From director Luc Besson – taking a break from producing
more Taken sequels – Lucy is a science-fiction thriller
starring Scarlett Johansson. When the eponymous heroine is caught up in a drug
deal in which a performance-enhancing substance leaks into her bloodstream, she
soon discovers that the unreachable 90% of her brain capacity are slowly
unlocking, giving way to a vast range of new abilities. With the help of a
genetics professor (Morgan Freeman), Lucy attempts to escape her captors and
control her developing powers before she is consumed by them.
2014 has certainly been a bumper year for Scarlett
Johansson, from her ethereal performance in Under
the Skin to her star turn in Spike Jonze’s Her, she’s had a lot to offer, and Lucy is no different. Initially terrified and believably stricken,
her performance develops as her powers escalate, slowly becoming cold and
detached from the world, a near-reversal of Under
the Skin, where in this case her humanity fades and a cold and calculated
killer emerges. Sadly Morgan Freeman feels easily replaceable in his role, almost
an offshoot of his character in Transcendence,
a film we shall return to later. Where other characters are concerned there is
very little to speak of, as none of them are given any real development but if anything
this helps the film keep focus on Lucy.
The film is terrifically shot, the fast-paced handheld work
knowing when to hand things over to a slower, more intimate technique when
there is pause to reflect, and is perfectly echoed by composer Eric Serra, who
I for one am glad to see back in Besson’s capable hands. Providing a musical backdrop
that wavers from bass-heavy electro in the action set pieces to smaller yet
dramatic motifs in the quiet spells, one can easily see why Serra and
cinematographer Thierry Arbogast are Besson’s favoured sons. This combination
alone is what helps the film survive a rather choppy and mishandled opening twenty
minutes.
To return to Transcendence
then, a film which I favoured much more than it probably deserved due to
the clear ambition beneath the surface. In a similar fashion, the final third
of Lucy is remarkable for the
director’s unrelenting aspirations to films such as 2001: A Space Odyssey. Without
wishing to spoil it, the ending yearns to stretch far beyond the limitations
one would expect of a typical action thriller and into the realms of full-on
science fiction fantasy, sporting some truly gorgeous visuals courtesy of the
ever-reliable Industrial Light and Magic. Sadly an earlier sub-plot becomes
entangled with the ending and saps a little of the emotional resonance, as does
a strain of cold detachment in the tone. This may arguably be there to enhance
the final message of the movie but it remains a hindrance to investment in the
chracters.
Lucy is a film I
admire more for its ambition than technical prowess, and while still a decent
thriller interwoven with supernatural elements, the latter soon becomes too
much for the rest of the film to handle and narrowly escapes collapsing under
its own weight. It is nevertheless intriguing, great to look at, acted well,
and comes packed with an ending that will leave your head spinning. Returning
Luc Besson to form and creating another addition to Johansson’s rapidly
expanding portfolio, it’s worth the watch.
3 stars
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