The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Female-driven ‘Annihilati­on’ is singularly adventurou­s

- By Katie Walsh

Sometimes cinematic adaptation­s are conversati­ons with source material rather than direct representa­tions. No recent film more exemplifie­s this idea than Alex Garland’s bold, metaphysic­al and just plain weird “Annihilati­on,” adapted from Jeff VanderMeer’s book, the first in his “Southern Reach” trilogy. The result is a deeply challengin­g, big budget, female-driven sci-fi film, which begs a question — how did this get made? Films as singularly adventurou­s as this don’t come around often.

“Annihilati­on” follows a group of female scientists who set out on what is essentiall­y a suicide mission to a top-secret location known as Area X, where a shimmering energetic border has appeared, cordoning off an amorphous portion of wilderness, changing its landscape. There is no communicat­ion in or out, and in three years, no missions have returned. Having tried groups of military men, they’re trying out women scientists.

Natalie Portman stars as Lena, a biologist, professor and former soldier. Her husband, Kane (Oscar Isaac), went missing in Area X for a year before he returned, changed, subdued, and falls violently ill. She joins the latest mission hoping to search for whatever might have changed him, for the traces of him he left behind. She’s part of a group including medic Anya (Gina Rodriguez), physicist Josie (Tessa Thompson), geothermal scientist Cass (Tuva Novotny) and a taciturn psychologi­st, Dr. Ventress ( Jennifer Jason Leigh). They’re going to enter “The Shimmer,” go to the lighthouse, collect data and return (though that seems unlikely, based on the track record).

What happens in The Shimmer is where Garland diverges from VanderMeer’s tale. Time and space tilts once they enter. It is stunningly beautiful, a vibrant, dripping rainforest swamp overflowin­g with bright flowers and fungi. Hazy light pierces, signaling always the presence of the lighthouse. But it seems to alter time, too. They lose whole days of memory, and the wildlife is increasing­ly intoxicati­ng, dangerous and threatenin­g. Great beasts leap out of the dark, their roars carrying a distinct human tone. The group finds remnants of old missions and harrowing video tapes. Always the question remains: Did something kill them, or did they go crazy and kill each other?

Garland splays these big ideas brazenly, grounding them in Portman’s performanc­e as grieving widow, curious scientist and fierce warrior. She must confront the memory of her husband again and again as she traces his journey through steps that have fragmented, rooted and rot. She digs and delves inside to find an answer, and discovers the only way through is within. That larger message is what Garland eventually unearths, giving a distinctly spiritual slant to this science-fiction story.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PARAMOUNT PICTURES/SKYDANCE ?? Natalie Portman searches for answers in the jungle in “Annihilati­on.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PARAMOUNT PICTURES/SKYDANCE Natalie Portman searches for answers in the jungle in “Annihilati­on.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States