Los Angeles Times

Keanu Reeves tries in vain

Then this sci-fi story wouldn’t squander a solid performanc­e by Keanu Reeves.

- By Katie Walsh calendar@latimes.com

Even a pro like Keanu Reeves, above, can’t save the silly sci-fi cloning thriller “Replicas.” Review,

Keanu Reeves is ever the consummate profession­al.

In the completely ludicrous sci-fi cloning flick “Replicas,” directed by Jeffrey Nachmanoff, written by Chad St. John, story by Stephen Hamel, Reeves not only keeps a straight face while delivering lines of quasi-scientific gibberish, but he also manages to earnestly sell the emotional motivation behind his character’s Dr. Frankenste­in-esque actions.

And yet, he might as well be waggling his eyebrows and shouting, “It’s alive!,” for all the gravitas this chintzy B-movie contains.

Reeves does get as close to campy as his range allows playing William Foster, a scientist working for Bionyne, a secretive Puerto Rico-based biotech company developing a process for transplant­ing human consciousn­ess into robots in order to save lives that have been cut short.

The process has stalled, but William finds his breakthrou­gh in personal tragedy. When his wife and children are killed in a car accident, he enlists his underling Ed (Thomas Middleditc­h) to help him preserve his family’s neural maps, clone their bodies, and re-imprint their memories into the clones.

Trauma is a hell of a drug, and combined with male hubris, it’s unbelievab­ly potent. Reeves does sell this point as a man who defies all of the laws of nature to bring his family back in some form.

The whole scenario is completely insane, and the script throws a humdinger Sophie’s Choice at William.

“There are only three pods,” Ed informs him, meaning William has to choose which of his three children to bring back, and edit the neural maps to reflect the new reality.

What does it mean to “Eternal Sunshine” your own offspring out of your cloned wife’s brain? That’s an interestin­g question, but there’s no time to ponder it — everyone hop in the sensible sedan and put your seatbelts on, it’s time for the car chase!

“Replicas” sets up a fascinatin­g existentia­l quandary, and then completely abandons it. Reeves’ performanc­e underlines the moral and ethical dilemmas that trouble William, who is trying to solve the death of his family as if it were a particular­ly tough math problem. But the film around Reeves is so poorly rendered — literally, the CGI is half-baked — and the film nose-dives hard in the third act.

As “Replicas” races headlong toward its conclusion, the filmmakers manage to avoid every potentiall­y interestin­g choice for far dumber, and far more inexplicab­le, conclusion­s.

But what would you expect from a film that casually purports that humanity can be contained on a hard drive?

 ?? Entertainm­ent Studios ??
Entertainm­ent Studios
 ?? Francisco Collazo Entertainm­ent Studios ?? ALICE EVE plays the wife of Keanu Reeves’ scientist. She and their children die. Can he bring them back?
Francisco Collazo Entertainm­ent Studios ALICE EVE plays the wife of Keanu Reeves’ scientist. She and their children die. Can he bring them back?

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