CHILDREN OF MEN
Directed by: Alfonso Cuaron
Written by: Alfonso Cuaron, Timothy J. Sexton, David Arata, Mark
Fergus, Hawk Ostby
Internet
Movie
Database Entry for full details
GRADE: A+ (4.0/4)
2006.

Aren't you glad that George W. Bush is the President of the United
States? No, of course not! But you might just be, at least
momentarily, tempted to think so after seeing Children of Men;
after all, without the vicious blunders of Falluja and Guantanamo to
inform its sense of doom, Alfonso Cuarón may never have had
the inspiration to make one of the best goddam things I’ve
ever seen up on the big screen. I worry about overselling the
film, that perhaps it was more bewitching than great, but
I’ve decided to follow a maxim once writ by A.O. Scott:
“overpraising good work is...a more forgivable sin than
underpraising it,” and so I cautiously concede to you,
readership, that Children
of Men may not be one of the best movies ever made; it may
not even be the best film of the decade, though surely it's the
best film of the year. What’s undeniable, at least, is that
it’s one of the most rewarding and harrowing cinematic
experiences I’ve had since renting Vertigo
as a
teenager. (Will this feeling subside? Will the film slip
down to a mere A or A- in my mind? Impossible to tell, though
just watching a six minute clip on YouTube left me breathless.)
Cuarón’s vision of the near future is bleak, which
is evident even without the expository information culled from P.D. James' novel—global
infertility, civil war, perpetual terrorism—by the chronically wet,
gray, dirty, graffito-ed streetscapes of 2027 London that are either
clogged with sad faces or entirely desolate. So what keeps
anybody going? With the help of state-supplied
anti-depressants, they, as a marginal character named Nigel says early
in the film, “just don’t think about
it.” A worldwide pandemic of psychological
infertility and political impotence has destroyed the world.
Theo, a career-defining performance from Clive Owen, seems to get by
with the help of his self-prescribed anti-depressant—an ever-present bottle of
scotch—as well as by smoking, frowning and unwinding with an old pal, Jasper,
played endearingly and masterfully by the increasingly avuncular
Michael Caine, bedecked in his John Lennon Halloween costume.
Theo is the classic Bogartian hero, an indifferent bureaucrat hardened
by age in a carbonite shell of cynicism, but compelled to action by forces around him greater
than himself. He’s bestowed with the honorable duty
of transporting the first pregnant woman in nearly twenty years to
safety, and he’ll have to it largely alone since he can’t
trust the rebels and certainly not the government.
Children of Men is an action movie, a generic hybrid of war movie,
chase thriller, and Nativity story. It’s many
opposites at once—topical & timeless, grim &
hopeful, political & religious, simply accessible & intricately complex—as well as being
unbearably intense and unmercifully relentless from its opening scene
that literally sent chills through my nervous system to the final
set-piece, the greatest battle sequence in motion picture history (eat
shit, Saving Private Ryan), that left me in tears. Cuarón,
with cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki (previously responsible for the
gorgeous visuals in, among other films, The New World and Sleepy
Hollow)
create a sense of devestating immediacy by not cutting away in
the most fervid sequences and by operating with a handheld camera. The
experience is more palpable than could've been had by even having been there
yourself; suture, the theoretical concept that,
according to Wikipedia, the filmmakers can "engage the viewer with the narrative
events onscreen; the viewer is subjectively sutured into the narrative
by the filmmaker(s), in order to keep him or her invested," has never
been more deftly and
astounding accomplished, and as such the film will be best experienced
in the theater, on a large encompassing screen. Don’t allow
yourself to miss the experience! The emotional thrill ride is
unstoppable, not even pausing to wipe off the blood that’s
spattered onto the camera lens; I haven’t had such a visceral
experience with moving pictures since I watched the Allies’
footage of the concentration camp liberations.
Cuarón allows
his camera to linger in the settings after his characters have left, like Antonioni with his temps mort, but instead of investigating depopulated landscapes, Cuarón more closely examines the people and action within the nightmarish
deathscape he’s wrought. The film’s own
concentration camp conspicuously resembles the Guantanamo and Abu
Ghraib of photographs, but is more affecting than even a real time
documentary of the abuses that occur/occurred in those places could be.
Cuarón and his team are in total control and get all the
details right, though it isn’t as though they linger to make
political points. The camera barely finds the time to look
around before it’s shoved forward by the film’s
unstoppable momentum that spurs, horrifyingly, forward.
It can be read in several different ways, for example: a Mexican
director’s polemic in which an illegal immigrant is turned into the
savior of humanity, an argument that the immigration issue is
a political red herring, a
political critique about the failures of both the
left and the right, an appraisal of the contemporary cultural fear
accumulated through attacks by phony terrorists. As grim as it
sounds, it’s
also genuinely and surprisingly hopeful. Things are going to
get a lot worse, but that doesn’t mean they won’t
get better. The first thing you can do, readership, is go see
this film. Right now.
--
Henry Stewart
Post a
comment/reply on our Discussion Board
-------

© 2007
Send Us an Email
Cinepinion Home
The
Cinepinion Archives