Dark City Movie Review
Dark City Review

"Dark City" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Alex ProyasProducer : Andrew Mason,Alex Proyas
Screenwiter : Alex Proyas,Lem Dobbs,David S. Goyer
Starring : Rufus Sewell,Jennifer Connelly,Kiefer Sutherland,William Hurt,Richard O'Brien
For all of the acclaim Dark City received after its initial, disastrous theatrical release
in 1998 -- movie-of-the-year and DVD commentary honors from Roger Ebert; cult adoration;
an eventual director's cut -- it probably still hasn't reached anywhere close to
the number of people who saw, say, The Matrix (released just about a year later). Perhaps
this has to do with the way the film shrouds its ideas in noir mystery rather than
cyberpunk fashion; if The Matrix turned a broad audience into geeks who wanted to know
kung fu, Dark City seemed ready-made for those whose geekery was established, though
the film is broad enough to welcome nerds of the film, sci-fi, and perhaps even architecture
varieties.
The Matrix is not a random comparison, mind you; the two films toy with similar ideas about
the meaning of humanity, memory, and self-perception (they also share a second-unit
director, though unless he is a brilliant stealth screenwriter, it is probably a
coincidence). Dark City, directed by Alex Proyas, is less thrilling and sleek than its cousin,
but equally imaginative, full of twisty images and clever synthesis of the movies
that inspired it. It gives geeks a good name.
The film begins with intriguing if unnecessary narration about a race of beings referred
to as the Strangers, but quickly proceeds to its irresistible hook: John Murdoch
(Rufus Sewell) wakes up in a bathtub with no memory and the police, led by Inspector Bumst
ead (William Hurt), hot on his tail. The Strangers, who look a bit like corpses reanimated
from the set of a forties noir, are also after him, as is the stutter-breathed Dr.
Schreber (Kiefer Sutherland), who sounds a bit like Igor and may be just as eage
r to help.
As Murdoch wanders the shadowy streets -- the unnamed city never seems to reach daylight
-- he tries to piece together his life. There are chases and confrontations, as well
as gorgeous and elaborate set design, including a subterranean fortress that looks ins
pired (like so many movies) by Fritz Lang's Metropolis, but the movie isn't a patchwork
thriller. The filmmakers build on their influences with great style.
The screenplay is credited to a team of once and future pulp aficionados: Lem Dobbs
(who wrote The Limey), David Goyer (who had a hand in the Blade and latter-day Batman franch
ises), and Proyas himself, who had just made The Crow, a comic-book movie that out-darkened
and out-gothed the then-king of the genre, Tim Burton. Dark City is a less emotional
creature than The Crow -- instead of romanticized, teenager-friendly doominess, it has
an everyman practicality even amidst its amazing sights. The characters in The Crow s
eemed at home in their fantasy world; the sharper people of Dark City get suspicious,
confused, lost in the shadows.
It helps that the movie has no major stars; Sewell, Sutherland, and Jennifer Connelly
(as Murdoch's estranged wife) take on a timeless, earnest, B-picture quality, simply
and skillfully avoiding playing larger than life. Even Hurt's scene-stealing is unde
rstated; Bumstead is dry and wary, though he shares many of Murdoch's questions and
suspicions. Their dialogue is sometimes stiff, even expository -- if anything, the
movie is initially too quick to explain some of its mysteries -- but for the most
part it works as part of the film's style, which mixes visual marvels with B-movie
archetypes and is actually derived from its substance: humanity as a pulp experiment,
struggling as existential playthings.
It might all sink with heavy ambition without Proyas's visual fireworks, which he
has yet to match in subsequent films. The camera swings from one striking image to
another -- mutating buildings; floating, ghoulish men; endless shadows (the cinematographer, Dari
usz Wolski, went on to work with Tim Burton and Disney's Pirates trilogy). The special
effects age well not because they pioneered any particular technique, but because
they serve the story. That story doesn't end with a definitive bang, but it doesn't
allow much room for Matrix-style sequels, either. It departs this world when it should,
floating on and leaving the rest to us -- or the geeks, anyway.
The Director's Cut DVD includes a number of commentary tracks (including Ebert's),
plus two making-of featurettes.
What, your city doesn't have a giant, disembodied skull floating in the middle of
it? Weak.
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Review by Jesse Hassenger
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