Broadsheet Trailer Park: Mute

at

What you may need to know:

1. Here comes Mute, the new film from Duncan Jones, the talented British director known for Moon (2009) and Source Code (2011), two of the best science fiction films of the past ten years.

2. He has described Mute as a spiritual sequel to Moon, in that it is set in the same universe. Eagle-eyed viewers should expect references, veiled or otherwise, to that stark, sorrowful knockout that coaxed the performance of a lifetime out of Sam Rockwell twice.

3. Jones followed those two up with video game adaptation Warcraft in 2016, which got a bit of a mauling. For that reason, some voices out there have urged viewers to manage their expectations regarding this latest outing.

4. Mute is set in Berlin of the future, a neon-soaked cyberpunk hellhole not unlike Blade Runner’s rain-soaked Los Angeles or the works of William Gibson. This town is populated by losers, psychos, criminals and misfits, including Alexander Skarsgård’s taciturn bartender Leo, whose search for his missing girlfriend (Seyneb Saleh) brings him into the orbit of two volatile American surgeons (Paul Rudd and Justin Theroux).

5. Mute is Jones’ Don Quixote. He tells Uproxx the film has been in the works for 16 years; even with the critical success he has (mostly) enjoyed, studios have turned his script down time and time again. The interview also simply describes Mute as “insane”, while Jones himself calls it “dark and weird”; make of that what you will.

6. Enter Netflix, which has both the money and the canvas to take creative risks like this. No matter how it turns out, it’s a shame a film with clearly such a strong visual element will never be seen in cinemas. The cinematic landscape is changing though; whether anybody likes it or not. So rather than a churlish refusal to embrace change (we’re looking at you, Christopher Nolan), Jones has opted to change with it. He has lamented, however, that the film will never get a Blu-ray release – or the packaging design possibilities that come with it.

7. I call it Don Quixote above, but Jones himself has called Mute “Casablanca of the future”; an evocative and alluring possibility – hence the stunning poster which loudly recalls that WW2 masterpiece. Someone should tell him though – we already got our Casablanca of the future in Barb Wire (1996) starring Pamela Anderson. No, really.

8. Going by Duncan Jones’ own word, Mute won’t be for everyone. That’s the point of it though. We complain that cinemas are overflowing with superhero and comic book films, which they are. Studios won’t go near anything that isn’t a guaranteed money-maker. It’s why you don’t see much from creatively idiosyncratic filmmakers, whose first objective is to challenge their audiences, outside of the festival circuits. Tastes will come back around eventually, but before they do we should embrace films like this whenever the opportunity presents itself.

Verdict: Shout it from the rooftops

Release: February 23.

Sponsored Link

7 thoughts on “Broadsheet Trailer Park: Mute

  1. Andyourpointiswhatexactly?

    Woo hoo! I love him. I love Alexander Skarsgard (PHOARRRR!) and I love ickle Paul Rudd with his mustache. This is going to be excellent.

    It will be seen in cinemas. Duncan has organised for it to be shown somewhere. Possibly LA? Not sure.

  2. ivan

    I like that. Not the movie, but the fact that Jones can make movies like this. It’s a shame – per the article – that the cinemas are chock full of derivative sheeite but the fact that Jones is there, ploughing his own furrow, with a few bob behind him has to be a good thing.

    Same thing with his auld lad; you didn’t have to like *everything* David Bowie did. Sometimes, knowing that David Bowie was doing anything at all was enough to make you happy. If you didn’t like this project, the next one might be just for you.

  3. The Ghost of Starina

    Sounds amazing, thanks for making me aware of it. Berlin? Futuristic? Skarsgaard (drool)? that poster art? YES.

Comments are closed.

Sponsored Link
Broadsheet.ie