CHAPPIE
Director : Neill Blomkamp
Cast : Sharlto Copley, Dev Patel, Yolandi Visser, Ninja, Hugh Jackman, Sigourney Weaver
Genre : Sci-Fi/Action
Run Time : 120 mins
Opens : 5 March 2015
Rating : NC-16 (Coarse Language and Violence)
Sentient robots, from the terrifying (the Terminator)
to the adorable (WALL-E), have long been a mainstay of science fiction films.
Director Neill Blomkamp hopes Chappie can join those ranks. It is the very near
future and South Africa has become the first nation in the world to utilise a
police force comprised entirely of androids. These robots, called “Scouts”, are
designed by engineer Deon Wilson (Patel) for the Tetravaal Corporation, run by
Michelle Bradley (Weaver). Deon’s professional rival at Tetravaal, ex-military
man Vincent Moore (Jackman), wants his own creation, the heavily-armed Moose robot,
to be deployed instead of the Scouts. Deon is working on his pet project, a
fully sentient artificial consciousness, when he is kidnapped by gangsters
Ninja (Ninja), Yolandi (Visser) and America (Jose Pablo Cantillo). They force
Deon to create a robot that they can train and control, resulting in the birth
of Chappie (Copley). Ninja, Yolandi and America try to mould the childlike
Chappie in their image as the robot comes to grips with having a consciousness
of its own.
Chappie is
an expansion of director Blomkamp’s 2004 short film, Tetra Vaal. Unfortunately, in making the leap from 1 minute and 20
seconds to 120 minutes, Blomkamp has exposed his shortcomings as a filmmaker. The
dialogue is cringe-worthy and the characters are disappointingly
two-dimensional, a shame considering Blomkamp and co-writer Terri Tatchell were
nominated for a Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar for District 9. That film was praised for its original take on the
alien invasion subgenre, a unique allegory for Apartheid. Here, it’s plainly
visible where all the ideas have been cobbled together from. With its
experimental military robot who gains consciousness, this is strongly
reminiscent of Short Circuit. The
Moose looks pretty much exactly like ED-209 from RoboCop, Chappie’s “ears” are cribbed from Appleseed’s Briaeros, the list goes on.
The
visual effects work, supervised by Chris Harvey and supplied by effects houses
including Weta, Image Engine and Ollin VFX, is top-notch. Blomkamp has proven
that he knows the right way to use CGI and the digital robots in this film all
have a realistic weight and texture to them. The character animation on Chappie
himself is good, with those ears being particularly expressive. Despite the
best efforts of the animators and Sharlto Copley, who plays Chappie via
performance capture, this reviewer was unable to truly connect with the
character. Blomkamp is striving to make the title character an endearing,
plucky creation and there are moments when the audience might go “aww”, but
there’s a spark missing. Just this past November, moviegoers embraced Baymax
from Big Hero 6 and TARS from Interstellar, androids with loveable,
well-defined personalities. Chappie certainly falls short of those two.
In
addition to being derivative, Chappie comes
off as indulgent. Very indulgent. We
have Watkin Tudor Jones and Anri du Toit, better known as Ninja and Yolandi
Vi$$er respectively, playing essentially fictionalised versions of themselves.
Blomkamp has cast rap-rave group Die Antwoord in his movie, not in a cameo
somewhere in the background, but in major supporting roles. Their shtick gets
really grating really fast and while the unique South African thug culture does
lend the movie a personality of its own, it quickly becomes just another
flavour of annoying. The film also awkwardly bounces between the tough and the
twee, with much of the comedy being derived from Chappie being taught gangster
affectations by Ninja with Yolandi playing a more nurturing role, actually
tucking the robot into bed and reading it a bedtime story in one scene.
Dev
Patel’s Deon is as stereotypical a computer geek as they come. The character
stays up all night working on programming his fully sentient AI, fuelled by Red
Bull and logging his progress via webcam recordings where he speaks in frenzied
tones. Hugh Jackman is as charismatic as he usually is, rocking a glorious
mullet and khaki shorts as the villainous Vincent. He really should take up bad
guy roles more often; we’ll get to see Jackman as Blackbeard in Pan a little later on this year.
Unfortunately, instead of a climactic confrontation, we get Hugh Jackman in a
virtual reality visor remotely controlling the actions of his giant killer
robot in a sequence that is anticlimactic in spite of all the explosions
because Jackman isn’t in the middle of the action. Sigourney Weaver doesn’t do
much as the stock boss lady and it’s a somewhat sad realisation to think her
character in this film could have been played by anyone.
Chappie is what happens when a promising
director is given too much free rein. Yes, big studios can often stifle a
director’s artistic voice, but sometimes, they need to be told “no” for their
own good, lest one end up with a Michael Bay. For all the effort taken in
making the world of Chappie seem
realistic and lived-in, it is impossible to swallow some of the far-fetched
sci-fi plot developments, particularly since the events of the film are meant to
take place a year or so from now. Here’s hoping that with the Alien film Blomkamp is doing next, the
rules of that particular universe make for a set playing field so he doesn’t
get so carried away.
Summary:
It looks like a relatively cool product and all the specs check out, but a
crippling software error brings Chappie
down.
RATING:
2.5
out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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