Los Angeles Times

Arty sci-fi slog leaves you numb

- — Noel Murray

Writer-director Sadrac González puts an austere, arty spin on a solid sciencefic­tion premise in “Black Hollow Cage,” a time-travel

movie more in the mold of Andrei Tarkovsky than “Back to the Future.” The film looks stunning and presents some provocativ­e ideas, but González’s quietly contemplat­ive approach is numbing.

Lowena McDonell stars as Alice, a pre-teen girl with a robotic arm, who lives in the woods with her fussy father (Julian Nicholson) and a talking dog she calls “Mom.” One day, a distressed young brother and sister, Erika (Haydée Lysander) and Paul (Marc Puiggener), show up, needing a place to recuperate.

Not long after, a mysterious black cube in the wilderness warns Alice to be wary of her guests. When Alice fails to pay proper heed, the cube offers her a chance to go back in time to set everything right.

Reduced to a written descriptio­n, “Black Hollow Cage” makes sense. Strangers disrupt an isolated household, and then fantastica­l technology allows a dysfunctio­nal family repeated opportunit­ies to heal. Played right, this could have been an amazing and emotionall­y involving story.

But González maintains a glacial pace and a hushed tone, while withholdin­g so much informatio­n that the film is confusing and only comes together in retrospect. It’s a grueling experience, with a modest payoff. By the time it ends, every word in its title feels apt.

“Black Hollow Cage.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 45 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Royal, West Los Angeles.

 ?? Level Film ?? THE TIME-TRAVEL film “Black Hollow Cage” stars Julian Nicholson and Lowena McDonell, right.
Level Film THE TIME-TRAVEL film “Black Hollow Cage” stars Julian Nicholson and Lowena McDonell, right.

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