Anima

A twelve or so minute collaboration between director Paul Thomas Anderson and musician Thom Yorke of Radiohead, this is being screened in Digital IMAX at various locations round the world this Wednesday. To some extent it has a built in audience. Admirers of the director, who has dabbled in 70mm movies (The Master, 2012) and worked with Radiohead on three 2016 promos will want to see it. More significant for the money men ( and women) is Radiohead’s and Thom Yorke’s audience. The band and he pretty much have creative control over everything they do, never worry about so-called commercial concerns and (when they don’t give their work away) sell albums by the truckload.

Anima, described as a one-reeler, is set to three new Yorke songs and features Yorke and a plethora of dancers. He wakes up on a tube train where other sleeping upright in their seats passengers clad in manual labourers’ clothing move in their sleep. Heads collapse onto waiting hands or jerk on necks. At some point you realise you’re watching a dance routine and your perception of the whole thing changes. And at some point, he is eyeing up a girl (Dajana Roncione) who is likewise eyeing him up among the other passengers.

At a station, the doors open and everyone disembarks. Thom Yorke picks up a metal lunch box that someone has left and goes after them with it – we’re not sure if he actually saw who left it, but anyway he goes with the flow. After a lot of walking, with his fellow passengers snapping awake as they leave the carriage, the exit barriers refuse to let him through. No-one else has this problem and before he’s resolved it with a run at the barriers and a dive over, a lady passenger has taken the lunch box.

There follows an episode in which Thom Yorke has to cross an area where a group of dancers are themselves moving as one across the area in a way that prevents anyone else doing so in a contrary direction. Sitting in this area is the lunch box, which Yorke wants to retrieve. Although the ground is flat, at some point it must have switched to a 45 degree incline because that’s how Yorke and everyone else stands on it, at a 45 degree incline.

After this he finds himself leaning on the wall. The girl is there. Together they roll along the wall, a dance of life. They and other couples run joyously, together then board a bus.

The whole plays as a one man against the system narrative. Along with boy meets girl and, presumably, they all live happily ever after. Although the monotony of the workers ‘ existence might suggest otherwise. Visually, the whole thing is spectacular, a full-blown dystopian dance movie like an update of the shuffling workers in Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927). Radiohead and Thom Yorke fans will like it as an extension of the band’s Gen X persona, and it’s worth seeing as an interesting addition to Paul Thomas Anderson’s impressive, wider body of work

Anima is in select IMAX cinemas from Wednesday, June 26th and on Netflix from Thursday, June 27th. Watch the trailer below:

Ederlezi Rising

You’ve got to admire the sheer ambition of Ederlezi Rising, a Serbian Sci-Fi movie shot in the English language with production values and visual effects on a par – mostly – with anything Hollywood at its most lavish can offer.

I say mostly because there’s an early rocket launch sequence which cries out for exterior shots of the rocket on its launch pad and then taking off, but all we get is an admittedly impressive view from space of the distant ship ascending into the atmosphere. It’s the only time the production misses a trick like this and it doesn’t detract from what follows.

The plot concerns one man and his dealings with women – well, one woman in particular. Milutin (Sebastian Cavazza) is given a new assignment by the Ederlezi corporation. Prior to his flight into deep space, a woman social engineer (Marusa Majer) explains the nature of his mission and that he’ll be required to work in a team of two, the other member being an android modelled after a human woman “but unlike a human woman, she’ll be unable to hurt you.”

In other words, he gets to programme the android, so in addition to doing her work as a crew member, she’ll do whatever he wants. Cue much physical, sexual activity between Milutin and his android Nimani (former porn star Stoya) whose name appears to be a generic model branding rather like HAL in 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick, 1968).

In the long tradition of Sci-Fi going back to ‘Mother’ in Alien (Ridley Scott, 1979), the ship’s computer is also a woman (voiced by Kirtsty Besterman). But it’s Nimani with whom Milutin spends the most screen time. When she periodically and literally shuts down her battery to recharge, she stands upright while lines of orange run up and down the three walled sides of the square shaped charging station around her recalling nothing so much as the black and white image of circles running up and down the lifeless, upright robot Maria in Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927).

Although she is very much an equal partner in the two-man crew operating the ship, Nimani’s heavily sex-oriented extracurricular activities recall the sexualised androids of Blade Runner (Ridley Scott, 1982) and its sequel Blade Runner 2049 (Denis Villeneuve, 2017).

The other major reference point is Solaris (Andrei Tarkovsky, 1971), the space station interiors of which have clearly provided the inspiration for those of the ship here with its sparse angular passageways.

There are further links. Solaris‘s astronaut was obsessed with and repeatedly ran into a reincarnation of his late wife while Ederlezi Rising’s is a loner obsessed with his numerous previous failed relationships with women. This contrasts with Nimani over whose personality Milutin has some control, but she proves far from satisfactory because ultimately he wants a partner capable of her own decisions, even if they prove to be at odds with his.

He can enable her independence only if he can delete her operating system and then reboot it, leaving her with memories generated from their relationship but without the compulsion to submit to him. The ship’s computer refuses him the security clearance needed to action this, so Milutin has to find a way to override the system. His only option is to put the ship in danger to access the required clearance. But in doing so he’s warned that the uninstallation process is irreversible and will be potentially catastrophic for Nimani.

There are more than enough CG exterior spaceship shots to satisfy SF buffs, but far more importantly the relationship material tackles some very deep male/female relationship issues. The whole thing is surprisingly memorable and effective.

Ederlezi Rising plays in the Raindance Film Festival. Watch the film trailer below: