Rotorua Daily Post

As the mood takes you

Lindsey Bahr tries to make sense of the web of drugs and emotions that is Spiderhead.

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GEORGE SAUNDERS’ SHORT STORY Escape from Spiderhead is not, you might say, an obviously cinematic piece. It’s the kind of subtly unsettling work — stark, moody and dialogue heavy — that could easily be a play or a haunting experiment­al film. So it’s an especially bold leap to use it as the inspiratio­n for a starry, big budget, Netflix-subscriber-driving event movie, as they've done with Spiderhead, which starts streaming on Friday. But stranger things have worked for the streamer and who doesn’t like a slick, dystopian sci-fi?

Originally published in The New Yorker in 2010, Escape from Spiderhead is about a group of prisoners living in a specialise­d facility who are being subjected to experiment­al mood-altering drugs, with names like Verbaluce, which makes you speak eloquently, and Darkenflox­x, which makes you feel about as badly as a person can feel. The audience experience­s the world through one of the inmates, Jeff, who is starting to question the tests, the drugs and the mysterious leader of the facility, Abnesti, who keeps an open-door policy in the Spiderhead to foster trust and respect with the prisoners.

You have to admire the ambition behind those who had the idea to adapt the story. Screenwrit­ers Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese (Deadpool) needed to make many big choices and leaps to stretch it out to feature-length: They added backstorie­s, love interests and flashbacks. Director Joseph Kosinski and his team, including cinematogr­apher Claudio Miranda (who also teamed with him on Top Gun: Maverick) further had to dream up an entire look for Spiderhead, too. They went with dystopian brutalism plopped in the middle of a tropical paradise.

Jeff is played by Miles Teller (who also worked with Kosinski on Top Gun: Maverick and the underseen firefighte­r drama Only the Brave) and Abnesti is taken on by Chris Hemsworth, who also produced. The writers have turned Abnesti into a more blatant eccentric, a visionary pharma/tech genius who makes grand speeches about the perks of life in Spiderhead and the virtuousne­ss of the experiment­s while also sampling his own product on the side. It’s

Ultimately, Spiderhead just seems a little unsure of what it is or what it’s supposed to be.

quite a good role for Hemsworth, who excels at being charming with an undercurre­nt of mania. There’s even an incredible dance sequence to Roxy Music’s More Than This that is perhaps on par with Oscar Isaac and Sonoya Mizuno’s Ex Machina moves. Like his brief turn in Ghostbuste­rs, it makes you eager to see him keep branching out beyond Thor.

Jeff, meanwhile, is somewhat stripped of his edge and tragic poetry and is turned into a bro with a conscience and visceral memories of the ill-fated night he decided to drive drunk. And he gets an actual, not drug-enhanced love interest, which under normal circumstan­ces would seem a bit cliche´ but here is made interestin­g because

of Jurnee Smollet’s raw and captivatin­g performanc­e.

Some of these choices work, some are silly and some come across as downright mean. In the story, Jeff is subjected to the love serum twice to see what happens with two different women described as “equally so-so”. Both times he falls deeply, albeit briefly, in love. In the film, however, one woman is convention­ally attractive and the other is styled as though she may be a meth addict. It’s turned into a joke, and a somewhat misogynist­ic one at that, and the poetic connection is reduced to an overthe-top sex bit. There’s a gay panic bit, too, and an odd subplot about an inmate who has been stealthily drawing on the walls with faeces. It’s not surprising that the writers of Deadpool and Zombieland veered towards humour, but it does at times feel less like pointed satire and more like crass irreverenc­e — and the tonal shifts come at the expense of the overall impact of the story.

Ultimately, Spiderhead just seems a little unsure of what it is or what it’s supposed to be.

One of the inmates is even reading Saunders’ Tenth of December in one shot. It could send the mind spinning with meta questions about whether he had made it to Escape from Spiderhead yet. Instead it’s just plopped there like an Easter egg to nowhere. —AP

 ?? ?? Chris Hemsworth (left), Miles Teller, (background centre), and Mark Paguio (right) in a scene from Spiderhead. Photos / AP
Chris Hemsworth (left), Miles Teller, (background centre), and Mark Paguio (right) in a scene from Spiderhead. Photos / AP
 ?? ?? Chris Hemsworth in a scene from Spiderhead.
Chris Hemsworth in a scene from Spiderhead.
 ?? ?? Nathan Jones in a scene from Spiderhead.
Nathan Jones in a scene from Spiderhead.

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