Posts Tagged ‘Gillian Anderson’

The Permanence Code

Tron: Ares

Director: Joachim Ronning

Cast: Greta Lee, Jared Leto, Evan Peters, Jodie Turner-Smith, Jeff Bridges, Arturo Castro, Gillian Anderson

Running Time: 1 hour 59 minutes

Film Rating: 7.5 out of 10

It’s been 15 years since Tron was released in 2010 and 43 years since the original Tron was released back in 1982. The good news is that Jeff Bridges stars in all of them.

2025’s Tron: Ares directed by Norwegian director Joachim Ronning who also did Maleficent: Mistress of Evil and Pirates of the Caribbean: Salazar’s Revenge.

Tron: Ares is not a bad film and the visual effects are amazing. The cast is sufficiently varied including Greta Lee (Past Lives) as video game founder Eve Kim and her nemesis, Julian Dillinger played with villainous mischief by Emmy winner Evan Peters (Mare of Easttown). Then there are the programs that Dillinger creates, Ares played by Oscar winner Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club) who is a digital being who wants to escape being disintegrated every 30 minutes and Athena played by the fabulous British actress Jodie Turner-Smith (Queen & Slim)  rocking a particularly retro Grace Jones look.

As Eve and her sidekick Seth Flores played by the Guatemalan star Arturo Castro discover the permanence code which allows advanced AI programs like Ares and Athena to exist forever. Dillinger’s corporation which he is trying to wrestle control away from his overbearing mother, pursue Eve and in a flashy motorbike chase through a nameless city, Eve discovers that she is weirdly attracted to Ares, even though he is a computer program.

Ares realizes that he is a disposable program in which Dillinger can reconstitute at any moment, so he teams up with Eve who sends him back into the original 1980’s video game where in this retro computer world reminiscent of 1980’s arcade games, Ares meets Kevin Flynn played with reverence by Oscar winner Jeff Bridges (Crazy Heart), video game creator of the original Tron grid.

Tron: Ares has lavish production values with cutting edge visuals assisted by a catchy soundtrack by Nine Inch Nails and Depeche Mode. Of course Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, Oscar winners for best original score for David Fincher’s The Social Network also assist with making this Tron soundtrack edgy and slick.

The best scene is when Ares meets Kevin Flynn in the original 1980’s computer grid of Tron, the first film which captured my imagination as a 10 year boy back in 1982.

If you enjoy the Tron world and the sleek visual aesthetics, then catch Tron: Ares now in cinemas. The acting is not brilliant but the storyline keeps the characters afloat in a treacherous digital world in which artificial intelligence is fighting raw human emotion.

Tron: Ares gets a film rating of 7.5 out of 10 and is worth seeing purely for the entertainment value and this time Disney managed to capture a futuristic world which is hyper contemporary and surprisingly relevant. Recommended viewing for those that love cool science fiction and watch it in the biggest screen possible.

Dividing a Subcontinent

Viceroy’s House

Director: Gurinder Chadha

Cast: Hugh Bonneville, Gillian Anderson, Michael Gambon, Simon Callow, Lily Travers, Manish Dayal, Om Puri, Huma Qureshi, Simon Williams

Bend it Like Beckham Kenyan born, British director Gurinder Chadha’s handsome post-colonial film Viceroy’s House about the partitioning of the Indian subcontinent in August 1947 effortlessly blends documentary footage of the historic event with gorgeous production design and exquisite costumes.

Fresh from his success as playing Robert Crawley, Earl of Grantham in the hit BBC series Downton Abbey, Hugh Bonneville turns in a nuanced performance as Lord Louis Mountbatten the last Viceroy of India who has daunting task of giving India its independence after 300 years of British rule.

Lord Louis Mountbatten is accompanied by his affected yet compassionate wife Lady Edwina Mountbatten played by Gillian Anderson (Shadow Dancer, The Last King of Scotland). Lily Travers (Kingsman: Secret Service, Me Before You) plays their daughter Lady Pamela Hicks.

The actual task of dividing the subcontinent into India and Pakistan so brilliantly written about in Salman Rushdie’s seminal post-colonial text Midnight’s Children is taken up by Sir Cyril Radcliffe in Viceroy’s House superbly played by Simon Callow the stalwart supporting actor of all those Merchant Ivory film’s in the 1980’s and 90’s from A Room with a View to Howard’s End and Jefferson in Paris.

Sir Radcliffe after admitting that he has never stepped foot in the Punjab admits that this is “a monstrous responsibility for one man”.

Equally on edge at the thought of a massive subcontinent being divided and suddenly changing power, are the two love interests of Viceroy’s House, the Hindu manservant Jeet wonderfully played by Manish Dayal (The Hundred-Foot Journey) and his Muslim girlfriend Aalia played by Huma Qureshi. Aalia, a bright and intelligent woman has to look after her father Ali Rahim Noor played by the recently deceased veteran Indian actor Om Puri (The Hundred-Foot Journey, Gandhi).

Michael Gambon who was so brilliant in Brideshead Revisited makes a welcome addition to the British cast as General Lionel Hastings who proves to be more deviant and manipulative as the partition date approaches in the summer of 1947.

In terms of setting the right political tone for the Viceroy’s House director Gurinder Chadha relies heavily on actual news and documentary footage of the partition and the massive disruption and refugee crisis it created when the subcontinent broke into India and Pakistan and then again into Bangladesh.

Chadha chooses to use the actual historical Viceroy’s house a sumptuous Empire palace to metaphorically show a subcontinent being torn into two as all the house servants had to literally choose which country to belong to in the space of three weeks: India or Pakistan, as well as callously divide up all the possessions of this magnificent estate.

From a historical perspective, Viceroy’s House is a fascinating film about the after effects of colonialism and the subsequent first heady days of independence in this case not of one country but two divided controversially along religious lines, Hindu and Muslim.

Audiences that enjoyed Midnight’s Children, Heat and Dust, A Passage to India, will certainly enjoy Viceroy’s House although these films are a far cry from the contemporary portrayal of India and Pakistan in such films as Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire and Mira Nair’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist.

Fascinating, tragic and historically relevant, Viceroy’s House with its sumptuous production design and beautiful costumes gets a film rating of 8 out of 10.

 

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