National Post

Should you see Annihilati­on?

A guide for the many people who haven’t

- SONIA RAO

Whether you will appreciate Annihilati­on largely hinges on how you feel about rules.

Writer- director Alex Garland disregards them almost entirely in his latest sci- fi movie, which opened Friday and made just US$11 million on its opening weekend. The genre requires filmmakers to bend reality, but Garland goes a step further by subverting traditiona­l storytelli­ng techniques, as well.

The film follows biologist and U. S. army veteran Lena (Natalie Portman) as she investigat­es a mystical, rainbow-coloured entity expanding throughout the South called the Shimmer. Previous teams, one of which included her husband Kane ( Oscar Isaac), entered the domeshaped zone only to disappear forever. Lena and four others — paramedic Anya ( Gina Rodriguez), psychologi­st Ventress (Jennifer Jason Leigh), physicist Josie ( Tessa Thompson) and anthropolo­gist Cass ( Tuva Novotny) — hope to avoid the same fate while examining the Shimmer’s simultaneo­usly beautiful and horrifying life forms.

Annihilati­on is an adaptation of Jeff VanderMeer’s 2014 novel in the loosest sense of the word. A whitewashi­ng controvers­y called Garland’s technique into question more than a week before the film’s release. Then he shared in an interview with Google that he adapted the book “like a dream” — instead of rereading it, he wrote from memory.

“In some places, it will correlate very closely, and in other places, it won’t,” he said. “It’s a dream response to a dream book.”

Critics’ responses to the results were mixed. The Atlantic’s Christophe­r Orr deemed the feature “a beautiful heap of nonsense,” and the New York Times’ Manohla Dargis argued that Garland “engages in too much narrative throat clearing.” The Post’s Ann Hornaday wrote that the final moments of the film devolve into “a muddle of histrionic­s and deeply unsatisfyi­ng weirdness.”

Much of Annihilati­on does come across as if it were written by someone tripping on acid. But this might appeal to fans of David Lynch and other storytelle­rs whose seemingly nonsensica­l writi ng reflects the ambiguity faced by the characters themselves. Garland’s writing mimics the scientists’ fear of slowly descending into madness in a way that s t raightfor ward writing couldn’t. And while the film i ncludes the usual monstrous obstacles — crocodiles­hark hybrids and skullfaced bears, specifical­ly — emotional impulses drive all the action.

As with his directoria­l debut Ex Machina, Garland’s cerebral thriller asks viewers to think for themselves. We share the frustratio­n of Benedict Wong’s character, Lomax, who questions Lena about what she experience­d in the Shimmer. More often than not, her answer is, “I don’t know.” The subsequent flashbacks answer questions about how the dangerous, psychedeli­c swamp came to be, but enough are left openended to encourage discussion­s afterward.

Arrival screenwrit­er Eric Heisserer tweeted that he encountere­d four friends discussing the ending upon leaving the theatre. “Each had a specific, different theory that resonated personally with them,” he wrote. “As is, the movie lets them all find a meaningful and bespoke connection. Clarity would have disappoint­ed at least 3 of them.”

Many reactions on social media shared the positive sentiment. Actress Hari Nef praised the writing and visuals calling it “vast surreal beautiful dramatical­ly whole and deeply unsettling,” while others such as BuzzFeed News’s Anne Helen Petersen praised the female-dominated cast: “The best part of Annihilati­on is the part when 90 per cent of the dialogue is spoken by women and 95 per cent of the action is performed by women.”

Though Annihilati­on has been distribute­d to American theatres, Paramount sold the internatio­nal rights to Netflix in December. Fans of the film criticized the studio for this decision, arguing that it deprives those outside of the United States of the proper viewing experience. Whether to hear the weird musical cue boom or to see the swamp’s psychedeli­c beauty on the big screen, the film is meant to be seen in a theatre.

 ?? PETER MOUNTAIN / PARAMOUNT PICTURES / SKYDANCE VIA AP ?? Natalie Portman stars as a biologist investigat­ing a strange phenomenom in the sci-fi thriller Annihilati­on.
PETER MOUNTAIN / PARAMOUNT PICTURES / SKYDANCE VIA AP Natalie Portman stars as a biologist investigat­ing a strange phenomenom in the sci-fi thriller Annihilati­on.

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