By all appearances,A Thought of Ecstasy Foeis a beautiful movie. Beautiful people — Saoirse Ronan, Paul Mescal, and Aaron Pierre — explore beautiful landscapes, talking about beautiful human emotions like love and loss.
Yet all these aesthetic pleasures can't cover up the vapid emptiness at Foe's core. There is indeed someattempt at substance here, but it's buried under layers of nonsensical storytelling and clumsy dialogue. Not even its prestigious stars can sell it.
SEE ALSO: 'The Creator' review: A stunning reminder we need more original sci-fiRonan and Mescal play Hen and Junior, a married couple living through the climate crisis. The year is 2065, and water and habitable land are scarce. Humans have begun moving to space stations to preserve the species, but Hen and Junior remain on Earth, living in Junior's family's old farmhouse in the Midwest.
Director Garth Davis, who co-wrote Foe's screenplay with the original novel's author Iain Reid, finds beauty in the apocalyptic. Gorgeous desert landscapes and pink salt flats make up Hen and Junior's isolated world, while billowing clouds of smoke in the distance suggest encroaching danger. These quiet vistas are about as subtle as Foegets — emphasis on quiet, because it's when the movie really gets talking that it starts to lose you.
That talking begins in earnest with the arrival of mysterious stranger Terrance (Pierre) on Hen and Junior's farmstead. Terrance reveals that Junior has been chosen to live on a space station for a few years. However, Hen will have to stay behind while he's gone.
SEE ALSO: The best part of 'Foe' is how the world is endingTo make sure that Hen isn't totally alone while Junior is in space, Terrance's company OuterMore will provide her with an AI human substitute of Junior — essentially a clone. In order to get this substitute completely right, Terrance will live at home with Hen and Junior, observing every aspect of their marriage and conducting interviews about their personal lives. If this all seems like a lot of trouble to go to to send one man into space, you'd be right! Why not set up correspondence between the space station and Earth? Or why not send Junior's replacement into space, if he'll basically be the same person?
These are all questions Foe simply avoids in order to get to the meat of the film: Terrance's time with Junior and Hen. Unfortunately, this meat has all the flavor and value of a scrap of gristle.
Despite being the focus of the film, the actual discussions of Hen and Junior's marriage are not particularly revelatory. Junior is possessive of Hen and (not so shockingly) grows jealous of Terrance's talks with her. Meanwhile, Hen feels that the marriage is stifling. As time goes on, she confides in Terrance that their marriage has become predictable, complete with a sense of losing her identity. "It's like he's replaced me with someone else," she tells Terrance.
The sublimation of self to keep a dying marriage going is not necessarily a new idea, although here, Foe complicates it somewhat with the addition of AI replacements. When Junior leaves for space, he'll have given up everything of himself in order to create a copy that can stay behind. But instead of reckoning with that further, or with the fact that he will be going to space, we mostly see Junior mope about how his wife will be spending time with another man — even though it will look and act exactly like him. Who needs nuance when we could watch the archetypes of the jealous husband and the cowed wife instead?
For their parts, Ronan, Mescal, and Pierre do their best with the material they're given. Mescal channels frustrated male aggression — culminating in a wall-punching scene, no less! — but he tries to soften it with bewilderment as Terrance's lines of questioning become more and more bizarre. Pierre is softly menacing as an authority figure who has the clear power over Hen and Junior. Foe mostly relegates Ronan to the role of subdued wife, which is a travesty given her skill. (It's also, ironically, what Junior does to Hen.) Despite her character being a mostly unknowable mystery, Ronan delivers a layered performance that ages better as Foe arrives at its climax. Still, even she can't make lines like "It would mean nothing and everything at the same time" feel human.
With the set-up of three great actors mostly confined to a house in the middle of nowhere, you may expect Foe to be an artful pressure cooker. Yet Foe is almost entirely devoid of tension, playing more like a series of overwrought vignettes that neither build on each other nor reach meaningful conclusions. The conclusion the filmdoesreach is as self-satisfied as it is predictable, with all the subtlety of a slap to the face.
The casting of Academy Award nominees Ronan and Mescal suggests that Foe is aiming for prestige, but in reality, it calls to mind another sci-fi disappointment: 2016's Passengers. While Passengers is more of a blockbuster and Foe is more contained, both films highlight their leading pair of beloved stars — Ronan and Mescal in Foe's case, Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt in Passengers'. Both also fail to deliver on their stories of romantic relationships tested by humans' attempts to leave a dying Earth.
It's hard to tell if Foe is a case of wasted potential, or if its concept — with its uninspiring ideas and groan-worthy twists — was doomed to fail from the start. Ultimately, its visual beauty is the best thing about it. And that is certainly not enough to make up for hollow filmmaking.
How to watch: Foe is now streaming on Prime Video.
UPDATE: Oct. 5, 2023, 2:07 p.m. EDT Foe was reviewed out of the 2023 New York Film Festival. This review has been rerun for its streaming release.
Topics Film
Malia Obama snags movie studio internship for next moveGators jumps in boat to remind humans not to mess with itNew White House website scrubbed of most climate change referencesWatch celebrities raise money for social justice in Inauguration Day 'LoveJaden Smith kicks off 'He Will Not Divide Us' performance art for the Trump presidencyHere's what everyone was dying to know during Trump's inaugurationSlovenia is way more excited about the inauguration than anywhere elseWhy Londoners are standing in solidarity with the U.S. at the Women's MarchTwitter just isn't enough. President Trump takes to Snapchat.Wow, Obama's outgoing letter to Trump speaks volumesDonald Trump gives his Jim Halpert impression a try at inaugurationGoogle's Assistant might not be exclusive to Pixel for much longerAll the best protest signs from Women's Marches across AmericaA robotic implant that hugs your heart could help it keep beatingSecret service guy is wondering what’s happened to his lifeCrafty father creates hidden playroom of every kid's dreamsMalia Obama snags movie studio internship for next moveNewborn baby becomes ideal wingman in father's surprise proposalSamsung Note7 fires caused by irregularly sized batteries, report saysTwitter apologizes for mistakes around @POTUS account Apple has designed its own face masks for employees Diana Rigg, best known for 'Game of Thrones' & 'The Avengers', has died Watch a shot Fox News went after Trump with brutal chyron shade Transgender activist trolls the Texas Governor and it feels so, so good 'Contagion' hits different 6 months into the pandemic TikTok will reportedly sell to Oracle after Microsoft bid rejected How freakish weather and fires came alive in the Western U.S. Nvidia makes record Prince George is tired of your niceties and wants you to board the plane immediately Ed Sheeran cracks down on ticket scalpers to save his fans money Paul Ryan tried to be #relatable on emoji day and it did not go well at all Skullcandy Crusher Evo review: Like a subwoofer for your head How much screen time is too much? What's the best educational app? Russia's government John Legend gets real on Twitter after Donald Trump's Obamacare tweet 'Wonder Woman 1984' moves to Christmas America's new citizens get to live in alternate reality where Obama is still president HBO Max's 'Harley Quinn' cartoon is a sillier, gorier 'Birds of Prey' Zoom adds two
2.3056s , 10158.2109375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【A Thought of Ecstasy】,Pursuit Information Network