|
|
THE
HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY (Apr 2005)
Director: Garth Jennings.
Writers:
Douglas Adams, Karey Kirkpatrick.
Starring: Mos Def, Zooey Deschanel, Martin Freeman, Stephen Fry, Richard Griffiths,
Dominique Jackson, Simon Jones, John Malkovich, Ian McNeice, Helen Mirren, Bill
Nighy, Steve Pemberton, Alan Rickman, Sam Rockwell, Mark Gatiss, Reece Shearsmith,
Warwick Davis.
 |
Mining the Diary, Missing the Madman. by
Jon Dunmore © 15 Jan 2007. Douglas
Adams did not live to see his wondrous literary creation, The Hitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy, made into this feature film. Maybe that's fortunate.
Each
individual component of this movie is well done, from Garth Jennings' direction,
to the astoundingly creative set design (all the good guys sport spherical décor,
the bad guys, cubical) and creature visualizations (the Vogons are magnificently
vile prosthetic puppets), to the performances (from creatures and humans alike),
to the creation of the on-screen Hitchhiker's Guide entries, to the artful compressing
of Adams' sprawling opus into a 109 minute movie. Yet somehow, the end result
of all these superior elements comes out as flollopy as a mattress from the swamps
of Squornshellous Zeta.
Eternally-vexed
Arthur Dent (Martin Freeman of Ricky Gervais' The Office) is hitch-hiked
off Earth by Ford Prefect (Mos Def) just before it is vaporized by Vogons to make
way for a hyperspace freeway. So begins Arthur's trek through the galaxy in the
company of opportunist Ford, intergalactic rogue and President of the Galaxy,
Zaphod Beeblebrox (Sam Rockwell) and flighty Earth girl, Trillian (Zooey Deschanel),
attended by "paranoid android," Marvin (voiced by Alan Rickman). Approaching
a movie with this level of cult status is slippery from the outset. The screenplay
issues from the demented pen of Adams himself, so cultists have little to complain
about, though whether his second draft should have been the FINAL one - his death
getting in the way - is definitely a matter for contention. Objectively, this
enterprise is miles above the British television series - for production value,
better acting and snappier writing - but fails in conveying a sense of empathy,
because we do not get to live with these characters through weekly adventures.
The
actual Guide is smartly purveyed as a computer - even in our modern day, we call
laptops "notebooks" - and there are seemingly endless elements of Adams'
book incorporated into the Guide and the movie itself. The more obsessive you
are, the deeper into the movie you'll fall. At
film's end, when the Improbability Drive turns the spaceship into various objects
- as our intrepid adventurers seek the Restaurant at the End of the Universe -
Adams' face is the last image we see as the space cyclorama fades to black. We
can only hope he would have been proud of the effort.
And
the question remains: With the movie failing to break box-office enough to
warrant funding for a big-budget followup, how many inferior sequels will be churned
out to court the cultist fanboy dollar?
The
answer may be as unimportant as Slartibartfast's name.
Then
again, the answer may just be 42. END |
|
|
THE
HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY (Apr 2005)
Director: Garth Jennings.
Writers: Douglas Adams, Karey Kirkpatrick.
Starring: Mos Def, Zooey Deschanel, Martin Freeman, Stephen Fry, Richard Griffiths,
Dominique Jackson, Simon Jones, John Malkovich, Ian McNeice, Helen Mirren, Bill
Nighy, Steve Pemberton, Alan Rickman, Sam Rockwell, Mark Gatiss, Reece Shearsmith,
Warwick Davis.
 |
|