National Post

Fear outweighs curiosity in end

- Chris Knight ∂∂

I was of two minds going to see Life. On the one hand, I love the look of space: the thin blue line that delineates our planet when the sun shines through its razor-thin atmosphere; the absolute black of the unfiltered cosmos; the way Earth’s weather looks from the outside. But I’m not a big horror fan. Neverthele­ss, the film had me when Hugh ( Ariyon Bakare) says of a newly discovered Martian life form: “Its curiosity outweighs its fear.” I get that.

Hugh is one of two British members of a six- person crew aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station in the near future. His countryper­son is Miranda ( Rebecca Ferguson), and they’re joined by Kat ( Olga Dihovichna­ya) from Russia, Sho ( Hiroyuki Sanada) of Japan, David ( Jake Gyllenhaal) f r om America, and Roy ( Ryan Reynolds) from . . . America. The filmmakers should really have let the Vancouver native play a Canadian, especially since you can’t spell SPACE without an “Eh.”

Nationalis­t griping aside, there’s solid science behind the film’s plot, which imagines that a robot- collected sample of Martian soil might be dropped off at the space station for study. NASA is already deep into planning how to prevent possible terrestria­l contaminat­ion by a Mars sample return mission in the 2020s.

But this is still science fiction. So when the sample is given something to eat and breathe, it quickly morphs from a single cell into a squishy blob, and then a creature that looks like Groot and Jell- O had a baby. As it grows, it next resembles a starfish, then an octopus, and finally a more repulsive creature that suggests that someone — or some thing — has been watching old Alien movies.

There’s a lot of Alien DNA in the script by Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick ( Zombieland, Deadpool). It starts with the simple white sansserif title font, kerned out so there’s about a parsec between each letter and the next. There’s the way some characters are more keen than others to kill the life form — Reynolds’ suggestion is unprintabl­e in its enthusiasm. There’s motion tracking, as seen in Aliens, and the sleeping pods resemble hibernatio­n chambers. And for variety, there’s a lift from 2001: A Space Odyssey, in which faulty comms require one of the astronauts to venture outside for repairs.

But there’s enough originalit­y to keep things moving along, at least until a final act whammy. (More on that in a moment.) Gyllenhaal, whose dedication to the craft is unparallel­ed, plays his character as someone who has been off- world so long — a record- setting 400- plus days — that he’s starting to feel eerily at home there. Ferguson acts as a more logical bulwark. Reynolds brings a touch of that Deadpool insoucianc­e. And Dihovichna­ya delivers maxims —“slow is fast” — that ring true in cinema as well as space exploratio­n. Jon Ekstrand ties everything together with a suitably creepy score.

It’s nail- biting fun when the alien critter, nicknamed Calvin, starts tearing up the ship, and everyone scrambles to respond. ( Among other things, it turns out that in space, no one can hear you drown.)

Swedish director Daniel Espinosa manages an effective mix of horror and character developmen­t, and never stoops to the easy jumpscare. Fighting inimical alien life is frightenin­g enough without it sneaking up on you.

Ah, but that ending. It’s problemati­c in that it breaks several of the unwritten rules of cinema, the kind that tell you that if a character looks out a window, the next cut will be of what she sees.

I won’ t say what it amounts to except that it feels cheap, and easy. Life is a good science- fiction horror blend, but it falls short of greatness because its fear outweighs its curiosity. 1/2

 ?? ALEX BAILEY / COLUMBIA PICTURES- SONY VIA AP ?? Vancouver’s Ryan Reynolds in a scene from Swedish director Daniel Espinosa’s sci-fi thriller Life.
ALEX BAILEY / COLUMBIA PICTURES- SONY VIA AP Vancouver’s Ryan Reynolds in a scene from Swedish director Daniel Espinosa’s sci-fi thriller Life.

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