DOWNSIZING
A diminished Matt Damon runs in ever-decreasing circles in this ponderous sci-fi satire.
The Bourne Identity star gives a pleasantly guileless performance as occupational therapist, Paul.
To solve financial worries, he signs up to be shrunk to five inches tall and live in an experimental community. However, the reality of his gilded existence is not exactly as it says in the brochure.
It’s consistent in tone, well designed and acted, but over long, patronising and only intermittently entertaining.
And as in his previous two films, 2011’s The Descendants and 2013’s Nebraska, writer and director Alexander Payne offers plenty of disdain for the working class, portraying them as fat, lazy, stupid and drunk.
Nor is the film’s premise as original as it thinks, being considerably less exciting than the 1957 classic The Incredible Shrinking Man, and a lot less fun than 1989’s huge hit Honey, I Shrunk the Kids. Out on Wednesday.