SUNSHINE

Here Comes The Sun, It's (Not) Alright

The Popcorn Reel Movie Review: "Sunshine"

By Omar P.L. Moore/July 19, 2007


A burnin-up-a!  Cliff Curtis forgoes sunblock but dons eyewear for the big bright shining hot star.  (Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures)

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"Sunshine" is a classic example of rolling a boulder up a hill: if you have the strength to get it to the top of the hill, you had better make sure that the boulder doesn't roll backwards and squash you.  Danny Boyle, who has directed interesting and intelligent films like "28 Days Later", "Trainspotting" and "Millions", somehow missed the boulder-up-the-hill training advisory session with his latest, "Sunshine", a film which starts out promisingly and intelligently, but descends into a conventional horror-slasher film.  One could accuse the writer of being lazy, but the director who normally is so on target has to take some of the lumps too.

"Sunshine", which opens tomorrow (July 20) in New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles (and expands next week), features Boyle's "28 Days" star Cillian Murphy as Capa, the only person who can deliver a payload that can assure survival of the sun and in turn, humankind.  But as always, lives will have to be sacrificed in the endeavor.  Says one of the crew members: "looks like a lot of short straws."

Looks like a lot of short-tempered audiences.

The heat really is on, not just for the race against the sun to save it from itself, but for the race for the theater exits, because the second half of this film is a frustration, degenerating into chaos, one violent episode after another.  There is also a mix of Freddy Krueger, Colonel Kurtz (whom Cliff Curtis resembles in shots at times, with dark glasses on), and a blast from the past with a "2001: A Space Odyssey" moment (or three), the voice of the starship Icarus (or is it HAL?) not withstanding.  There is also an occurrence that comes out of nowhere about two-thirds of the way through "Sunshine".  Did Mr. Boyle and co. run out of ideas?  Imagination?  Intelligence?  Or were they just plain lazy?

Chris Evans is no longer superhuman as Johnny Storm, the human flame in the "Fantastic Four" films; here, in "Sunshine" he is Ace, and he is reduced to mere mortal status, in a most ironic way from his "Fantastic" exploits.  Mr. Curtis, who is good in most everything he does, continues the tense, clench-jaw act from last month's "Live Free Or Die Hard".  (When we see him, we can tell almost instantly whether he will thrive or perish.  Rose Byrne, Michelle Yeoh, Hiroyuki Sanada, Benedict Wong, Troy Garrity and Mark Strong are the other primary crew members.)

For the first hour though, there is tension, suspense, drama and acting decent enough to sustain interest.  And while the predictability and half-hearted lines ("we're all gonna die out here, aren't we?") there are promising things to hang your hat on -- story threads that one expects will be explored during the course of the film, such as the internal dynamic amongst the crew members.  The emotional and historical fabric and background of each of these characters could (and should) have received a for sustained examination.  What kind of relationships have they had with each other?  What are their histories?  What are the psychological dynamics between and amongst them?  An investigation of all of these queries would have made for a stronger suspense drama. 

Instead, the filmmakers go for the schlock and the kind of violence that doesn't befit "Sunshine" and the intelligent discourse between the accomplished scientists and crew members that the film promises.  Nor does it befit Danny Boyle, who will do superior work to this in the future.  Even filmmakers of Mr. Boyle's caliber are entitled to off-days.  Obviously the boulder got the best of him.

Maybe the boulder was a shade too hot.  And alas, like Icarus, the wings of a filmmaker on a roll, melted.


"Sunshine" is rated R by the Motion Picture Association Of America for violent content and language.  The film's duration is one hour and 47 minutes.  The film expands its release across the U.S. and Canada in various cities on Friday, July 27.


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