Cosmopolis (15)

Film

Drama

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>3/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>2/5
Rate this  

Time Out says

Tue Nov 8 2011

David Cronenberg’s ‘Cosmopolis’ is a weird, heady and entrancing portrait of individual alienation in a super-rich, corporate world where money, sex, love, happiness and death are rapidly losing all meaning. It’s based on a 2003 novel by Don DeLillo, and while it offers some superficial relevance to the current financial crisis, and trades in some of its imagery and events (markets crashing, protests), this is not in any way a realist work. It takes Cronenberg back to territory he hasn’t explored since ‘eXistenZ’ and ‘Crash’ – this is also his first script since those films. It’s a psychosexual, more interior companion piece to films like ‘Inside Job’ and ‘Margin Call’.

‘Cosmopolis’ gives us a young man riding through Manhattan in a limo on a day that feels more and more like his own self-made apocalypse. He’s a super-rich New Yorker, Eric Packer (Robert Pattinson), a 28-year-old billionaire captain of the money markets and tech industries. He insists on travelling across town for a haircut, even though his driver warns him that a presidential visit and a rap star’s funeral are causing traffic gridlock. Packer’s world is confined to this luxury vehicle. It’s full of screens and gadgets and it’s here that he’s joined first by a 22-year-old whizz kid and then two women, one played by Juliette Binoche, the other by Samantha Morton. Outside, Packer encounters a protester (Mathieu Amalric) who is determined to shove a cream pie in his face, his soon-to-be-ex wife (Sarah Gadon) and a man with a serious vendetta against him (Paul Giamatti).

‘Cosmopolis’ is an odyssey defined by a series of one-on-one encounters. There are prostate examinations, stripped bodies, sex, conversations about Rothko and souped-up chats on subjects such as the philosophies of financial security systems and how time is a corporate asset. Much of the talk makes no obvious sense: ‘Cosmopolis’ has the air of an experimental theatre piece and trades in heightened, eroticised language. You could say it tries to turn the mind of Packer inside-out: to make the psychological real. That’s tougher on film, surely, than in print, and ‘Cosmopolis’ is at its best when it’s otherworldly and aching with artifice. It’s at its worst when it becomes weighed down by an excessive, wearying wordiness, or when it steps out of the limo – the film’s self-imposed arena of surreality – and into a place more like the real world. ‘Cosmopolis’ threatens to soar and to be important, but it only offers flashes of lucidity; the limo is a mesmerising bubble that is quickly burst when the film leaves it.

That said, there’s a consistent air of charged, end-of-days menace running through the film, which Cronenberg handles with an unbroken sense of precision and confidence. He’s well served, too, by a leering, disintegrating Pattinson, giving a commanding, sympathetic portrait of a man being consumed by his own vanity and power. 

16

Comments

Add +

Release details

Rated:

15

UK release:

Fri Jun 15 2012

Duration:

109 mins

Share your thoughts
  1. * mandatory fields

Comments & ratings

Rated as: 2/5 (11 ratings)
  • I think that the fact that so many people walked out during this film shows how bad this film is. Given how many genuine artists are struggling to make a living outside the PR system, this film deserves only one thing: utter disgust.

    francoisfromparis Sun Oct 14 2012
    Report
  • I think people who don't watch the entire film shouldn't be allowed to give ratings. Somewhere in between jarmusch and lynch, this is refreshingly weird and interesting film.

    cassius Fri Oct 12 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
    Report
  • A pile of shit! Avoid at all costs - you have been warned

    Nigel Fri Aug 3 2012
    Report
  • Really really dull film. I fell asleep after 20 mins - woke up 10 mins later hoping that it had improved - I hoped in vain and then had to leave - total cobblers

    Ant Thu Jun 28 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  • I read the book first and like Cronenbergs intense filming style.The dialogue is true to the book and Pattinson was magnificent in this movie. The last 22 minute scene between Pattinson a Giamatti is Oscar worthy. At least watch the whole movie before reviewing. I would go again if the cinema had have been more local .4 star rating 5 for Pattinson and Giamatti.

    BP Mon Jun 25 2012
    Rated as: 4/5
    Report
  • Very eloquent, unpredictable and funny. Whoever Robert Pattinson is, he's excellent. The opening back projection/green screen stuff through the limo windows is horrendous and the film seems to piss itself away in the last 15 seconds but for the most part it's terrifically strange and vigorous.

    Phil Ince Sun Jun 24 2012
    Report
  • One word. Dire.

    ADAM WALKER Fri Jun 22 2012
    Report
  • Too bad 'Zero Stars' are treated as unrated! Even one star seems very generous for such a terrible movie. Yet... As I walked out in the middle of it, bored to tears, like so many of the people there before me - the movie is really unbearably dull and excruciatingly empty - the cinema staff kindly reassured me that it was a fairly normal reaction. Since they are showing it, they are recording unprecedented levels of leavers! Up to one third of the audience! 'So much money and talent invested to get to such a catastrophic result' I initially thought, of course, on my way home tonight (not in a limo, thanks god) -and another illustration of the Empty Train Problem. But, while bitterly regretting having wasted £14 on a limo-style seat, I finally got the point: what a brilliant metaphor for the world of finance!! If that was the intention, it is pure genius. Although I doubt it. So, seriously, don't go and read the FT (or the Yellow Pages) instead. It will be, trust me, cheaper and far more exciting.

    francoisfromparis Wed Jun 20 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
    Report
  • I think it's maybe a bit unfair to leave a review after walking out not even halfway into the film... but it was a bit odd. I actually preferred the bits that weren't in the limo, as the bits in the limo felt embarrassing to watch. There was a scene I couldn't watch tho - the cream pie scene. There was flash photography going on in the scene which can induce a migraine. Thanks.

    odd Tue Jun 19 2012
    Rated as: 2/5
    Report
  • Overblown, self indulgent, deathly dull........ seventeen people walked out of the screening I attended. (That is how interested I was in the film - I counted the folk leaving!) Mind numbingly boring. A shame as the stellar cast and five star reviews on the posters perhaps promised so much more.

    Myerson Tue Jun 19 2012
    Rated as: 1/5
    Report
  1. 1
  2. 2
  • Hotwise
  • Cool brands
  • Star