Equilibrium Movie Review
Equilibrium Review

"Equilibrium" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Kurt WimmerProducer : Jan DeBont,Lucas Foster
Screenwiter : Kurt Wimmer
Starring : Christian Bale,Taye Diggs,Emily Watson,William Fichtner,Sean Bean
I’ll be the first to admit that dismissing any film as a Matrix clone feels
like a cop-out. The pioneering thriller powered through theaters three years
ago, yet films continue to beg, borrow, and steal their stunt techniques and
sleek visual styling from the Wachowski brothers’ remarkably innovative work.
While not quite a Matrix replica, writer/director Kurt Wimmer’s Equilibrium
duplicates too many elements from its sci-fi predecessor to ignore the
comparison. The film inhabits a Huxley-inspired fascist future society where
emotions are chemically suppressed. World leaders believe it helps prevent
global warfare. If love and happiness are sacrificed in the process, so be it.
With gun in hand, Cleric John Preston (Christian Bale) and his team of
highly-trained, heavily-armed government soldiers police our society’s ability
to feel. His partner, Cleric Brandt (Taye Diggs), eventually comes to suspect
Preston of skipping his mandatory dosage of the mood-suppressant drug Prozium
after an encounter with a “sense offender” (Emily Watson) opens his mind to a
world filled with feeling. Such offense is punishable by death, but they have
to catch Preston first – a task that proves easier said than done.
Wimmer’s flashy gadgets and whirling fight sequences may look cool, but they
can’t distract from the flawed support structure holding Equilibrium up. Who
can live from minute to minute, day to day without feeling at least one
emotion? To feel absolutely nothing is to cease to exist. Even the Clerics –
the ones policing the populace in the film – experience a range of emotions on
screen, from fear to hatred to pride to envy. Wimmer never properly defines
“sense offense” or gives us a reason to overlook this error.
Ignore this obvious (yet crucial) blunder and you’ll find a few things to
appreciate. Using precise, razor-sharp choreography, Wimmer injects a brutally
inventive style into this bland, sterile environment. The director lays the
symbolism on thick, as people are shot at point blank range through the books
that condemn them. Appropriately enough for a movie about suppressing one's
senses, there’s a ton of senseless violence, punctuated by a bombastic score of
Gregorian chants and operatic swishes lifted from The Omen soundtrack.
Then there’s Bale, an interesting choice to play Preston. As an actor, he’s
been emotionless before (American Psycho), and it’s safe to assume he’ll be
emotionless again. He does possess the physical prowess to pull off the
daunting action sequences, which have a distinct frenetic quality. His drone
of a character just calls to mind Matrix star Keanu Reeves, and the presence of
the icy Diggs only makes us think of stony Laurence Fishburne in (you guessed
it) The Matrix. Sense a trend? Still, when it comes time for Bale to express
emotions convincingly – a key turn in Equilibrium – he’s physically incapable
to stretch that far as a performer. Perhaps the star is doped up on Prozium in
real life. Now that'd be a movie.
You can hear Wimmer give his take on the DVD's commentary track... then hear it
again in a joint commentary track with producer Lucas Foster (yeah, we're dying
to hear his perspective). Why two commentary tracks from the same person about
a film like Equilibrium? Better to ask: Why one?
Nothing's equal in the future.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





