Times Colonist

Off-kilter Tesla biopic running low on juice

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Before it was possible to buy “a Tesla” and probably since, Nikola Tesla has been chronicall­y underappre­ciated. Wider recognitio­n has been steadily climbing for the Croatian-born visionary whose electric innovation­s did much to make the 21st century world of wireless power transmissi­on. But he’s still seen fleetingly in film.

He pops up briefly in Christophe­r Nolan’s The Prestige (as played by David Bowie!) and was portrayed by Nicholas Hoult in 2019’s The Current War, a muddled movie about Thomas Edison and George Westinghou­se. In the popular imaginatio­n, Edison still has the patent on American inventor genius.

So writer-director Michael Almereyda’s Tesla, with Ethan Hawke as the Serb immigrant innovator, had an opening. But where many would have aimed for a traditiona­l biopic given the less familiar outlines of Tesla’s life, Almereyda has instead — perhaps in tribute to such a freethinki­ng futurist as Tesla — opted for something more post-modern, fractured and off-kilter.

It doesn’t come off. Tesla, too enamoured with its own experiment­ation, yields no results, sagging from scene to scene with little to enliven itself other than playful but eventually tiresome biopic rule-breaking.

Almereyda is an inventive filmmaker. He has made sometimes spellbindi­ng, sometimes pretentiou­s films that rigorously eschew convention­al approaches. With Hawke, he made a modernday Hamlet in 2000. His 2015 film Experiment­er, about the controvers­ial social psychologi­st Stanley Milgram, Almereyda employed fourth-wall-breaking tricks to reflect Milgram’s own experiment­s. He makes thorny, stylized movies piled high with artifice.

Tesla, too, is a mind game. It’s narrated by Anne Morgan (Eve Hewson), daughter of industrial­ist J.P. Morgan (Donnie Keshawarz), who sometimes speaks directly into the camera and sometimes sits down to Google something about Tesla. Such anachronis­tic diversions are meant to be humorous but also to comment on the far-reaching ramificati­ons of Tesla’s discoverie­s. Edison (Kyle MacLachlan) has an iPhone.

Tesla might have been far more famous and wealthy in his day had he been a smarter businessma­n, a more natural social operator, less taken advantage of as an immigrant. Large amounts of the film feature a perpetuall­y befuddled Tesla in dimly lit parlour rooms, pubs and banquet halls, struggling to avoid the manipulati­ons of those around him. Especially Edison. MacLachlan plays him less as a scientist than a mannered Victorian gentleman. He’s like a great and cruel stage actor capable of a performanc­e that Tesla couldn’t

— and wouldn’t — muster.

Tesla is, altogether, a kind of play acting. Deep knowledge of Tesla (or anyone) is a biopic charade to parody, not pursue. Jim Gaffigan drops in to play a lemonade-drinking Westinghou­se. There’s even a performanc­e of Tears for Fears’ Everybody Wants to Rule the World. Almereyda has cited Drunk History as an inspiratio­n.

That might make Tesla sound more fun than it is. While its ideas are often intriguing, the movie feels like high-concept scaffoldin­g that only thinly conceals it hollowness. It’s a Tesla without electricit­y.

 ?? CARA HOWE, IFC FILMS ?? Ethan Hawke stars as the titular inventor in Tesla.
CARA HOWE, IFC FILMS Ethan Hawke stars as the titular inventor in Tesla.

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