'Inferno' - Review - Chris At The Pictures

Thursday 27 October 2016

'Inferno' - Review


★ ½ ☆ ☆ 

Tom Hanks returns as Professor Robert Langdon for another round of basilicas and balderdash in this hokey theological thriller adapted from Dan Brown’s novel. When Langdon awakens with a suspicious case of memory loss in Florence, Italy (around 5:42 AM, as the first in a series of pointless time checks informs us), doctor Sienna Brooks (Felicity Jones) whisks him away before a series of pursuers attempt to nab him for possible involvement in a deadly plague engineered by a TED Talking religious fanatic (Ben Foster). There’s an increasingly irritated Omar Sy as a W.H.O. operative, a lock-jawed assassin played by Ana Ularu, and Sidse Babett Knudsen doing her very best not to be dragged down by the cacophony of exposition and nonsense surrounding her.

“I need better from all of you!” she demands of her cohorts, although the same exasperated call could equally be levelled towards the cast and crew of this mess. One might argue attempting to transfigure a Brown novel into anything watchable is a terrible waste of time, but you’d think the combined efforts of director Ron Howard, lead actor Tom Hanks and composer Hans Zimmer might be able to salvage something. Alas, with The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons already testing that hypothesis to breaking point, Inferno secures the hat-trick.

After an unwatchable opening – in which Hanks burbles a lot about Langdon’s freaky visions and the camera shakes all over the place like the D.O.P. is on a Haribo-only diet – we’re back to the running and explaining that is the series’ predominant mode of address. There’s some pretention towards a complex web of conspiracy this time (complete with a plot twist that couldn’t be more obvious if an usher entered the cinema and announced it via megaphone), but David Koepp’s screenplay is more face-palming than head-scrambling. It’s not so much an intricately woven web of intrigue and deception as it is someone shouting excerpts from the Wikipedia entry on Dante while tumbling down a helter-skelter.

This half-completed join-the-dots puzzle is mirrored in the knotted frown lines consistently borne upon Hanks’ forehead and his total, bizarre lack of chemistry with Jones. Both more-or-less sleepwalk through their respective roles: he’s been here before, and Jones’ character is particularly undemanding. Omar Sy’s main job is to run around looking a bit miffed, whilst Irrfan Khan makes the most of any screen time to chew, savour, and swallow up the scenery.

However, the moment the film’s cast finally lost me (as I’m sure will be the case for a vast swathe of the UK audience) came when Paul Ritter – you know; the foul-mouthed dad, Martin, from Channel 4’s Friday Night Dinner – appeared as a shady agency overseer. As Langdon and Brooks make another escape, he pulls off his headset in frustration, and you half expect him to burst out with a hearty refrain of “Shit on it!”

If you thought some refuge from this execrable ensemble could be taken in the film’s technical achievements, you’d be wrong, because there really aren’t any. The framing and composition is all over the place, with everything ramped up to eleven to give the illusion of excitement. A lofty spinning shot – the sort that Michael Bay might use to frame a sunset-backed rocket launch or Ridley Scott to establish the surface of an alien world – is used here to encompass two people in an empty church reading something scrawled on a lump of plaster. Zimmer’s score is similarly disastrous, as if a classical orchestra and a Sega Genesis soundtrack were recorded in the same concert hall.

This is a bittersweet symphony for what could be the final cinematic outing for the Dan Brown/Ron Howard partnership, now they’ve finally (read: barely) conducted an entire trilogy. Any small sense of mystery or thrills has long since been neutered, and even the unintentional comedy wellspring has definitely dried up. The unspeakable box office takings may prove me wrong, but I think it’s time to give the bookshelves a good going over with a charity shop bag (or perhaps a flamethrower) to spare us further theological tosh.