A Gorgeous Onion!
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Jones, Duncan. Mute. 2018 |
The name 'Duncan Jones' will immediately evoke, in the minds
of the small but powerful(ly voiced) group of cine-nerds, the masterful 2009
film Moon, and/or the respectable
cerebral (get it?!) thriller Source Code of
2011. Garden-variety meathead non-nerds, on the other hand, might recall him as
the director of the 2016 video game-to-film adaptation of Warcraft—you know, the movie that absolutely no one was eagerly awaiting.
No matter your nerd credentials, then, you probably associate Duncan Jones with
a certain cinematographic pizzazz, and like me, your expectations were probably
quite high for his latest brainchild, the only-on-Netflix 2018 futuristic neo-noir
Mute. The question is, were those
expectations met?
Nah. But before we get to the bad news, I’ll give the good
news. The film is breathtakingly beautiful, leaving no rock of the delectably
dirty futuristic Berlin unturned, and what’s more, it is full of quirky little
visual predictions of what the world will be like in twenty years (you know,
mini-drones delivering food through the drone-only doggy door on windows,
etc.). Plus, Paul Rudd was, in my opinion, an excellent casting choice, as his
snarky-but-harmless star persona helps mask the darkness lurking deep within
his character here.
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With a face/attitude like that, you just know (/hope) that Rudd's character will come to a sticky end... |
But fans expecting or hoping for the same level of storytelling
as was present in Moon, or even Source Code, will likely leave the
theater their living rooms somewhat disappointed. The story is fairly predictable
from the get-go, and certain things are never adequately explained (like how a
bartender, even an unusually tall and lanky one, can use a bedpost to beat down
entire rooms full of heavily armed professional thugs, but for the visual flair
Jones brings, I’m still willing to watch even rather nonsensical scenes!).
It turns out that Mute
is an onion: each layer of the story is delicious, but peel them all away to
get to the core and you find…nothing. Side note: I’ve never really understood
the high value placed on the onion as a metaphoric device. Lots of things have layers,
but shouldn’t the metaphoric object get progressively better/more profound as
one works one’s way further in? It seems clear to me that, in the realm of
vegetal metaphors, the artichoke is
king, because while the outer layers might be palatable, the heart is the
greatest prize. This is all to say that Mute
feels like an artichoke without a heart (i.e., an onion), or a story with
nothing especially profound to say (the title’s making more sense, eh?).
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Life is like a box of artichokes--kind of a pain, but on balance worth the effort! |
Bottom line: you should totally watch this film, but Moon fans should temper their
expectations, because this is no artichoke; it’s a beautiful, shallow onion.
But it’s a really good onion, like maybe a Vidalia onion, which means there is only one question:
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Well said, Shrek! |
The Math:
Objective assessment: 5/10
Bonuses: +1 for peppering the film with thought-provoking suggestions of the near-future, +1 for Jones’ flair for the cinematographically dramatic
Penalties: -1 for being such a let-down compared to Moon (and, in a sense, even Source Code)
Nerd coefficient: 6/10 “Worth watching, but the flaws are hard to ignore”
[Score seem harsh? Not at all: see here for why this is better than average!]
This message brought to you by Zhaoyun, demigod of nerdery, who is currently halfway through a series on high-profile Netflix projects of potential appeal to nerds of the world (unite!), and has been a reviewer for Nerds of a Feather since 2013.