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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Movies -> 
Annihilation
    2018-04-20  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Starring: Natalie Portman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Gina Rodriguez, Tessa Thompson, Tuva Novotny, Oscar Isaac Director: Alex Garland

BEING able to generate dread and awe with equal skill, “Annihilation” is an absorbing amalgam of genres and influences, all coming together to produce strong vivid as the hybrid life forms our heroines encounter on their perilous journey. With nods to “Stalker,” “Solaris” and myriad jungle war films, this sci-fi action-thriller boasts a beautifully sustained mood and a bracing intelligence, bolstered by Natalie Portman’s gritty performance. This is a film of ambition and ideas, and part of the exhilaration comes from watching Garland and his cast risk so boldly.

Based on the first book of author Jeff VanderMeer’s so-called “Southern Reach Trilogy,” “Annihilation” stars Portman as Lena, a biologist whose soldier husband Kane (Isaac) has been missing in action for a year. When he returns home, though, he can’t explain where he has been, what his mission was and why he is violently ill.

As Kane clings to life in a military hospital, Lena volunteers to accompany a group of soldiers who are venturing into Area X, a quarantined section of American coastline where, she learns, Kane and his team went to investigate an alien crash-landing. No one except her husband has ever returned, but Lena is determined to get answers.

Garland (who previously wrote and directed “Ex Machina” and penned the screenplay for Danny Boyle’s “Sunshine”) has a reputation for smart, brooding sci-fi, and he uses VanderMeer’s book to explore grief, marriage, death and environmental catastrophe while delivering the kind of terrifying thrills mainstream audiences expect from a horror movie.

Although there’s a refreshing novelty to the fact that the reconnaissance team in “Annihilation” is filled entirely with gun-toting women — including Jennifer Jason Leigh’s no-nonsense leader Ventress and Thompson’s muted physicist Josie — Garland doesn’t dwell on their gender, instead supplying us with enough character detail so that we are invested in these people’s circumstance. Each of them dealing with their own secret pain, the team enters Area X, unable to communicate with the outside world and worrying whether the dire fate that eradicated previous search parties will befall them

To reveal Area X’s surprises would spoil the fun, but suffice to say that “Annihilation” has some overlap with “Solaris” and “Stalker,” Andrei Tarkovsky’s ruminative and mind-bending portraits of surreal other worlds. Still, Garland adds plenty of expertly executed jolts to keep viewers drilled to their seats. Cinematographer Rob Hardy emphasizes the claustrophobia of Area X’s thick jungle terrain and impenetrable fog, while production designer Mark Digby concocts dank, desolate environments that drive home the clammy anguish of our main characters. But that mood-setting only makes the scare scenes more startling — part of the movie’s suspense derives from the fact that Garland so confidently shifts from moments of lyrical quiet to shocking horror sequences.

Quickly, Lena realizes that something seems to be mutating Area X’s terrain, and likewise Garland cross-pollinates, not just mixing genres but also tones. Ben Salisbury and Geoff Barrow’s score ranges from delicate acoustic guitars to dizzying electronic dissonance, just another way that “Annihilation” keeps us off-balance. Similarly, Garland’s screenplay moves from examining the fragility of Lena and Kane’s marriage to delivering a third-act payoff that’s nearly operatic in its sci-fi spectacle. But unifying all of the movie’s disparate components is a sensitive inquiry into how human beings wrestle with the unknowable (possibly lethal) mysteries of the universe.

Whether firing a machine gun or calmly studying Area X’s latest curiosities, Portman is commanding as a scientist whose background as a soldier will serve her well. As for Leigh, she brings an eerie reserve to Ventress, rendering the character a fascinating enigma. In VanderMeer’s later novels, these two characters are revealed to be, respectively, Asian and half-Native American/half-Caucasian, which has provoked advocacy groups to blast the film’s casting choices. It’s a disappointing slipup in a film that is otherwise quite thoughtful.

The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen.

(SD-Agencies)

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