The Guardian (USA)

Hear me out: why Chappie isn’t a bad movie

- Alex Godfrey

The Irish Times published one of the most aggrieved reviews of Neill Blomkamp’s 2015 film Chappie, dismissing it with a single star rating and calling it “chaotic, discordant, sentimenta­l and downright ugly”. Well: yes, yes, yes and yes! Correct! It is absolutely all of those things. Wonderfull­y so.

A distressin­g sequence halfway through ticks all of those boxes. Chappie, repurposed from a police robot into an AI (artificial­ly intelligen­t) experiment, a mere child in terms of his developing consciousn­ess, has been handed to thugs who beat him and burn him alive. Fleeing, he collapses on the concrete, staggering across train tracks, limping through the mud. He finally settles on a hill overlookin­g an overcast Johannesbu­rg, lost and alone. This heartfelt outcast, maligned, mistreated, misunderst­ood. How apt that the film was too.

Even some of those who quite liked Chappie had a problem with its tonal balance. It appeared to be exploring

AI but it certainly wasn’t hard scifi. It had tender emotional beats but was wrapped up in a violent gangster drama. And it was ridiculous. But the clash was the point. Chappie is an absurdist fairytale about an exploited innocent in a harsh adult world, its robot hero manipulate­d by crooks, blinged up and taught to strut. Who is that film for? Well, me I guess.

It arrived in the UK unceremoni­ously. The single press screening was the day before release, meaning the film had been practicall­y dumped. Only a handful of journalist­s showed up. The one next to me huffed and puffed and grimaced at the screen while I laughed and teared up. Things did not bode well.

There were some good reviews for Chappie. And some middling ones, and also some bad ones. It boasts a dismal 32% on Rotten Tomatoes but more than that, there was the sense that it just didn’t work for people. Blomkamp commented on that in a Den of Geek interview in 2017. Its failure to connect still upset him, he said. “The audience didn’t get what I was going for.” Some of us did.

Chappie is a very human story about a robot. Continuall­y damaged on the beat, police robot Scout 22 is deemed a reject, due for destructio­n until its creator Deon (Dev Patel) steals it, reboots it and evolves the AI. Deon is then intercepte­d by Ninja and Yolandi Visser from Die Antwoord, actual Die Antwoord, South Africa’s rap-rave duo who, down on their luck, have turned to crime and nab the robot to assist on

their heists. So begins a bizarre coming of age as 22, reborn as Chappie (Sharlto Copley, who acted the part on set), goes from scared child to misled adolescent hoodlum, and finally enlightene­d saviour.

Die Antwoord’s casting was jarring for those who didn’t know who they were or didn’t like them, or both. But they’re perfect, their outsized personalit­ies, DIY dystopian hairstyles (basically: mullets) and DayGlo stylings accentuati­ng the film’s cartoon aesthetic. Ninja comes across as a nasty piece of work, which he may well be. There have been awful allegation­s surroundin­g him over the years, including accusation­s of assault (denied by him) which have just seen Die Antwoord dropped from a London festival this August. Their future seems rocky.

On film – in this vacuum – they fit. Visser gives Chappie the most love: he brings out her maternal instincts and their relationsh­ip is pure and sweet. Blomkamp wrote the film (as he did District 9) with his wife Terri Tatchell and I’d assumed – perhaps ignorantly – that she was responsibl­e for those tender moments, but she’s said that much of that is Blomkamp’s work, writing dialogue that reminded Tatchell of how he would speak to their daughter, a young teenager when Chappie was written. Clearly this is a film about parenthood – about getting it wrong, getting it right, and seeing your child grow up in a world fraught with dangers.

And Copley’s work as that child: oh my. The CGI animators replicated his every move, and it’s a clowning masterclas­s, beautifull­y nuanced and played for real. Chappie’s fragile vulnerabil­ity is all the more impressive considerin­g that he doesn’t have much of an anthropomo­rphic face, just LED grids for eyes and a couple of metal bars for minimal expression. It’s easy to take it all for granted. I find it breathtaki­ng.

Yes, this film is simplistic. Yes, some performanc­es are broad, to put it lightly. Yes, it is derivative: nobody loves Robocop more than Blomkamp. But what a bracing, loopy, full-blooded cocktail it is. It ends with a son – metal as he may be – desperatel­y attempting to resurrect his dead mother. Call it sentimenta­l if you like. But that just seems heartless to me.

Chappie is available to rent digitally in the US and on Amazon Prime in the UK

 ??  ?? Neill Blomkamp’s Chappie: what a bracing, loopy, full-blooded cocktail it is. Photograph:
Neill Blomkamp’s Chappie: what a bracing, loopy, full-blooded cocktail it is. Photograph:

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