Children
of cucumbers
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Brave
New Future Shocker. by
Jon Dunmore © 16 Feb 2007. If
there is a Best Badass Tough Guy Overcoat category, Clive Owen should sweep the
field. In CHILDREN OF MEN, a refreshingly original drama, he pecks at a few fashion
police warnings (jeans and cardigan, flip-flops, shoeless, office guy couture),
but it is only when he dons that long, black overcoat that he actually gets something
done.
It
is London 2027 and for once an apocalypse has not been caused by the idiocy and
violence of the human species - but is nonetheless exacerbated by that idiocy
and violence. Departing from cinematic formula, the apocalypse has not come from
without (genocide, nuclear war), but from within - women have become infertile,
thereby ensuring the evolutionary branch of homo sapiens is soon to wither
like that of the saurians. And humankind - as it usually does when faced with
no future - goes bonkers. We
catch up with Office Guy and ex-activist, Theo (Clive Owen), on the day that the
world's youngest person dies - an eighteen-year-old who is mourned worldwide.
While humanity attempts to come to terms with no more children being born, Theo,
with the help of an old flame, Julian (Julianne Moore, looking her usual bloodless
zombie self), stumbles on a black woman, Kee (Claire-Hope Ashitey), who is somehow
eight months pregnant, and must deliver her to a science community called the
Human Project, the whole animalistic, political, greed-mongering human psycho-community
in his path. Anti-formulaic as well, the solution to humanity's continuance is
not dependent on humaneness, morality or smartmouth Disney kids, but biological
science. In a dig at the current state of First World intellectualism, the Human
Project has been forced underground, attaining the aura of myth.
As
in V FOR VENDETTA,
the rest of the world has succumbed to anarchy and "only Britain soldiers
on" - and that's just the first jab. There is something in CHILDREN OF MEN to offend almost everyone - which is why it is so powerful. It fears no
one.
The
USA will no doubt have a good little cry over being shelved as a superpower again;
the KKK will blow a fuse, "Humanity's savior is BLACK?!"; immigrants
won't be adding writer-director Alfonso Cuarón to their Christmas card
lists after seeing the cages full of foreigners readied for deportation (George
W. Bush's version of heaven); empowered career women will do a spit-take when
Kee is given the choice of birthing the baby or not - and she defers to Theo for
a decision!; animal activists should get a kick out of seeing horses burning in
a field; and I can hear the feminist outcry: "Children of MEN?" followed
by the tiresome "miracle of birth" refrain. Then there's Michael
Caine, playing weed-drenched hippie, Jasper, who farms strawberry-flavored 420
- D.A.R.E. should have a minor freakout. And when he mentions the Renouncers cult
(who flagellate themselves for humanity's forgiveness), Scientologists and other
lunatics are bound to take issue; and Art aficionados will cringe at the image
of Michelangelo's David with a prosthetic leg. On
the other hand, Al Gore's nuovo flower children should love the reference to "2003
- that beautiful time when people refused to accept the future was just around
the corner" (whereas W's merc scientists will have a brainfry); and Pink
Floyd-ians should recognize the cover of Animals when they see it. And
Christians - being Christians - will have a field day bitching and moaning, re:
all of the above.
There is also much to admire in CHILDREN OF MEN, screenplayed by Alfonso Cuarón, Timothy J. Sexton, David Arata, Mark Fergus
and Hawk Ostby (from the novel by P.D. James): it not only captures the violent,
backbiting nature of humanity, but its primal survival instinct as well - when
Theo must rescue Kee from a building under army fire, the shells and shrapnel
are as harshly real as any scathing SAVING PRIVATE RYAN sequence, but upon
the bloodthirsty sectarian factions discovering Kee's baby in the crossfire, an
unnatural ceasefire suddenly ensues, every brainless wardog subliminally sensing
that the lifeblood of their very species is contingent on this one infant's survival.
In the
best screen birth you will ever see, a severely artful camera angle shows us the
baby exit the womb, as small as a real newborn, complete with umbilical cord and
wet blood, floppy and mucused, then suddenly bursting into wailing and thrashing;
a catalyst for a variety of characters who clamber to politically gain from its
existence - guerrilla Luke (Chiwetel Ejiofor, INSIDE MAN), soldier Syd (Peter Mullan, TRAINSPOTTING) - or fight to nurture
the human seed - the jabbering, non-English Marichka (Oana Pellea).
As
much as redneck fundamentalists and hypocrite politicos pule against pornography
and philandering (subsequently getting their pasty asses exquisitely busted with
minors and prostitutes), it is sex and more unchristian, unsafe, semen-spilling
sex that keeps our human species above ground. If sex were to stop, or if people
became infertile, only then would the slogans of "No Hope" ring
true. NOT - as they so "morally" warn - in the case of wanton debauchery.
The
future is envisioned in brilliant subtlety, from the scarring set design, to the
hard, gritty city exteriors. From cars to computers, media to weaponry, this film
sits snugly in future verisimilitude, Cuarón thankfully lacking that Hollywood
gene that screams (in the words of Sir Laurence Olivier), "Look at me look
at me look at me look at me
" In a scene that slaps us to
the reality of the imperfect future we are fast approaching, Theo cannot start
a getaway car during a cold dawn and must push it downhill to outrun pursuers,
who in turn cannot start their cars for Theo stealing their keys. Unfortunately,
being one of the "look at me" stars in this movie does not guarantee
longevity, and the movie captures the arbitrariness of Death by Extras. Like a
United Nations Symposium Gone Wild, every ethnicity battles in the streets, only
those with Badass Tough Guy Overcoats making it through the gauntlet. It's
heartening to know that in the future, Ruby Tuesday will still sound poignantly
fresh, that marijuana will be cultivated with strawberry aftertaste and that Badass
Tough Guy Overcoats will still look cool on Clive Owen. END |
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