Work always gets in the way
Director puts new spin on romance ... and it kind of works
SUBMERGENCE
★★★ 1/2outof5 Cast: James McAvoy, Alicia Vikander Director: Wim Wenders Duration: 1h52m Can a bio-mathematician and a CIA operative meetcute?
They can in Wim Wenders’ newest film, a geo-political romance starring Alicia Vikander and James McAvoy, and based on the 2011 novel Submergence by J.M. Ledgard.
When we first meet Vikander’s ocean-obsessed math genius and McAvoy’s idealistic spy (what a film had those roles been reversed!) they’re literally worlds apart, as Dani explores the depths of the Atlantic while James rots in a makeshift Somali prison.
With no answer to her cellphone calls, and innocent of his true occupation, she worries he’s quietly dumped her.
The truth is much more dire.
From this painful beginning the film rolls back a monthorsototheirchance meeting in a fancy hotel on the north coast of France. James tells her he’s a water engineer, the cover story he plans to use while looking for a terrorist in Somalia. She tells him about the layers of the ocean, from the sunlit epipelagic zone to the crushing pressure and blackness of the hadalpelagic. Over such multisyllabic sweet nothings they fall in love.
But work calls them apart. The rest of the movie finds a distracted Dani trying to concentrate on her oceanographic surveys as visions of James come to her unbidden. He, captured and branded a spy, fixes on her memory as a way of keeping a grip on his sanity.
Wenders, who originally wanted to film this drama in 3D (he has worked stereoscopically twice before), makes great use of light and shadow to convey and contrast the worlds above and below.
As he cuts from Somalia to the sea and back again, the two characters seem almost in contact. Certainly water is never far from either.
The ending may strike some as excessively simple, even hackneyed; James finds the possibility of deliverance through some remarkable coincidences.
But if you’re sufficiently invested in the film you’ll forgive it the odd narrative hiccup. As Vikander’s character jokes about her ocean-floor science, you may just be keen to get to the bottom of things.