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Doomsday
Reviewed By Rich Drees
With Dog Soldiers (2002) and Descent (2005), director
Neil Marshall proved himself a skilled cinematic chef, able to take
the standard ingredients of a genre film and with the application of
spice and style serve up a an unexpectedly gourmet dish. It comes as
a bit of a disappointment then, that Doomsday seems like
Marshall is trying to recreate the dimly remembered taste of a
perfect cheeseburger consumed some summery day in his youth. It may
be well prepared, but it is still just a cheeseburger, lacking the
nuance in taste that his previous filmic dishes have had.
In just a few
weeks, a plague will begin to decimate Scotland to the point where
the only option is to barricade the entire country behind a
fortified wall to contain it. Twenty-five years later, it appears
that crowded conditions in London have led to a re-emergence of the
deadly virus. Tough as nails cop Eden Sinclair (Rhona Mitra) - who
escaped the quarantine of Scotland as a child when her mother put
her onto a helicopter Fall-of-Saigon style - is recruited to lead a
mission into the Scotland quarantine zone behind the wall. It turns
out that the government had been monitoring the zone with satellites
and three years earlier had discovered there were survivors in the
cities. If there are survivors, there must be a cure and Sinclair’s
group has 48 hours to find it. However, the survivors that they find
are not very happy at having been left to die a quarter of a century
earlier.
In the midst of all this, we have to wonder why Marshall seems to be
trying to recreate a mélange of genre films from the 1980s. The
basic premise borrows heavily from Escape From New York, but
at least Marshall acknowledges it by naming one of his characters
Carpenter. The Scottish castle location in the film’s second act
recalls Highlander while the finale is nothing more than
The Road Warrior on crystal meth. He even works in a sly
reference to television’s Max Headroom. The inclusion of Adam
Ant, Fine Young Cannibals and Frankie Goes To Hollywood on the
soundtrack do nothing to deter one from thinking about that decade.
While there is
nothing wrong with making a film that serves as an homage to the
past, Doomsday feels as if it is about nothing but the
homage. The characters are nothing more than the most basic of
stock. Sinclair’s backstory is only a reason for the character to be
tough, it isn’t anything that feels that it really drives her story.
Once she is behind the wall, it is quickly forgotten and never
developed. Even worse is an actor like Bob Hoskins is treated,
saddled with a character whose purpose is to provide exposition in
the beginning and then stand around until the plot needs him to
unintentionally deliver some ironic justice to a character. Though
derivative, the action is still well staged and delivers some
thrills. It is just unfortunate that the film is nothing but empty
calories. |