The trailer for this film caught me: stark primary colors, surreal futurist imagery, Charlize Theron in black leather. The film has a faint déjà vu quality--echoes of Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury as rendered by Truffaut back in 1966. The blimp seems straight out of Blade Runner (1982).
Apparently this film is based on a comic book. Its portentous premise is that in 2011 a virus wiped out 99% of the human population. A group of scientists kept the human race alive by developing a vaccine which rendered sterile everyone vaccinated. The scientists who invented the vaccine develop a technique for cloning people when they die so that the human race can perpetuate itself. Seven or so generations have passed since the viral near-annihilation of humanity. Women are beginning to disappear for unknown reasons. The government has become more interested in preserving power than in sustaining humankind. It’s a totalitarian state that surreptitiously surveys every detail of the lives of its citizens and marks for liquidation those who pose a danger. But one scientist is having doubts. There is a group of rebels . . .
So it goes. The story is tangled, twisty, and devoid of imagination. It’s something we’ve seen a hundred times before. (Most recently, in The
Even the visuals, which attracted me in the first place, disappoint.
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