Dante 01 Movie Review
Dante 01 Review
"Dante 01" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc CaroProducer : Richard Grandpierre
Screenwiter : Marc Caro,Pierre Bordage
Starring : Lambert Wilson,Linh Dan Pham,Simona Maicanescu,Dominique Pinon,Bruno Lochet,Gérald Laroche,Yann Collette,François Leventhal,François Hadji-Lazaro
Murky and brooding, Marc Caro's Dante 01 is a sci-fi phantasmagoria that
wouldn't look out of place in a Clive Barker fever dream. As the film's
character and place names suggest (all echoing Dante Alighieri's epic poem, The
Inferno), Dante 01 is less about sci-fi action than overdrawn religious
allegory.
Dante is a hellish planet (its surface a crackling fire-and-brimstone
concoction) in deepest space. Around it orbits a psychiatric facility housing a
handful of criminally insane patients, several physicians, and three armed
guards. Everyone on the ship (which resembles a golden cross made out of
Rubik's cubes) has had their head shaved and slinks around in almost complete
darkness. The docs, manning computer screens and a device called the Answerer,
experiment on patients who live in a warren of sterile steel corridors in the
bowels of the ship. There are a multitude of sub-plots swirling in the miasma:
a new doctor, Elisa (Linh Dan Phan), with an experimental nanobot-infused drug,
a conspiracy between "warden" Charon (Gérald Laroche), and his prize patient,
the hacker Atilla (Yann Collette), an aging (perhaps unstable) lead physician,
Persephone (Simona Maicanescu), and a new patient (mute at first and dubbed
Saint-Georges, the dragon slayer, played by Lambert Wilson) who can "see"
parasites affecting the patients and is either, as the ad copy put its, "a
monster or a messiah."
Director Caro enjoyed a distinguished career as an acclaimed comic book writer
(writing for comics like Metal Hurlant, the original Heavy Metal adult comic
magazine) and a short film maker/animator before teaming up with fellow sci-fi
fan Jean-Pierre Jeunet and making the breakout films Delicatessen and The City
of Lost Children. The directing team split after Alien Resurrection, the fourth
entry in the Alien film franchise and Jeunet/Caro's first brush with Hollywood.
While Jeunet went on to make the successful Amelie (followed by A Very Long
Engagement), Caro focused on art direction and animation and reportedly wanted
to make this film for quite some time.
There are some marvelous sequences in Dante 01 that may thrill Jeunet/Caro fans
(as well as add a little something new to the gothic sci-fi genre): the literal
defrosting of Saint-Georges, Saint-Georges' "visions" of the parasites (he eats
them when he finds them), and a dive into a cooling tank. However, the film is
far from perfect. With an overly oppressive atmosphere and a choppy script, the
film is as almost neurotic as its leads. And Caro juggles far too many themes,
each with diminishing results: the film starts with a Dante myth, morphs into a
standard Poe-inspired "who's really the crazy one here?" story, and closes with
a 2001-inspired Christ tale.
Due to a fairly low budget and some reported behind-the-scenes problems, the
film looks cheaper than it should (perhaps the reason it's so un-lit). And it's
likely some of these budget constraints can also explain several loose threads
and the film's non-ending. A failed (though ambitious) experiment in mystical
sci fi horror, Dante 01 emerges from its very long gestation to resemble
nothing so much as a poorly translated Heavy Metal comic strip.
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Review by Keith Breese
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