Self/Less (2015) [Blu-ray]
Action | Drama | Mystery | Sci-Fi | Thriller
In this provocative psychological science fiction thriller, an extremely wealthy man (Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley) undergoes a radical medical procedure that transfers his consciousness into the body of a healthy young man (Ryan Reynolds). But all
is not as it seems when he starts to uncover the mystery of the body's origin and the organization that will kill to protect its cause.
Storyline: An extremely wealthy man, dying from cancer, undergoes a radical medical procedure that transfers his consciousness into the body of a healthy young man. But all is not as it seems when he starts to uncover the mystery
of the body's origin and the organization that will kill to protect its cause. Written by Anonymous
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, November 10, 2015 -- What does it mean to be alive? How is life defined? Is life the mere beating of the heart and the sustaining of the physical body, or is there more to it? Can one
replenish, renew, or even restart life by transferring an invisible essence -- be that collected experiences or something more metaphysical, like the soul -- into another host body? If one hopes to find the answers to those questions, or even
thought-provoking hypotheticals, by watching Self/Less, the result will be frustration, not enlightenment. Director Tarsem Singh (The Cell, The Fall), known for his high concept work, succumbs to disappointing cliché and an almost
disturbing emptiness with his latest film. Self/Less primes itself, and audiences, for a fascinating journey into what it really means to be alive but instead devolves into a mostly mindless Action movie with little consequential payoff, dramatic
weight, or satisfactory examination of the deeper, and much more interesting, themes that are so ripe for exploration but that are left achingly alone for the duration.
Exceedingly wealthy businessman Damian Hale (Ben Kingsley) may have enough money to do whatever he wants, but all the wealth in the world cannot cure him of cancer. He's fought it tooth-and-nail. He's keeping up appearances by wearing the finest clothes
and dining at lavish restaurants with his longtime business partner Martin O'Neil (Victor Garber), and he's even trying to reconcile with his estranged daughter (Michelle Dockery) by throwing another large check her way. He has only months left to live.
It's been a good, fruitful life, but he's not ready for it to end. Enter Phoenix Biogenics, a firm specializing in "shedding" or, in layman's terms, the process of replacing a sick, decaying, or aged body with that of a fresh twenty-something custom grown
in a laboratory. It's a $250,000,000 process that seems to hold all the answers. After a particularly violent setback to his health, Damian is rushed to the clinic and, while the rest of the world believes him to be dead, is reborn a new man.
Damian awakens believing the process has failed, but he's quick to realize that, even as his mind remains his, it's inhabiting another body (Ryan Reynolds). Damian is forced to undergo intensive physical therapy -- strength training, water aerobics -- to
familiarize himself with his new body. And once he's unleashed, he takes full advantage of his newfound youth. He vigorously shoots hoops with a new friend named Anton (Derek Luke) and beds beautiful women. But when he misses a round of his medication, he
suffers a serious side-effect: hallucinations. These aren't random images but rather specific visions of a past reality that was never his. An investigation into the glimpses he remembers leads him to Missouri where a terrible truth comes to life, a truth
that puts not only him, but others, in great danger and calls into question everything he believed he knew about himself, his new body, Phoenix Biogenics, and the people who run the company.
Self/Less is a disappointing departure from form for Singh, a gifted, visionary filmmaker who, with Self/Less, has sold himself well short of both the visual wonders and heady themes for which he is rightly known. The movie is little more
than a straight Action film with an interesting yet almost fully unexplored Sci-Fi theme that just screams "potential" from the word "go." The movie has all the makings of something like Face/Off or RoboCop meets Total Recall -- and
wouldn't that make for an interesting combination? -- but the movie never comes close to doing anything with the idea, instead populating it with the usual array of car crashes and shootouts that aren't poorly assembled by any stretch of the imagination
but that only serve to, rather than draw attention away from the thematic vacancy, reinforce it with a deluge of action that seems like it's getting in the way of a better story that's just not there.
The performances are at least decent within the framework the movie provides its actors. Kingsley sells the sickly billionaire well enough, and it's a shame his screen time is limited and doubly disappointing that an actor of his stature can't work with
the meatier themes that are achingly a fingertip away from his creative genius. Ryan Reynolds is fine as the younger hero. He's never all that believable as the character Kingsley creates in the film's first act, but considering that Kingsley's Damian is
seen only as a sickly old man -- there's not much backstory here -- the performance works well enough if one considers Reynolds a younger version more in spirit than mind or body. It's a part that's almost impossible to master, particularly with a script
that's not interested in exploring the finer details. Reynolds essentially holds serve and looks good enough running around and shooting a gun, but it's otherwise a fairly routine acting job that satisfies the movie's disappointingly simple requirements,
nothing more and nothing less.
Self/Less is, in a word, disappointing. The movie has all the ingredients in place -- including the right director -- for a brainy Sci-Fi film but instead settles for a slick but still second-rate Action bore-fest that's neither creative nor
exciting. The movie works well enough as a mindless romp through a litter of potential that the movie seems almost afraid to touch, but anyone expecting even a modicum of dramatic satisfaction should look elsewhere. Universal's Blu-ray release of
Self/Less does offer top-shelf video and audio. Supplements are of the standard commentary and featurette variety. Rent it.
[CSW] -2.2- For me it was a not-to-original very predictable plot. Ok one twist that incidentally left a big plot-hole (the partner should have known at least one of two things), but otherwise the outcome was entirely predictable. I would have loved to
have heard the thought processes as the main protagonist argued both sides of the dilemma. But that was not to be. All of which turned this into a so-so completely forgettable film.
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box codes were available at the time of this rental but they are available now.
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