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The perfect set up to a major rug pull >>>
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Anon movie review
“I give the fight up: let there be an end. A privacy, an obscure nook for me. I want to be forgotten, even by God.” Opening with a quote from Robert Browning’s poem, Paracelus, suggests that Andrew Niccol’s latest techno-thriller might be slightly more high brow than his previous film In Time. Clive Owen certainly offers more gravitas than Justin Timberlake could muster in that 2011 outing, his surly demeanour immediately placing him outside the era he finds himself in.
A detective in an age where everything we do is recorded, by us, you’d think he’d have been pensioned off as perps give themselves away with their own histories. This technology, which is tantalizingly never discussed or explained outside its obvious usage, is like Shazam, Wikipedia, LinkedIn and facial recognition software all delivered as a digital overlay to the world. But when someone cracks the system and the bodies start piling up, it’s clear some old-school detecting is in order. “Who can hack a human being,” is the question that goes unanswered.
Packed with current issues that resonate in a climate that sees Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg up in front of a Senate hearing, the only thing spoiling the tech plotting is, well, the plotting. A borderline totalitarian police state lets a murderess slip through its fingers multiple times, while a late attempt to explain away the killings makes no sense whosoever.
Throw in some gratuitous sex scenes that see unnecessary repetition thanks to the always-on ocular run throughs, as Owen lives out the kind of male fantasy a ’70s gumshoe would enjoy, and the clever sci-fi antics are somewhat swept away. Shame, as the drab, colourless world that serves as the basis for all the digital signage is a powerful counter to our billboard covered times, and the themes on offer can’t help but resonate in our current climate. Review by Matt Chapman
INFO
Release: 11 May 2018
From: Sky Cinema
Format: Theatrical Release and Sky Cinema subscription channel
Age Rating: 15
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One of the elements we love in Netflix’s new Lost in Space TV series is the family dynamic. They might be flying light years away from the Earth as they head out to colonise a planet, but the Robinsons are a tight-knit unit with their own family foibles.
Max Jenkins, who plays Will Robinson, has a sister in real life and recognised the sibling banter he’d naturally fall into at home.
“Taylor and Mina were as much of a family on set as we were off the set. We signed our names when we texted each other as ‘your space sis’ or ‘your space bro’. We felt so comfortable together,” he tells ThatFilmThing’s Matt Chapman.
“But I feel like no-one can replace my sister at home. She’s my best friend and actually one of the biggest challenges while I was on Lost in Space was being away from her.”
Taylor Russell – who plays Judy Robinson in the revamped Lost in Space – also has two brothers in real life, and acknowledged the same familiar feel.
“It’s exactly like how a family would be, in terms of you don’t see your family for a while and then you come back and nothing’s changed. It feels comfortable and you have that feeling of happiness,” she says.
“Nina and Max are so lovely. They’re such funny, smart kids and we got along right away. They went to school together on set and so I would crash their school sessions and just hang out. And it just felt like I was with my people. So it was effortless and seamless between us, which was really nice.”
That strong bond also helped the actors during the more difficult parts of the production.
“Being on green screen was a very challenging part of this production,” says Jenkins, “but when we were acting with one another we didn’t feel timid around each other. We were able to go and scream at a man in a green suit who would end up being a giant scary monster. So that was really nice.”
All 10 episodes of Lost in Space are now airing on Netflix.
Courtesy of Manga UK >>>
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