Knowing
- Released: 25 March 2009
- Genre: Fantasy, Science Fiction
- Runtime: 115 mins.
- Websites: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0448011/
- Item Tag: Mystery
Movie Information
Starring: Nicholas Cage, Rose Byrne, and Chandler Canterbury.
Directed by Alex Proyas. 115 min.
Rated M: Supernatural themes and disaster scenes
Review
Alex Proyas who has a history of delving into the supernatural, and who gave us "Dark City" and "I, Robot", tackles the film with energy and vigour. The movie abounds with disaster images that are typical of apocalyptic movies that trade on uncertainty about the future. However, it doesn't glamorize disaster. Rather, it integrates its disaster sequences cleverly into the context of John's spiritual quest and personal commitment to save his son. The science behind the movie is sufficiently credible and the moral is clear that through apparent randomness in life, there is nearly always true purpose that hides there, and it is this that fires the resolve of John Koestler. The plot of the movie is a little bit of a hard-to-believe story from a team of writers involving the Director, but it is presented well by Proyas in a gritty, realistic way that challenges the viewer to look for meaning in everything that is happening.
Some disturbing scenes in the movie make it almost as dark as the previous films that Proyas has directed. We see grotesque images (burning animals, and people on fire), and the disaster sequences are filmed very convincingly. There is a predicted plane crash, photographed in a single take, where John tries desperately to rescue burning passengers escaping from the wreckage; and there is a stunning train crash in Manhattan, New York, which is almost astonishing in its impact. The look of the film is unusual, and much of it is photographed with digital red cameras that manage to give the film a sinister look and feel. Credit for the brilliant special effects goes to a huge team of special effects coordinators and supervisors, and to the film's talented cinematographer, Simon Duggan.
This is a very smart science fiction movie that makes clever use of natural uncertainty about the world's future. There is more than a hint of its trying to unravel the ultimate meaning of what happened in the US on September 11, 2001. It is a movie that tugs at our emotions, and it deals with the supernatural in ways which lead the viewer in directions that suddenly turn themselves around to mean something different. Reflecting the character of the science fiction- supernatural genre, the film explores life's issues philosophically, but true also to its character, it can't answer all of the questions it raises. When the final moment comes, it is unclear, for example, why the world didn't require saving for the people in it, and one wonders what really lies ahead for a uni-racial society that is presented implicitly as its salvation.
Despite a few blemishes, this is a thriller that is highly entertaining, well acted, and directed. It is genuinely scary in places, maintains its tension throughout, and trades effectively on everyone's concerns about what the future holds for today's world; hopefully, that won't be exactly what this movie shows. Overall, this is a film that capitalizes intelligently on the lack of the world's preparation for where it is going, and it succeeds by playing very effectively with our anxieties about terrible events, and by manipulating cleverly the emotions that they arouse.

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