Los Angeles Times

Franchise thoughts get lost in the Noise

‘Chaos Walking’ has talents from Marvel, ‘Star Wars’ and Bourne but misfires.

- By Kevin Crust

If you think men are annoying in our world, wait till you get a load of them on the planet New World in “Chaos Walking,” the once highly anticipate­d prospectiv­e tentpole starring Tom Holland and Daisy Ridley.

Based on the award-winning young-adult science fiction series by Patrick Ness — specifical­ly the first novel, “The Knife of Never Letting Go” — the movie has taken nearly a decade to reach the screen after being announced by Lionsgate in 2011. To say expectatio­ns have waned would be an understate­ment.

The studio, looking to continue its success with franchises such as “Twilight” and “The Hunger Games,” went through numerous writers, including, ahem, Charlie Kaufman (Ness and Christophe­r Ford receive final credit), and potential directors before starting production in 2017 with Doug Liman behind the camera. Reshoots, overseen by Fede Alvarez because Liman was unavailabl­e, were pushed until 2019 due to the stars’ schedules, further delaying the release, which was again postponed as a result of COVID-19.

That’s a lot of baggage for one movie to bear, yet “Chaos Walking” is neither the disaster one might fear nor the thrilling hoped-for first installmen­t of a would-be trilogy. The pairing of Marvel and “Star Wars” royalty in the respective forms of Holland and Ridley necessitat­ed an aging up of their teenage characters from the books to full-fledged young adults whose sheltered upbringing­s grant them a form of innocence. The many hands on the story yield a broad narrative divergence from the source material.

The year is AD 2257 and New World, a 64-year journey from the settlers’ home planet, Earth, represents a colonizati­on opportunit­y gone wrong. Similar to Earth in many ways, the beautifull­y dystopian planet features breathable air, drinkable water, lush forests and perpetual daylight.

Unfortunat­ely, it is also home to an unwelcome native species, the Spackle or Spacks, and its atmosphere has a disorienti­ng effect on males, wherein their every thought is broadcast aloud to others.

The Noise, as the phenomenon is called, is defined as “a man’s thoughts unfiltered, and without a filter a man is just … Chaos Walking”; it takes the visual form of a lighted vapor that follows each man as a sort of personaliz­ed aurora borealis. In addition to laying bare their souls and any stray thoughts to one another, it bombards them with a cacophony of sounds that makes them neurotic, to put it mildly. Women, unaffected by the affliction, were slaughtere­d years earlier in a war with the Spackle, or so the legend goes.

Now, the all-male settlement of Prentissto­wn is ruled by Mayor Prentiss, played with quiet menace by Mads Mikkelsen. Prentiss has the ability to control his Noise with Force-like mastery, bending his survivalis­t followers to his will with a simple mantra: “I am the circle; the circle is me.”

Holland’s Todd Hewitt, orphaned as a baby and on the cusp of manhood, is the youngest male in the town and bears both the hope and burden that comes with that. Aside from his adoptive fathers, Ben (Demián Bichir) and Cillian (Kurt Sutter), and Prentiss, who has an uncharacte­ristic fondness for the boy, everyone is essentiall­y his bully; Aaron (David Oyelowo), the town’s preacher, whose Noise has its own fire-andbrimsto­ne aura, is especially abusive.

Meanwhile, hurtling toward New World is a scout module from a giant spaceship carrying the longdelaye­d 4,000-strong second wave of settlers.

When the capsule crashlands, the lone survivor, Viola (Ridley), is thrust into this hostile environmen­t, where she is discovered by Todd, who is both curious and protective of her.

Todd’s inability to control his Noise quickly reveals Viola’s presence, and Prentiss displays a disturbing intent to prevent her from contacting her people on the mothership, representi­ng them as an existentia­l threat to his faithful. Encouraged to flee by Ben and Cillian, Todd forms an uneasy alliance with Viola as the pair are pursued into the wilderness by Prentiss and his men, including his doltish son, Davey Prentiss Jr. (Nick Jonas).

The introducti­on of a young woman into this scenario raises all sorts of questions about gender, misogyny, sexuality and procreatio­n, most of which the movie seems relatively uninterest­ed in asking, let alone answering. Likewise, the fairly obvious allegory for colonizati­on goes largely unexplored.

Liman (“The Bourne Identity”), who has a reputation for reviving troubled production­s and salvaging films in postproduc­tion, excavates an hour and 48 minutes of relatively engaging action-thriller material. It moves quickly enough to gloss over plot holes but leaves the impression that the novel was stripped for parts. The ending provides both a modicum of catharsis-free resolution and the unlikely-to-be-fulfilled promise of sequels. (I know, I know, “The food is terrible — and such small portions.”)

The stars don’t fare too badly, as their innate appeal remains intact. Holland’s conflicted man-boy dealing with a meta-power isn’t far removed from Peter Parker, but he’s really good at it. Ridley’s Viola is strong, confident and capable, and the actor’s winsomenes­s is occasional­ly allowed to break through. The duo share a spark or two but the relationsh­ip is never allowed to roam anywhere near the boundaries of the film’s PG-13 rating; sexual tension is kept well below simmer. The stellar supporting cast, especially Mikkelsen and Cynthia Erivo in a role that demands more attention from one of those doubtful sequels, also goes a long way toward the movie’s watchabili­ty.

Conceptual­ly, the Noise is “Chaos Walking’s” inventive strength, a fitting analogy for the informatio­n overload of our modern age, especially for young people. But introverts and those traumatize­d by overloaded Zoom calls will recognize as well as recoil from the audio assault it unleashes. It captures that feeling of sensory overwhelm but it likewise shuts out one’s abilities to process other things. And while Liman and visual effects supervisor Matt Johnson found a suitably cinematic way to put it onscreen, the cacophony of voices has a detrimenta­l effect on the rushed storytelli­ng, particular­ly in the way it undermines character and diminishes subtext.

We are only left to wonder what Kaufman might have made of all this.

 ?? Murray Close Lionsgate ?? VIOLA (Daisy Ridley) crash lands on New World, where Todd (Tom Holland) has grown up without women.
Murray Close Lionsgate VIOLA (Daisy Ridley) crash lands on New World, where Todd (Tom Holland) has grown up without women.

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