SFX

Jupiter Ascending

The Banks job

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Release Date: 6 February

12A | 127 minutes Directors: Lana and Andy Wachowski Cast: Mila Kunis, Channing Tatum, Eddie Redmayne, Tuppence Middleton, Douglas Booth, Sean Bean

How will the Wachowskis

be remembered when the time comes for them to hang up their megaphones? Some 16 years after Neo’s first groundbrea­king adventure in cyberspace, “the makers of The Matrix” is still the main way they’re described. Yet that ignores the fact that in the decade and a half since, their output – while often flawed – has never been less than interestin­g. From the overblown Matrix sequels to the sugar rush of Speed Racer and the mind- bending Cloud Atlas, Lana and Andy have so frequently pushed the envelope of what it’s possible to put on screen that they deserve the benefit of the doubt when it comes to the occasional storytelli­ng misstep. Nobody makes movies quite like they do.

Jupiter Ascending is everything you’d expect from the siblings’ first trip into orbit, a fun, inventive, visually stunning piece of space opera. Given free rein and a mega- budget to play among the stars, the duo have plundered ideas from a diverse range of sources ( both screen and page), and mixed them all up to make something that feels unlike anything we’ve seen before. Indeed, this is possibly as close as cinema has ever come to matching the vast scope of Banksian literary SF, such is the detail of the production design – the sheer density of things happening in each frame is mindboggli­ng.

Both visually and in the action stakes, Jupiter Ascending could give pretty much any space movie a run for its money. One vertigo- inducing scene set above Chicago, where Channing Tatum’s alien soldier Caine Wise protects Mila Kunis’s Jupiter as he evades alien attackers while flying among the skyscraper­s on rocket boots, is truly exhilarati­ng, and feels so real you can almost feel the wind in your hair.

But go in expecting Guardians Of The Galaxy and you’ll be disappoint­ed. Yes, it has a human whisked away from Earth at its centre ( in this case, Mila Kunis’s eponymous toilet cleaner). Yes, it has a megalomani­ac villain who cares not a jot for the little people ( quelle surprise). And obviously the A- grade special effects are a given. But that’s where the similariti­es end.

Where Guardians pulls off that tricky balancing act between having its tongue in its cheek and being credible science fiction, Jupiter opts for a different route, taking itself entirely seriously. It gets away with it too, because even at its most camp and outrageous – and it’s often undeniably both – you always feel that everyone involved believes 100% in what they’re doing. Yes, you even buy that Sean Bean is a soldier whose genes are spliced with a bee’s. Perversely, it’s when Jupiter actually tries to be funny – in a couple of botched one- liners and the rather broad portrayal of Jupiter’s Russian family – that it feels least assured.

As in The Matrix, it’s the villains who stay in the memory. Eddie Redmayne, currently grabbing headlines for his role as Stephen Hawking in the awards- hoovering The Theory Of Everything, is brilliant in an entirely different way as Balem Abrasax. The scheming elder sibling of an uber- rich and powerful family, he’s trying to claim the Earth for himself in a performanc­e of unashamed pantomime villainy that comes with just enough menace to keep him threatenin­g. His interactio­ns with similarly Machiavell­ian siblings Kalique ( Tuppence Middleton) and Titus ( Douglas Booth) play out like Dallas In Space, with whole planets taking the place of oil fields. Luckily, however, the political machinatio­ns here are rather more exciting than they were in The Phantom Menace. It’s just a shame that you really have to keep your wits about you to keep track of who’s doing what to whom and why. If you find yourself getting

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