Luke Scott’s sci-fi/horror thriller
Morgan is a frustrating watch. Admirable in it’s ambition,
full of potentially interesting themes and ideas, with a fantastic cast and
heady premise, there’s a great deal to ingest and appreciate. Which makes it
maddening that the finished product face plants into tedium, the painful twist
becomes obvious five minutes in, and it never capitalizes on what works in its
favor.
A generically monolithic sounding conglomerate sends Lee
Weathers (Kate Mara, Fantastic Four), a corporate
risk-management consultant, to a remote, isolated research facility to observe
a hyper-intelligent, artificially created, human-ish thing named Morgan (Anya
Taylor-Joy, The Witch). Tasked with deciding whether or not
to terminate the program, and the subject, the tight-knit group of scientists
attempt to sway Lee’s judgment.
Morgan marks Luke "Son of Ridley" Scott’s feature debut,
but shares a similar detached feel as his 2012 short, Loom.
This removed distance makes sense thematically, as the film aims to be esoteric
and mysterious, but it also pushes away the audience.
Kept at arm’s length, with a chill cast over everything,
it’s damn near impossible to connect with the characters or story on any meaningful
level. Full of individuals with their own hidden agendas,
Morgan plays things so close to the vest, and reveals so
little in regard to motivation and personality, that instead of this secrecy
heightening the stress and tension, the actors, across the board, don’t have
much to work do.
Rather than icy, rational, and calculating, Mara plays flat,
bland, and single note. And though she’s supposed to be lab-generated
human-technology hybrid, Morgan’s defining characteristics are a monotone
voice, pregnant-with-meaning scowl, and heavy makeup designed to make her
appear more synthetic and inhuman. Morgan talks about its
namesake having a personality and unique psyche—it’s never seen, but it’s
spoken of quite often.
Morgan touches on ideas of humans playing
god; whether or not things created in a lab can transcend their beginnings,
become sentient, and be truly human; and similarly rich sci-fi conjecture. All
of which are appropriately timely and pressing, but, like with the characters, Seth
W. Owen’s script never delves deeper than the shallowest conceits.
Even the stylistics mirror this emptiness and lack of depth.
With only a handful of settings—upstate New York wilderness, a monstrous but
dilapidated mansion nestled in the woods, and a sterile underground medical
bunker—there’s little to make them visually interesting. Awash in cold, subdued
hues, a familiar ominous score, workmanlike camera movements, over-edited
moments of action, and the flagrant abuse of reflective surfaces, the overall
aesthetic package is rote and unremarkable.
If nothing else, Morgan stands out among
Hollywood movies for its treatment of women. The female characters own the keys
to the kingdom—most of the male characters are largely erroneous—and celebrated
for their intellect and capabilities rather than looks and physical appearance. This shouldn't be all that unusual, but here we are.
In fact, relegated to background and supporting roles,
Morgan flips the script when it comes to male and female
roles in genre fare. Lee is the business oriented, get-shit-done protagonist,
while Michelle Yeoh’s Dr. Cheng is the brains and driving force behind the
whole operation. The only typically gendered role is Rose Leslie’s behaviorist,
Dr. Mesner, who forms an overwrought maternal bond with Morgan.
On the other hand, Toby Jones’ Dr. Ziegler is the character
who becomes emotional, overly attached to the subject, and acts irrationally.
Chris Sullivan is dealt the superfluous significant other role to his much more
capable partner, Dr. Brenda Fincher (Vinette Robinson). And the job of obvious
inept eye candy, who follows the main character around and exists for no other
reason than to be pretty, falls to Boyd Holbrook.
For as fantastic a crew of actors as
Morgan assembles, there’s not much meat on the bone, and the
talent is squandered and flops to the floor, limp and unutilized. Hot off her
badass turn in The Hateful Eight, Jennifer Jason Leigh as a
grizzled, wounded doctor wasted on pain meds, is the highlight of the entire
movie, though she only has two momentary appearances of note. Paul Giamatti
chews his dialogue heartily for a scene as a psychiatrist assigned to assess
Morgan’s mental state. And though Brian Cox’s voice appears early on, he only
shows up on screen for a few seconds to pin the heavy-handed tail on this
donkey of a film.
Taken on their own, pieces of Morgan are
admirable and intriguing, though the sum is much less interesting than the
individual parts belie. It could have amounted to more, but the ink on the page
is predictable; the story is dry, dwells wholly on the surface, and is
needlessly oblique; and there’s little life to behold.
[Grade: C]
It was silly. But also kind of fun. Nice review.
ReplyDeleteI agree with most of what you said. The script is pretty weak, but I think overall it still shows promise for Luke Scott - http://www.tinseltine.com/2016/09/movie-blog-post-morgan.html
ReplyDelete