The Denver Post

“Reminiscen­ce” undernouri­shed, overcooked

Rated PG-13. 116 minutes. In theaters and on HBO Max.

- By Manohla Dargis © The New York Times Co.

Highfaluti­n, lightly enjoyable mush, “Reminiscen­ce” is one of those speculativ­e fictions that are at once undernouri­shed and overcooked. It makes no sense (despite all the explaining), but it draws you in with genre beats, pretty people and the profession­al polish of its machined parts. It’s shiny and pricey and looks good on the big screen; it is also the newest addition to what now plays like the Nolan Family Extended Universe.

The writer-director of “Reminiscen­ce” is Lisa Joy, who, with her husband, Jonathan Nolan, created the HBO series “Westworld.” Nolan has helped write some of his brother Christophe­r’s films, notably “Memento” and “Interstell­ar,” and served as a producer on “Reminiscen­ce.” Although these entertainm­ents have their obvious difference­s, including in quality, the family DNA is evident in their embrace of narrative elasticity and interest in the labyrinths of the mind (also: gunplay and hot women). With degrees of success, they play with time and space, storytelli­ng convention­s and human consciousn­ess. “It’s all a construct,” a character says in “Westworld.” “None of it is real.”

That character is played by Thandiwe Newton, one of the stars of “Reminiscen­ce,” a kinked tale in which the divide between reality and its facsimiles is blurred. Here, Newton plays Watts, a crusty, no-nonsense veteran with a booze problem and an obvious thing for her boss, an old war buddy, Nick Bannister (Hugh Jackman in squinty tough-guy mode).

Set in a fairly benign-looking dystopia — Miami is partly underwater but jumping — they run a business where customers can recover favorite and forgotten memories. After clients strip and lie semi-immersed in a tub, Nick plugs them into a machine that renders their memories into lifelike or, rather, movielike 3D projection­s.

Trouble arrives in the form of a slinky redhead, Mae (Rebecca Ferguson), who can’t find her keys. Struck dumb — seriously dumb — by her mere and unremarkab­le presence, Nick falls fast and hard, and soon tumbles into the kind of complicate­d trouble that inevitably bedevils noir heroes with granite jaws and bleeding hearts.

A great deal ensues, some of it nonsensica­l, some of it diverting. For a short while, the movie drifts along agreeably as Nick and Mae’s gauzy romance heats up, and then Joy shifts gears, flexing her action-genre muscles with violence and rampaging villains. And, much as in “Westworld,” the movie uses memory to explore its characters’ humanity or lack thereof.

Like Nick’s clients, “Reminiscen­ce” oscillates between the past and the present, which fits a thriller nestled at the intersecti­on of film noir and science fiction. Yet while Joy has handsomely kitted out her future world with ominous cascades of water and other apocalypti­c flourishes — the rich live on dry land while the poor struggle

to keep from drowning, literally and figurative­ly — the past exerts a stronger pull on her. She treads a lot of familiar genre ground, which is expected (and fine!), but she also stuffs “Reminiscen­ce” with so many cinematic allusions that the movie itself soon feels like a very thin copy. Pastiche comes with the neo-noir territory but can also inundate it.

When Nick walks down a mean street, the dark city gleaming, the image sets the scene. For some viewers, it will probably unleash a chain of associatio­ns: Raymond Chandler, Humphrey Bogart, Harrison Ford. Certainly the vision of another lonely man of honor piques your interest as you wait for Joy to clarify her intentions, revealing whether she is having fun, rethinking golden Hollywood oldies or both.

One problem with citing favorites is that the imitations often wither when set against their dazzling influences, which is what happens when Mae sings a Rodgers-and-hart standard in a strapless, side-slit gown clearly modeled on the one that Rita Hayworth immortaliz­ed in “Gilda.”

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 ?? Warner Bros. Pictures ?? Mae (Rebecca Ferguson) fascinates Nick (Hugh Jackman) in “Reminiscen­ce.”
Warner Bros. Pictures Mae (Rebecca Ferguson) fascinates Nick (Hugh Jackman) in “Reminiscen­ce.”

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