a lethal dose of radiation at work — and given five days to live — he runs to Spider (Wagner Moura) for help. Spider offers him a chance to get to Elysium if he can download a cerebral upload from Carlyle, which is part of a coup with Elysium’s Defense Secretary Delacourt (Jodie Foster) to take down President Patel (Faran Tahir). The many subplots include Max being assisted by his friend Julio (Diego Luna), and Max running across his first love, Frey (Alice Braga), whom he met as a child in an orphanage and Agent Kruger (Sharlto Copley), hot on Max’s tail, as a rogue defense agent taking orders from Delacourt.
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The biggest accomplishment of Elysium is that it continues Blomkamp’s one-man band style. Oh sure, he may have some huge help from his visual effects team and his actors, but he’s now delivered two of the best sci-fi films back-to-back with only himself as writer/director. Just when we thought summer was over, Elysium kicks things back into high gear, and if you see it on any screen, make sure it’s IMAX. This is a film as big as you’re likely to see this year next to Pacific Rim or Oblivion. While I could go on and on about the film’s themes involving immigration, health care, and class — it’s no coincidence that almost all the inhabitants of Elysium are both white and rich — what really matters is if the film delivers on the wow factor. And boy does it ever.
Photos courtesy TriStar Pictures
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