Community Corner
Tom Cruise's 'Oblivion' Movie Opens to Mixed Reviews
Do you plan to see the latest post-apocalyptic sci-fi film? Watch the trailer and read what some of the critics are saying.
"Oblivion" is playing at nearby Gateway Cinemas 12 in Barrow County and Beechwood Cinemas 11 and Carmike 12 in Athens.
The year is 2077. Jack Harper (Tom Cruise) and ο»Ώο»ΏVictoria (Andrea Riseborough) are work partners and lovers on an earth that was destroyed by invading alien Scavengers. Jack and Vicki are preparing to leave earth for Titan, a safe moon where the remaining humans have fled. Jack is plagued by nightmares and visions of his life before in New York. These nightmares hold the key to Jack's existence and the remainder of the plot.....but my lips are sealed. The cast also includes Morgan Freeman, Olga Kurylenko, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Melissa Leo and ZoΓ« Bell.
Do you plan to see the film? Leave your review in the comments below.
Here's what the critics are saying:
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The story probably doesnβt stand up to heavy scrutiny, and at times the effort by star and director shows....But at least the effort is there. The film is beautiful to look at. You can check off most of your go-to sci-fi elements here: a post-apocalyptic, dystopian future; aliens; memory wipes; outlying rebels; the aforementioned Tom Cruise. Some are used more effectively than others, including Cruise. The puzzlements will be explained by the end, but as is often the case, the fun is in the getting there. Bill Goodykoontz, Arizona RepublicΒ
Memories of earlier sci-fi dramas peek out of βOblivionβ like bits of New York jutting out of the futuristic rubble. From high on the shoulders of β2001: A Space Odyssey,β βSilent Running,β βSolaris,β βThe Matrixβ and others, directorΒ Joseph Kosinskiβs movie surveys a hodgepodge of narrative worlds, and our mental circuits make the connections.Β Yet while fans of apocalyptic cinema may hope to add βOblivionβ to those ranks, Kosinskiβs ultimately underwhelming film leads nowhere. As its palpable sense of dread β well-sustained in a gently cascading first hour β gives way to dead ends, this Omega Movie shoots itself in the foot. Joe Neumaier, New York Daily News
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Stylishly directed byΒ Tron: LegacyβsΒ Joseph Kosinski,Β OblivionΒ is one of those easy-on-the-eyes post-apocalyptic sci-fi movies that lives or dies by its pretzel-logic plot. Sadly, what we have here is a stale pretzel. I would describe the movie as a mash-up ofΒ The Matrix,Β Blade Runner, andΒ Planet of the Apes, but that makes it sound better than it is.Β Chris NashawatyΒ Entertainment WeeklyΒ
But this remains the kind of film where viewers know Cruise is sad because he says, in voiceover, that heβs sad; they know heβs in love because he and his partner rotely announce it. And they know heβs driven because he keeps mechanically repeating a Thomas B. Macaulay poem about death while facing fearful odds. Thereβs a clinical remove to virtually every step inΒ OblivionΒ that doesnβt get in the way of the pieces as they slot into place, but does make the story feel hollow. All itβs missing is Cruise proclaiming in a monotone, in the middle of the final battle, βThis is very exciting.β Tasha Robinson, AV Club
What's interesting about it is its tight focus on a handful of characters. "Oblivion" is odder and less conventional than your average forgettable star vehicle; at times it feels like a five-character play taking place in a digital-effects lab. But there's not much energy to it. When you go to a futuristic, dystopian, post-apocalyptic barn dance starring Tom Cruise and his space guns, you expect a little zap with your thoughtful pauses. Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune
"Oblivion" is rated PG-13 and runs 126 minutes.
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