“
What if I could put him in front of you, the man that ruined
your life. If I guaranteed you’d get away with it would you kill him?” With that cryptic question one of the better movies dealing with time travel begins.
Time
travel is one of my favorite film genres because if done right not only
can it be immensely entertaining, but it can be very thought provoking
as well. In the case of
Predestination it certainly achieved both of those in spades. The movie is based on the short story
“ ’—All You Zombies—’ ” by
Robert A. Heinlein
and if you are going to make a science fiction movie, a Heinlein story
is certainly one of your better choices for source material, and
directors
Michael Spierig and
Peter Spierig did their best to stay true to the original.
This is one of those movies that is incredibly hard to review because
going into the film cold is probably the best way to go, so I will do
my best to not spoil or even get into the intricate twists and turns the
plot makes, but if all you want to know is that it’s a time travel
movie starring
Ethan Hawke
and based on a Heinlein story then stop reading now. Those who wish to
continuing reading, don’t worry I will do my best to dance around
anything that could spoil this movie for you.
The film follows the missions of a
Temporal Agent played by Ethan Hawke who works for the mysterious
Temporal Bureau that sends its agents through time to prevent major crimes. On a mission to stop an infamous terrorist known as the
Fizzle Bomber,
the Agent is able to stop the bomb from killing hundreds, but is
severely burned and the bomber escapes. The Agent returns to his own
time where doctors are able to do amazing surgery and facial
reconstruction with the result being that the agent now looks a lot like
Ethan Hawke.
“I distinctly remember asking for the George Clooney look.”
We learn that the
Fizzle Bomber is the only criminal to be able to continually elude the
Temporal Bureau and that the Agent, now all healed up nicely, is to be sent out on his last mission before he will be decommissioned. With his
coordinate transformer field kit (that’s
a time machine to likes of you and me) he arrives in 1978 where he
takes up work as a bartender where he seemingly is waiting for someone.
“A time traveler walks into a bar.”
An odd looking man enters the bar and the Agent in the role of
bartender cajoles the man to tell a story about himself that will truly
shock him, for if it is shocking enough the man will win a free bottle
of liquor. What follows is a wild tale of how this man actually came
into the world as a girl (yeah this movie has your standard sex identity
twist as an appetizer) and how twenty years ago she was dropped off at
an orphanage as a Jane Doe baby. She grew up smarter and stronger than
all the other children, thus she found herself apart and treated like a
freak.
Though a damn adorable freak.
Her aptitude and the fact that she is still a virgin draws interest
from SpaceCorp, a Sixties-era government agency charged with recruiting
women to go into space to provide sexual relief for astronauts on long
space missions. Now those of you who may have some historical knowledge
may be thinking, “
I don’t remember there being a SpaceCorp in the 60’s.”
Well that is one of the clues that this movie takes place in an
alternate Earth, similar to ours but different in many ways. Another
subtle clue is a mobile hanging over baby Jane’s crib which has a globe
that’s continents don’t quite seem to match ours.
A clue or maybe the orphanage just got that mobile from a Texas based educational company.
Just as things seem to be going well for Jane she is kicked out of
SpaceCorp for fighting, falls in love with a mysterious man who gets her
pregnant and then abandons her, then after a tricky birth finds out
that she is a true hermaphrodite and that due to complications with the
delivery the doctors had to remove her uterus and ovaries. Because they
discovered male organs intact, they decided to surgically make her a
man.
I’m not sure where the Hippocratic Oath sits on that one.
Now that may sound like I’ve spoiled a lot but that is really just
the tip of the iceberg on what is a wild and crazy ride. The movie will
take Jane and the Agent to places where if you think you know where
things are heading you are at best probably only half right. This film
takes the idea of the “
Time Paradox”, drags it behind the bar and beats it with a stick until it apologizes for existing. To quote Doc Brown,
“Great Scott!”
What makes this film stand out even more are the stellar performances
by its two leads, Ethan Hawke as the Agent, and Sarah Snook as Jane.
Hawke keeps the film grounded by his world weary time travelling agent
who may have jumped through the space time continuum one too many times
while
Sarah Snook
is simply amazing in a part that could easily become farcical. As the
bizarre nature of the story twists and turns we learn more about the
nature of the
Temporal Bureau and what makes the Agent so
special. It is only the talent of these two actors and the tight
direction by The Spierig Brothers that keeps the film from flying off
the rails.
So if you like serious science fiction and enjoyed such films as
Primer and
Looper you will most likely get a huge kick out of Predestination.
Time Machine Note:
How our protagonist in a time travel movie gets up and down the
corridors of time has almost as infinite amount of designs as there are
timelines; from the ornate time chairs of T
he Time Machine (1960) and
Time After Time (1979) to the awesome Delorean from
Back to the Future or in the case of
Predestination where it can all fit inside a violin case. Regardless of their design I love them all, with maybe the exception of the
Hot Tub variety.
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