Elysium (2013)
109 min - Action | Drama | Sci-Fi - 9 August 2013 (USA)
Tagline: In the year 2154, the very wealthy live on a man-made space station while the rest of the population resides on a ruined Earth. A man takes on a mission that could bring equality to the polarized worlds.
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Writer: Neill Blomkamp
Stars: Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Sharlto Copley
In her recent Elysium performance, does Jodie Foster
take on the persona of her Silence of the
Lambs nemesis?
Now, before hoards of
angry Foster groupies break into street riots, rest assured that this assertion
is not a disparagement of her acting ability. In fact, Foster is totally
believable in the character she’s playing – Elysium’s tough defense secretary who
does what it takes to protect humanity’s rich minority from the rest of us.
Why the comparison to
Dr. Hannibal Lecter?
First of all, unlike her
past roles as an underdog, protagonist, or victim, here Jodie Foster plays the bad
guy. And not just any bad guy, but someone who stands out from the evil crowd
in both IQ and panache.
Second, her acting in
Elysium hints that, to prepare for it, she watched Silence of the Lambs – not
to check on her own performance, but to learn from the master menace of cool psychopathy.
Foster (as Defense Secretary Rhodes) is cool, confident, smart, and educated (she
even speaks French!). She issues orders to terminate the innocent while manipulating
everyone and staying ahead of her opponents, who are weakened by human
conscience and tedious handwringing.
Third, while Foster’s
murderous actions do not include cooking her victims, her malevolence is no
less. In Silence of the Lambs, we never saw actual flesh-eating by Dr. Lecter,
yet we believed it through the clever plotting and magical acting. Foster reenacts
this cultured-brutality in a feminine version of stylish civility, allowing her
to eliminate, clean up or dispose of targets without using harsh words or showing
even the slightest increase in pulse.
Fourth, Elysium uses
Foster to scare us on another level altogether. While the movie delivers a
truly enjoyable science fiction thrill with a striking visual world and
wonderful acting, it achieves much more than that. Without hitting viewers over
the head, Elysium tackles a timely social ticking bomb: The growing gap between
the few haves and the multitudes of have-nots.
Showing us where this
gap, if it continues to widen, will take us, writer-director-producer Neill
Blomkamp artfully weaves into Elysium the social disparities of today in food
supplies, healthcare availability, citizenship rights, personal safety, and
child wellbeing. The difference between today's world and the future world of Elysium
is that the gated communities have all relocated to a highly sophisticated
space-based habitat that’s visible yet unreachable from Earth.
That habitat, Elysium, also
serves as the seat of government. Unlike our current political leaders, the
Elysium government no longer pretends to serve everyone. It shamelessly cradles
the tiny rich minority while suppressing the multitudes of the working poor, left
back on a ravaged Earth. An all-knowing system of police forces (using robots,
of course) restrains the population, while sophisticated space weapons
eliminate anyone trying to reach the idyllic cocoon in which the rich live.
In summary: With Foster as
a Dr. Lecter protégé, Matt Damon as the ultimate hero, and Alice Braga, Sharito
Copely and Wagner Moura in supporting roles, Elysium delivers a highly
enjoyable science-fiction thriller with all the goodies we’ve come to expect: Believable
characters, fierce human conflict, wondrous technology, intense non-stop
action, surprising plot-twists and setbacks, a phenomenal climax, and a
heartbreaking-yet-satisfying resolution. But as any schoolteacher knows, a
great story is the best way to dramatize a civic lesson, which is how Elysium delivers
its underlying, thought-provoking and scary social message. Or, to quote
another great movie, “A spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down.”
Avraham Azrieli writes
novels and screenplays. His latest novel is Thump. www.AzrieliBooks.com
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