Gattaca
In his new sci-fi drama, writer/director Andrew Niccol creates a "not so
distant future" where genetic engineering reigns supreme -- at the expense of
human diversity. In a world where petri-dish babies are manufactured for
perfection, less-fortunate "god children" -- those conceived without the
benefit of scientific intervention -- are automatically destined for failure.
People born naturally suffer a new kind of discrimination: genoism.
Enter Vincent (Ethan Hawke), a perfect specimen of a man: intelligent,
healthy, athletic, good-looking, ambitious, well-adjusted, and well-endowed.
He's a "faith child," however, so to achieve his lifelong dream of space travel
at the Gattaca Corporation, he has to buy and assume the identity of a genetic
"superior" -- a chainsmoking alcoholic who has been paralyzed and is now
willing to sell his DNA on the black market. But when Gattaca's mission
director is murdered a week before Vincent, now an elite navigator, is
scheduled for take-off, police threaten to brand him a killer.
Unfortunately, despite all the advances of modern science, predictable
one-liners and full-circle scenes of corny machismo haven't been fully weeded
out of Hollywood's gene pool. At least Gattaca has some positive traits:
an aesthetic vision of the future that's stunningly realized through Frank
Lloyd Wright architecture and 1940s-inspired costumes; a genuinely suspenseful
plot that relies more on complex ethical ideas than on big chase scenes; and a
character (the gene sellout played by Jude Law) whose charm, wit, and tragic
status steal the show from the seemingly superfluous Uma Thurman and even the
talented Hawke.