Knowing Movie Review
Knowing Review
"Knowing" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Alex ProyasProducer : Todd Black,Jason Blumenthal,Steve Tisch,Alex Proyas
Screenwiter : Ryne Douglas Pearson,Juliet Snowden,Stiles White,Stuart Hazeldine,Alex Proyas
Starring : Nicolas Cage,Rose Byrne,Chandler Canterbury,Lara Robinson
In the list of filmmakers packed with wasted potential, Alex Proyas has to be
near the top. While Dark City sparkled with a kind of surreal sci-fi magic, his
other efforts -- including the gloppy Will Smith epic I, Robot -- have felt
strained and unrewarding. So when you see his name attached to the lasted
Nicolas Cage effort (said actor himself a perfect example of the law of
continued diminishing returns), one fears a flop coming on. But as luck would
have it, Knowing is actually very good. It proves that Proyas is perhaps one
mainstream mega-hit away from finally fulfilling his so far unrealized
possibilities.
Fifty years ago, the students of a small Massachusetts school buried a time
capsule filled with their drawings of the future. In 2009, it's opened, and
what's inside will change the fate of MIT Professor John Koestler (Cage), his
son Caleb (Chandler Canterbury), and the actual world as we know it. Seems the
boy gets a weird list of numbers, scribbled by a troubled child five decades
ago. Now, Koestler sees a pattern in the randomness -- they appear to be
predicting cataclysmic events, providing the date and the actual number of
casualties. Luckily, most of the tragedies have already occurred.
Unfortunately, there are three remaining. With the help of Diana Wayland (Rose
Byrne) and her daughter Abby (Lara Robinson), our hero will try to understand
the omens before life as we "know" it no longer exists.
Knowing, while not without its faults, is a fascinating and brave
entertainment. You haven't seen doom and gloom like this since Michael Tolkin
delivered the actual Rapture. Proyas reconnects with his muse in a way that's
quite wonderful throughout. The three main set-pieces -- a horrific plane
crash, an equally brutal subway smash-up, and the frightening finale -- are all
so skillfully rendered, so startling in their cinematic audacity that it's hard
to imagine a studio giving them the greenlight. With an equally strong sonic
backdrop to add to the chaos, these scenes play like newsreel footage filled
out with actual visions of real-life death and destruction. For these moments
alone, Knowing is worth your time.
Even Cage can't countermand Proyas' ability behind the lens. While much better
here than in other recent paycheck parts (Bangkok Dangerous, Next), there are
times when he feels out of sync with the rest of the movie. He's even upstaged
by child actor Canterbury some of the time. But as the story moves along, as
his character learns more and more about the fateful list, Cage comes around.
He seems more comfortable in the reactive role, not having to put on the
faux-heroics that the early parts of the film require. Proyas even helps out by
keeping the cast small and insular.
Of course, there's a caveat. You can't make far-thinking, big-budget
speculative spectacle without it. During the last 15 minutes, Knowing takes a
turn so unique, so baffling in its believability yet obvious in its setup that
you either go with it, or you don't. Your reaction to this plot point will be
the make-or-break moment for you and this film. Buy it, and you're in for
something wholly satisfying and special. Don't and you'll be twiddling your
thumbs in Spielberg/War of the Worlds disbelief. Given all that's come before
-- and it's some amazing moviemaking stuff -- it's a big risk for Proyas and
his picture. Indeed, if the film's a hit, it will be the water cooler moment
for the next few weeks.
Frankly, all of Knowing feels daring and deliberate, as if Proyas wanted to
purposely undermine the expectations of the standard popcorn pandering. That it
succeeds so well shows what this unsung artform hero is really made of.
Aka Know1ng.
He also knows what you did last summer.
|
Review by Bill Gibron
|






