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Natural
City Movie Review:
It’s
the year 2080 in the city of Mecaline, and combat cyborgs
created by a company called Neucom have started to show
defects (i.e.: murdering humans).
A crack team is set on the case to track them down and kill
them before they can do more damage. Their especially nasty
leader, Caper, manages to get away and continues to evade
capture by having his memory chip implanted into the bodies
of others, effectively taking them over.
One of the team is R, an arrogant guy who is constantly
in trouble and up to illegal mis-deeds. Then there is Cyon,
an orphaned girl who drifts the streets offering to tell
people their fortune. Ria is a robot whom R has fallen in
love with. But bots only have a short life-span, and R has
to find a way not to lose her, no matter what.
Every scene oozes high quality. From the lushly re-created
Mecaline, to the gripping fight scenes and costume design,
everything has been rendered in vivid detail and is eye-poppingly
lovely.
“Terminator”, “Bladerunner”, “Alien”,
“Neuromancer”, “The Matrix”, even,
“I Robot” and are all blended together into
a froth of action, romance and sci – fi.
Which is good, because these are all great movies/books,
but not so great because it means that despite the unique
look to the film the feel is all too familiar.
The story is actually a bit thin too, but there are three
very cool words will immediately draw hoards of sci-fi buffs
towards Natural City regardless: Martial Arts Cyborgs.
You see, it looks great, but once the shine wears off you
realize that all that’s left is a fairly formulaic
story with some excellent fight scenes, discounting the
over-used and over-seen ‘bullet time’ technique.
On a less blood-thirsty note, there are some breathtaking
underwater scenes too.
There’s also a kick-ass kamikaze explosion sequence
and in terms of pulling off a convincing vision of cities
of the future this is spot on.
But a strong intro and conclusion doesn’t disguise
the fact that the story is lacking the x-factor which could
really make it a crossover smash.
You may note that Yoo Jie Tae, the lead character, is also
highly billed on the excellent “Old Boy” (see
day 1). He plays this part with serious swagger, and owns
the screen because he has attitude written all over him.
He also looks a little like Elvis.
Watch this just to wallow in the lovely bits, but don’t
expect it to be engaging or all that original on any deep
level.
Terresa Gaffney
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