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Film Review: Mickey 17 is a sci-fi comedy for our era with antagonists ripped from current headlines

Mickey 17

How do you follow up an anti-capitalist Best Picture winning satirical thriller? Why if you’re writer/director Bong Joon-Ho, you spend over $100 million of Warner Bros/Discovery’s money to craft an anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, and slightly askew sci-fi allegory/comedy starring one of our generation’s greatest actors in a dual role as the products of a literal human printer. Adapted from the 2022 novel Mickey7, Mickey 17 follows the titular character (Played by a game and giving Robert Pattinson.) and his friend Timo (Steven Yeun), who are on the run from a loan shark and take jobs as part of a ship crew colonizing an ice planet fittingly called Niflheim. Mickey takes on the role of an “Expendable” going on dangerous missions, dying, and being reprinted to go on even more missions. Mickey has died 17 times and has taken on the moniker of Mickey 17. He ends up being caught up in a web of intrigue featuring a corrupt, ultrareligious politician named Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo), his wannabe gourmand wife Ylfa (Toni Collette), and the menacing Creepers, which are making it difficult for Marshall to turn Niflheim into a new home for “pure” humans.

There are definitely shades of previous science fiction films in Mickey 17, including Edge of Tomorrow, Moon, and Starship Troopers plus some philosophical bits from Blade Runner. However, Bong puts his own imprint on the sci-fi satire genre, and it all starts with a frenetic, duelling banjos of performances from Pattinson. There are some comedic pratfalls, bleak cinematography from Darius Khondji, and more importantly, memorable, tardigrade-esque creature designs for the Creepers, but Mickey 17 truly picks up steam when Mickey 18 appears on the scene. Having multiple Expendables is a big legal no-no in the film’s universe, and Bong Joon-Ho creates believable tension out of both Mickeys sneaking their way across the ship or channeling Cain and Abel when they see Timo selling space opioids to a fellow passenger.

With the twin Mickeys as a sounding board, Mickey 17 does explore and have a viewpoint about the ethics behind cloning with plenty of charged dialogue about “one body, one soul” from Kenneth Marshall. However, there’s definitely some time for silliness and sexiness like a hilarious/kind of hot scene where security agent Nasha (Naomi Ackie), who has a romantic history with one of the previous Mickeys does some serious thinking and acting on the classic ice breaker question of “Would you kill or sleep with your clone?” These moments of levity make Mickey 17 and 18 endearing characters and solidify Nasha as a true ally when the second half of the movie goes into full political resistance mode after Mickey 17 almost dies when Marshall feeds him experimental meat and later experimental painkillers at a dinner in his honor that has big “We couldn’t give you a raise, but have a microwaveable Red Baron pizza on us.”

Mickey 17

There are flashes of Luigi Mangione and the 2024 attempted assassination of Donald Trump in several sequences in Mickey 17, and Ruffalo’s performance as Marshall is a ketamine and Pentecostal praise and worship laced chimera of Trump and Elon Musk. He talks about the Expendables and Creepers in the most demeaning terms, and when an agent named Kai (Anamaria Vartolomei) tries to have an emotionally honest moment with him and Ylfa, he turns into a weird performative, evangelical prayer-off. Mark Ruffalo and Collette perfect the othering gaze with their treatment of Mickey, the Creeper, and just everyone around them. Their screen presence is like being with a rich person in a social setting, who only wants to speak to someone either equal to or superior to them in status. Everyone else is just “the help” or subhuman. For example, Marshall puts a revolver to Mickey 17’s head, and Bong frames it in a way where it’s like he’s putting down livestock not killing a human being.

Mickey 17 has compelling commentary on settler colonialism, the poor treatment of the working class, and as mentioned in the previous paragraph, the relationship between religious fundamentalism, late stage capitalism. However, it’s no lecture, and especially the back end of the film is quite entertaining with lots of profanity-filled one-liners and monologues from Mickey 18, a fairly suspenseful icy chase sequence, and one messed up dream sequence. This is all powered by Robert Pattinson’s performance as Mickey 17 and 18. There’s a lot of Connie in Good Time in Mickey 18’s DNA, and he’s got the sexy, yet occasionally righteous sociopath thing going for him while Mickey 17 flops around, is pathetic, and lets Pattinson indulge in some slapstick, and fear of mortality. Because, beneath the jokes and reprints, Mickey Barnes is afraid of death.

Mickey 17 is a sci-fi comedy for our era with antagonists ripped from current headlines and a setting that would make RFK Jr. drool and save Jeff Bezos a lot of money. It’s epic in scope and worth seeing on the big screen, but grounded in the compelling humanity of Mickey 17 and Mickey 18, who are given vibrant life and love by Robert Pattinson. Also, its setting might be dystopian, but Mickey 17 is quite a hopeful film too and features characters that are pure catharsis. (Seriously, Nasha for president!)

Overall Verdict: 8.0

Movie Review: Hereditary

HEREDITARY posterMovies don’t normally scare me. Real life scares me enough. There have been some great films with horror elements this year: Annihilation still has some of the scariest moments of the year and A Quiet Place was magic.

Hereditary makes them look like church. Literally, I had too sleep with the lights on the night after seeing it. I’m still disturbed thinking about it.

One of the best things about it is how it blends so many different scary elements into a single narrative. It’s what makes the film hard to explain in terms of its plot and basic premise without spoiling things because you’re really not quite sure what’s going on, what’s real and what isn’t real, until almost the very end.

It also depends on things that are truly scary rather than just cheap jump scares. The scares are earned and come from character and building on the breadcrumbs that the script leaves ever so subtly on its way. In fact, most of the movie you’re just wondering if maybe this poor family just has bad mental health issues and that’s what’s causing all of these problems.

Central to this concern are the family’s parents played by Toni Collette and Gabriel Byrne. Her mother has just died, and the family is all dealing with their grief in different ways. Youngest daughter Charlie (Milly Shapiro) is not only the only one who seemed too have a positive relationship with the matriarch, but is also exhibiting strange, disturbing behavior of her own.

Collette also befriends a woman named Joan (Ann Dowd) at a grief support group. When Joan teaches her how to contact spirits from the other side, then things really start going haywire.

But aside from the supernatural elements, this is also just a portrait of a family in crisis and how they deal with death and grief. Oldest son Peter (Alex Wolff) is mostly in denial, turning to drugs to numb the pain and also just because he’s a normal teenager who gets high with his friends.

As the family increasingly is at each others’ throats, with mother and son blaming each other, the father is caught in the middle trying to keep it all together. And this is where Collette and Byrne shine.

Believe the hype when it comes to Toni Collette. She is the heart of this movie and we follow her mostly. We’re also left with the same impression her husband is. . . maybe she’s just cracking under the stress of what this family is going through, and these supernatural things are just imaginary? Is everyone just going crazy?

Since so much of the horror is therefore based in reality, it makes the film layered and scary on so many more layers than most other scary movies. And as the final pieces come together in the end, you’re left with a chilling choice: go back and watch it again to pick up what you may have missed, or say “Nope!” because no way are you watching something that scary and disturbing ever again.

Hereditary is that perfect summer counter-programming movie. An antidote to blockbuster fatigue, but don’t say I didn’t warn you. Make sure you have friends to talk about this movie with afterwards and a well-lit place to sleep the night after. Seriously, this may be a movie to check out in the middle of the day. It is just that scary.

4 out of 5 stars