Mortal Engines (2018)
Cast
Hera Hilmar as Hester Shaw
Robert Sheehan as Tom Natsworthy
Hugo Weaving as Thaddeus Valentine
Jihae as Anna Fang
Ronan Raftery as Bevis Pod
Leila George as Katherine Valentine
Patrick Malahide as Magnus Crome
Stephen Lang as Shrike
Director
Christian Rivers
Writer (based on the book by)
Philip Reeve
Writer
Fran Walsh
Writer
Philippa Boyens
Peter Jackson
Cinematographer
Simon Raby
Editor
Amy Hubbard
Liz Mullane
Composer
Junkie XL
Science Fiction
Rated PG-13 for sequences of futuristic violence and action.
128 minutes
How did this truly crummy movie get made? I have a theory. Co-producers Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh,
who once upon a time could put together a motion picture that was
engaging, coherent, entertaining, and even genuinely dazzling, looked at
a bag of money that Universal and sundry other sources of capital left
on their table and asked themselves, “Can we whiff as badly as the
Wachowskis did with ‘Jupiter Ascending,’ only leaving out the fun
pansexual campy parts?” And the answer is, absolutely!
Co-written by Jackson and Walsh (you may remember their “Heavenly Creatures” and a couple of Tolkien adaptations) with frequent collaborator Philippa Boyens,
from a sorta-I-guess-must-have-been YA novel (it was published by
Scholastic in the States, I see) by Phillip Reeve, “Mortal Engines”
begins with the usual voiceover informing us how “that Ancients”
destroyed Earth’s civilization in “only 60 minutes,” using bad and
terrible weapons technology, and how now the world itself is unmoored,
as predator cities scavenge the globe for what’s left of its resources.
How this translates into visual terms is
that whole, or at least partial, world cities now are mobile, going
around on giant tank treads. How this engineering feat was achieved is
not addressed. Anyway, London, which we still largely think of as
genteel, is hauling ass and hunkering down on a much smaller “Romanian
mining town,” hoping to steal its salt. On that town is Hester Shaw (Hera Hilmar),
a teenage girl looking to take revenge on London’s power engineer (or
something) Thaddeus Valentine for killing her mom. London’s own Tom
Natsworthy (Robert Sheehan),
a young historian building up a collection of “the Ancients’” weaponry
(the Ancients, in case you’re missing it, were us) the better to dispose
of it so as to study war no more, is initially a Thaddeus fan. But once
Tom gets too close to Hester’s secret, down London’s garbage chute he
goes, the better to find love and adventure with the feisty, reticent
Hester. This move, among other things, allows Thaddeus access to the
weapons storehouse, which will abet him in constructing a Brand New
Superweapon.
As for Hester, does she
have much to be reticent about. In her orphaned girlhood she was adopted
by a member of something called “The Lazarus Brigade,” undead robots
with high-level superpowers who always get what they want. Her adoptee,
Shrike, played by Stephen Lang
with a substantial overlay of CGI, was touched by her promise that she
would allow him to turn her into a similar robot (because it sounds like
such a great deal, right?). But Hester reneged to seek revenge on
Thaddeus, and Shrike went apeshit, or whatever the equivalent of apeshit
is for super-powered undead robots. The better to keep Hester at bay,
Thaddeus frees the very insistent and very destructive Shrike from a
floating prison and off he goes to collect on her promise. He destroys
so much in his path it’s a wonder that Hester’s many newfound friends
even keep her around, but lucky they do, because, surprise, she holds
the key to dismantling Thaddeus’ super weapon. The storyline is just
packed with surprising plot developments like that.
Said
story’s various components are introduced so haphazardly they can’t
help but elicit titters, but even if brought into the picture
differently, Shrike, intended as a poignant reminder of What It Is To Be
Human, is a terrible idea terribly executed. I know Lang has probably
been cooling his heels Down Under waiting for the “Avatar”
sequels to start shooting long enough that he’s gotten antsy, but I
wish he’d found a better way to waste his time. Even by the lower
standards of kids’ stuff, this movie is laughably portentous and
kitschy, and gets progressively worse, what with the heavy-handed
introduction of the ethnically diverse rebel flyer team and the Dalai
Lama lookalike leader of the Asian territory Thaddeus intends to
bulldoze.
But it looks great, right? Not really. Directed by Christian Rivers,
a longtime art director for Jackson, the overall look asks the
question, “are you sick of Steampunk yet,” and for me, yeah. Never mind
that the whole concept of the movie is like someone decided to take Terry Gilliam’s
“The Crimson Permanent Assurance” way more seriously than it was ever
intended. I did like the near-cavernous tread tracks that Hester and Tom
had to run around in on their Way to Love.
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