Los Angeles Times

Sci-fi is bogged in first dimension

- — Gary Goldstein

“Curvature” is a forgettabl­e sci-fi thriller whose intriguing start gives way to an arcane, convoluted plot that fails to viscerally or emotionall­y engage. Director Diego Hallivis, writer Brian DeLeeuw and production designer Laura Miller work hard to distinguis­h their work, but it’s a case of style — and conjecture — over substance.

Helen Phillips (Lyndsy Fonseca) is a robotics engineer mourning the recent suicide of her husband, Wells (Noah Bean), a brilliant scientist and co-founder, with partner Tomas (Glenn Morshower), of the Curvature Research firm.

One morning, after Helen wakes up panicked and disoriente­d, she receives a puzzling phone call warning her to escape her home — her life is in danger. She enlists friend and co-worker Alex (Zach Avery) to help her unravel a mystery that involves a shadowy pursuer (Alex Lanipekun), time travel, murder, hidden cameras and the rethinking of Wells’ death.

Oh, and that strange call? It was from Helen herself, a just-go-with-it twist that will inform much of her risky journey, one that includes several OK action sequences and a climactic visit to a time-machine prototype (it looks like a tricked-out MRI machine) that was designed in secret by Wells and Tomas.

More dimensiona­l characters played by a more charismati­c, starrier cast might have helped warm up this remote effort. Linda Hamilton’s brief, throwaway role as a fellow engineer doesn’t help.

“Cur vature.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 28 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills; also on VOD.

 ?? Screen Media Films ?? HELEN AND ALEX (Lyndsy Fonseca and Zach Avery) get to the bottom of a mystery in “Curvature.”
Screen Media Films HELEN AND ALEX (Lyndsy Fonseca and Zach Avery) get to the bottom of a mystery in “Curvature.”

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