Proper from the beginning, the new-to-Netflix film from Practice to Busan and Peninsula writer-director Yeon Sang-ho brings to thoughts different sci-fi movies, as so many style films do. For American audiences, no less than, the opening sequences and different moments in JUNG_E will recall films like Alita: Battle Angel, Elysium, and different Neill Blomkamp photos, together with The Phantom Menace, later-period Terminator sequels like Salvation, and the Alex Proyas model of I, Robotic.
It’s not that these seeming homages symbolize a stunningly curated, uniformly nice set of sci-fi classics. Alita is terrific and Phantom Menace is underappreciated, whereas Terminator: Salvation is apparently misbegotten at greatest. Collectively, these movies might not even be what really impressed Yeon: He’s from South Korea and he started his profession in animation, so he might nicely have a complete different set of influences in thoughts. However trendy sci-fi films are so fast to drag from the identical sources — Blade Runner, the unique Star Wars, and Alien — that any movie even suggesting a unique lineage is an attention-grabber.
JUNG_E can also be grabby as a result of it begins off with a crackerjack motion sequence, as mercenary Yun Jung-yi (Kim Hyun-joo) fights her method via a bunch of robotic troopers on a bluish junkscape. Because the scene begins to look more and more video game-like, the film appears to anticipate this thought, and pulls again to point out that its heroine is occupying a digital area. The actual Jung-yi is in a coma following a significant battle. Now, scientists working for a big company are placing AI-cloned variations of her via that very same battle, hoping some model will work out the way to survive it — and change into the nice warrior wanted to win the continued civil warfare.
There’s a variety of lore to get via, proper from the highest: The film is about on the finish of the twenty second century. Earth is uninhabitable, so humanity has moved to area, the place they’ve cut up into two factions engaged in a seemingly infinite armed battle. The movie, principally set in and round lab services, solely reveals digital glimpses of the warfare. The chief researcher on the AI undertaking is Yun Search engine optimization-hyun (Kang Soo-youn), whose tight-lipped professionalism belies the truth that she’s additionally Jung-yi’s daughter. Her taciturnity contrasts considerably with the manic, generally goofy Sang-hoon (Ryu Kyung-soo), a crew chief centered extra on cash, pleasing his company bosses, and, as he places it, “showmanship.”
JUNG_E opens with that thrilling battle scene, and closes with a much bigger, higher motion sequence, with barely cartoony however efficient (and when wanted, appropriately weighty) visible results. But it’s not precisely an motion film. Within the lengthy stretch between situations of mayhem, it goes via a variety of world-building, contemplative drama, and a few plot twists that deliberately undermine each the characters’ and the viewers’s expectations about the place the story may logically be headed.
Realizing in regards to the film’s odd construction upfront may spoil some sense of discovery in an admirably unpredictable film. Alternatively, much less affected person viewers may be forgiven for assuming, across the midway mark, that Yeon has wandered too far afield and misplaced his momentum. Generally it’s irritating when the story cuts away from Jung-yi; whether or not in human type in flashbacks or robotic type within the current, she’s the film’s most charismatic character, whereas her grown daughter Search engine optimization-hyun is, by design, much less instantly expressive. Kang takes her time to deliver out the emotion in Search engine optimization-hyun.
Sadly, that is Kang’s surprising farewell efficiency. The actress, a star in Korea for a number of a long time, died after finishing the movie. That sense of loss is eerily acceptable to the fabric, which considers how or when mimicry of the human mind constitutes its personal life type, and what that form of superficial life extension may imply to extra conventional types of consciousness. Although it has satirical moments, JUNG_E’s pangs of disappointment develop inside the film because it proceeds.
By the point it circles again to a extra spectacular climax, the film looks like a real hybrid, somewhat than a case of tonal whiplash. When the film reveals a swarm of robots with generically human faces, they don’t simply resemble the robotic designs from the 2004 I, Robotic; it looks like Yeon has made a weirder, extra private companion to that compromised film, amongst others. JUNG_E has loads of spare elements, and sometimes janky green-screen results. However each the robots and people it assembles transfer with surprising grace.
JUNG_E is streaming on Netflix now.