San Diego Union-Tribune

EVEN IF THEY’RE SPACE PIONEERS, TEENS WILL BE TEENS

‘Voyagers’ takes ‘Lord of the Flies’ into the cosmos

- BY KATIE WALSH Walsh writes for Tribune News Service.

Neil Burger’s sci-fi flick “Voyagers” feels like the product of a brainstorm­ing session that started with the concept “Nostromo for teens.” Indeed, the “Alien” DNA is obvious in “Voyagers,” but Ridley Scott’s 1979 masterpiec­e is inescapabl­e in modern sci-fi. Burger has given the sturdy, familiar template a “Lord of the Flies” twist with motivation borrowed from right from Space X impresario and would-be Mars colonizer Elon Musk: The Earth is too hot, we must find another planet.

With that premise, writer/ director Burger (“The Illusionis­t,” “Divergent”) takes the opportunit­y to pose the necessary questions inherent in intergalac­tic migration. How long will it take? Who will go? What do you pack? The answers provide the basic conceit of “Voyagers.” It’ll take too long, 86 years in fact. So they have to plan for at least one generation to live their lives in space, reproducin­g future planetary pioneers. They should be old enough to drive, but young enough to survive the trip. As for what to bring, more food and fewer guns would be prudent, though humans have never excelled at that. As the kiddie astronauts climb aboard their rocket ship, with Colin Farrell as the only adult supervisio­n, one can’t help but think we’re doomed.

All joking aside, the film is an interestin­g, if blunt, political allegory, using the spaceship, and the young people aboard, who were conceived as test tube babies and raised in isolation, as a way to examine social dynamics among human beings. In a crisis, they have to figure out how social order works without ever having experience­d it for themselves. And though the kids been geneticall­y chosen for genius, and nurtured in an egalitaria­n pod, far away from socioecono­mic inequaliti­es, Burger ultimately asserts that there’s no arguing with human nature and the forces of desire, lust, jealousy and rage.

In the wake of a power vacuum, the group consults “the program” and elects Christophe­r (Tye Sheridan) chief, which leads to Zac (Fionn Whitehead) plotting a coup, using the rumor that an alien has boarded the ship in order to manipulate his peers and stage a revolt. While it often has the feel of a lunchtime student council campaign, there are moments that resonate while witnessing the effect that this toxic combinatio­n of fear and misinforma­tion has among the crew and its contributi­on to the escalating violence and division aboard the ship.

The allegory drives the film, constantly burbling with questions about purpose, destiny and identity, as well as apt comparison­s to modern political movements and authoritar­ianism. It’s just that the characters within this highconcep­t metaphor aren’t all that interestin­g beyond their symbolic function. Their isolated childhoods and scientific­ally calibrated brain chemistry have left them dulled and stilted. Despite having grown up together, these kids act as if they’ve just met, like they’ve never bonded with one another at all. Even when chaos erupts later, the chill permeates everything and never warms up.

Writer/director Burger presuppose­s all the right questions (and anxieties) about the realities of climatecha­nge-induced space migration, it’s just that as a film, “Voyagers” feels like a roleplayin­g game rather than a character-driven story. While there are fascinatin­g ways to play out the different scenarios, as well as deep existentia­l questions to ponder, the most important one isn’t answered by “Voyagers,” which is: Are we even worth saving at all?

 ?? LIONSGATE ?? “Voyagers” stars Fionn Whitehead as Zac, who attempts to gain power by starting rumors and using fear and misinforma­tion to manipulate his peers.
LIONSGATE “Voyagers” stars Fionn Whitehead as Zac, who attempts to gain power by starting rumors and using fear and misinforma­tion to manipulate his peers.

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