Oblivion: Movie Review
Oblivion: Movie Review
Cast: Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman, Andrea Riseborough, Olga Kurylenko, Melissa Leo, Zoe Bell and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
Director: Joseph Kosinski
Tom Cruise returns in this latest from the director of the TRON: Legacy film and those behind Rise of the Planet of the Apes.
He plays Jack Harper, one of the last few drone repairmen stationed on an Earth which has been abandoned for years following decades of war with a group known as the Scavs. Along with Victoria, his wife (played with ice maiden overtones by Andrea Riseborough) they maintain the fleet of drones, protecting the earth from the threat of the Scavs.
Yet, when a series of drones go down, and a spaceship crashes with a beautiful survivor Julia (Olga Kurylenko) onboard, Jack finds his life changed forever as everything he knows (or thinks he knows) is blown apart.
Oblivion is an incredible piece of visual sci-fi, which reeks of epic scale up on the big screen.
From its sleek, wonderfully realised world of day-after-tomorrow style technology to some brutally intense fight sequences (Attack of the Drones anyone?), it's one of those films which screams to be watched on the biggest screen possible. On an IMAX screen, it's visually awe-inducing as Harper heads out across the radiated and ravaged remnants of the world on various bits of tech. Director Kosinski, who cut his teeth on TRON: Legacy has done an incredible job of harnessing the power of VFX - from the robot drones which hover in the sky to the ship which Cruise pilots, it's certainly up there with some of the best.
And yet, that's where Oblivion starts to falter a little. It all feels a little too familiar in places, particularly if you're well versed in various sci-fi tropes. It feels very reminiscent of many others from the genre and while it mashes a lot of those influences together, you can't help but feel towards the end, that new movie Oblivion has offered little to the genre and is ever so slightly derivative. It's very much a case of style over substance in terms of story, rather than spectacle which is a real shame for the genuine concept behind the Oblivion movie.
Based on a graphic novel, there's very much the feel of a video game in this as well; mend the drones, rescue the girl, save the planet etc as each sequence segues into the next; complete with an at times OTT OST with blasting synth and drums at key moments, you can't help but feel this is occasionally console entertainment, stepped up for the big screen.
And certainly, there's an issue with some of the pacing of the film; with a lack of real story to progress, characters who aren't greatly written and even the twisty plot playing itself out, there are moments when it really starts to sag and you really start to notice the number of influences present. Usually, around those times, is when Kosinski brings the fight from the drones to distract you. In terms of the human presence, Cruise is in dialled down, restrained mode as Harper and brings a resilience to the role; Freeman channels Laurence Fishburne in the Matrix, Kurylenko veers between hysterical and silent and never really brings great amounts of emotion to her part; and Riseborough is quietly impressive in the role which becomes the "other woman" once Julia is found.
Overall, the Oblivion movie isn't a disaster by any stretch of the imagination; as the mystery initially plays out, you do find yourself drawn in, but as the pieces begin to slot together, you can't help but feel you've seen it all before - and given the concept those involved put together, it's a real shame.
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