Awake Movie Review
Awake Review

"Awake" Overview

Rating: R
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Joby HaroldProducer : Jason Kliot,Joana Vincente
Screenwiter : Joby Harold
Starring : Hayden Christensen,Jessica Alba,Lena Olin,Terrence Howard,Christopher McDonald,Arliss Howard,Fisher Stevens
Surprising, really, that "anesthetic awareness" -- helpless, immobile and, it
should be noted, very rare consciousness during surgery -- hasn't been explored
in a thriller before. Or maybe it has and I don't remember; that would explain
why Awake sounds so novel but feels so familiar. In Joby Harold's film, young
millionaire Clay Beresford (Hayden Christensen) is undergoing a risky heart
transplant operation when he realizes the anesthetic isn't working as it should
-- he is completely and silently paralyzed, but continues to hear and feel
everything around him. If the movie wanted to top itself, it could find a way
for Christensen to transfer immediately from anesthetic awareness into
catalepsy, and maybe knock off Poe's "Premature Burial." Unfortunately and
despite its killer gimmick, Awake isn't consumed with that kind of B-movie zeal.
Clay, like so many men before him, tries to block out the pain by intense
concentration on thoughts of Jessica Alba (playing his girlfriend Sam -- though
oddly enough, Clay's strongest memories reveal nothing more explicit than
Alba's demurely exposed back). His focus breaks down when he overhears some,
shall we say, less than reassuring words from his doctors, and from there a
trapped Clay races against time, desperately attempting to alert Sam and/or his
possessive mother (Lena Olin) of the danger he's in.
You might wonder how a silent, immobilized man can accomplish this, and Awake
will keep you wondering. The gimmick is a hook that doesn't sink in; first-time
writer-director Harold hasn't figured out a clever way to integrate anesthetic
awareness into a thriller plot. We see Christensen walking through his
memories, and sort of mentally projecting himself into the world he overhears,
but this doesn't translate into anything but a mix of Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind lite and the out-of-body crime-solving in the equally
undistinguished thriller The Invisible.
Instead of displaying any kind of metaphysical creativity, the screenplay falls
back on a series of stock thriller twists, which I will not reveal here -- not
so much out of respect for those who may see the movie, but rather because
they're as boring to write about as they are to watch (and in at least one
case, nearly irrelevant to the story at hand). In fact, one of the biggest has
more to do with star politics than characters or their actions; Clay's mother
is at least as prominent a character as the pretty faces on the poster. Those
expecting a sexy thriller starring Anakin Skywalker and the Invisible Girl may
be surprised by the bizarre bait-and-switch that leaves them watching a
Lifetime melodrama starring Lena Olin.
Nothing against Olin (though if any member of the cast should be stealing
scenes from younger costars, it's Terrence Howard); Harold just doesn't seem
particularly interested in the strengths or weaknesses of his cast --
Christensen plays another brooding young man of power, and the lack of depth in
his relationship with Alba has ample anti-payoff in several muted, uninvolving
climactic scenes. Even the use of the stars as visual ornaments peaks early,
when an extended, creepy shot of Christensen submerged in a bathtub appears in
the first 10 minutes. Nothing so arresting happens for the rest of the film;
it's an exercise in dramatic paralysis.
Where can I get fitted for one of those Darth Vader helmets?
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





