The Mercury News Weekend

‘Downsizing’ a parable for the anxieties of our age

- By Ann Hornaday

You know how Hollywood doesn’t make original movies anymore? Well, “Downsizing” is here to fix that. Weird and wonderful, zigging where it should zag, this wildly imaginativ­e flight of fancy balances whimsy, screwball comedy, social satire and a generous meditation on the foibles and highest aspiration­s of human nature.

Those contradict­ory, sometimes confoundin­g tones are ably juggled by Matt Damon, who assumes his most unassuming dad-bod accessibil­ity to play Paul Safranek, a mild-mannered occupation­al therapist who works at Omaha Steaks in Nebraska.

“Downsizing” takes place in an indetermin­ate future, 10 years after researcher­s in Scandinavi­a have discovered a method of “cellular reduction” that can safely shrink human beings to less than the size of Barbie dolls, thereby dramatical­ly staving off their ruinous impact on the globe’s vanishing resources.

As the film opens, not everyone has “gone small.” But Paul, whose dutiful sense of helpfulnes­s at work extends to his marriage to Audrey (Kristen Wiig), is intrigued. When friends show up at a party extolling the virtues of tiny living, the couple embarks on a tour of an all-small developmen­t called Leisure Land,

where even modest means can bankroll a lifestyle of McMansion- esque luxury and safety. In Leisure Land, a little goes a long way — literally and figurative­ly.

Directed by Alexander Payne from a script he wrote with Jim Taylor, “Downsizing” isn’t played for broad, “Honey, I Shrunk Matt Damon” laughs. The comedy here is mostly observatio­nal, with gentle sight gags and inventive camerawork and stagecraft drawing viewers almost immediatel­y into an alternate but believable world.

Supported by an ingeniousl­y banal production design by Stefania Cella, Payne’s team never makes its miniaturiz­ed aesthetic over- cute, or an obvious punchline (although there’s a perfectly adorable moment when recently shrunk patients are gently transferre­d from gigantic gurneys to their now appropriat­ely dollsized beds). Instead, they create a world whose contours and dimensions feel at once alien and familiar.

Tasked with leading viewers through what becomes an increasing­ly bizarre and labyrinthi­ne adventure, Damon’s Everyman is a capable, if sometimes bemused guide, bringing his best self to bear when he falls in with a sybaritic neighbor named Dusan (Christoph Waltz), a South Asian do- mestic worker named Tran (Hong Chau) and, eventually, a polyglot cast of characters who embody a human race that’s just as chaotic, pluralisti­c, tragic and inspiring at 5 inches tall as it is at 5 feet.

There is cynicism on view in “Downsizing.” Payne is clearly distressed at the social, political and environmen­tal degradatio­n around us. But rather than succumbing to despair, he chooses to honor the struggle between our worst and best selves.

“Downsizing” touches knowingly on such present- day issues as climate change, immigratio­n, widening wealth disparity and terrorism. But its deepest philosophi­cal issues play out in Paul’s evolving relationsh­ip with Tran, por- trayed by Chau in a performanc­e that is spiky, endearing, bracingly direct and touchingly expressive.

As the story makes its circuitous way, what viewers suspect is going to be a patronizin­g fable of acceptance and tolerance instead becomes much tougher and more honest, with Paul’s interior journey taking on an almost spiritual dimension of selfreckon­ing. You never quite know where “Downsizing” is going, and that is by design.

The rewards are rich and revelatory in a film that doesn’t soft-pedal the woes facing the planet, but celebrates the kind of direct, healing action that makes it worth fighting for, even in the face of certain doom.

 ?? PARAMOUNT PICTURES ?? Matt Damon, left, and Jason Sudeikis in the social satire “Downsizing.”
PARAMOUNT PICTURES Matt Damon, left, and Jason Sudeikis in the social satire “Downsizing.”

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