| The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |
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| Science-Fiction |
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CHRYSALIS
Rating: 
France. 2007.
Director Julien Leclercq, Screenplay Julien Leclercq & Franck Philippon with the participation of Nicolas Peufaillat & Aude Py, Producer Franck Chorot, Photography Thomas Hardmeier, Music Jean-Jacques Hertz & Francois Roy, Visual Effects La Maison (Supervisor Bruno Maillard), Production Design Jean-Philippe Moreaux. Production Company Gaumont/TF1/Cinecinema/Sofica.
Cast:
Albert Dupontel (David Hoffman), Marie Guillard (Lieutenant Marie Becker), Marthe Keller (Professor Brügen), Melanie Thierry (Manon Brügen), Alain Figlarz (Dimitri Nikolov/Danis Nikolov), Estelle Lefebure (Clara), Claude Perron (Captain Miller), Patrick Bauchau (Charles Becker), Manon Chevallier (Clemence), Francis Renaud (Yuri)
Plot: Paris of the future. Police lieutenant David Hoffman, still grieving for the murder of his partner during pursuit of the wanted Bulgarian black marketeer Dimitri Nikolov, is paired with a new partner, Marie Becker. The two investigate after the body of an illegal immigrant girl is found murdered. The investigation takes Hoffman back on the trail of Nikolov and he is successful in arresting him this time. But when Nikolov pulls Maries gun on her in his cell, Hoffman shoots him in the head. But then Nikolovs twin brother turns up in Hoffmans apartment and abducts him. Nikolov has stolen an advanced machine known as Chrysalis that can copy, delete or transplant memories into another persons mind. He now orders that Hoffman be put inside Chrysalis and left abandoned with a blank mind.
The template for the modern French science-fiction film was Luc Bessons The Fifth Element (1997). The last couple of years has seen notable others such as Banlieu 13 (2004), Immortal (ad vitam) (2004), Babylon A.D. (2008) and the animated Renaissance (2006), which has quite a few similarities to Chrysalis. All of these are notedly French variants on the Cyberpunk genre, concerning themselves with densely detailed and downbeat futures set amid rundown cityscapes and designer gadgetry.
Certainly newcomer director Julien Leclercq offers up a subdued and manneredly cool variant on the Cyberpunk look. The lighting schemes have all been washed out to the point that Chrysalis seems to take place in shades of gunmetal grey. There are lots of nifty pieces of advanced gadgetry littered in the background the polices handheld holographic data scanners, the doctor who is seen signing a series of papers that only exist as projections on her desktop, the futuristic cars subtly placed in the background, the ultra-modernist Parisian skylines. The coolest of these is a scene where Marthe Keller conducts surgery via telepresence, using a series of holographic robot arms to operate on a hologram body. Like most of these abovementioned Cyberpunk films, the hero is a burned-out detective. Julien Leclercq seems to enjoy choreographing tough and gritty fistfights and throws a number of these in throughout.
But Chrysalis is a frustrating film. For the most part we are following a mundane crime plot about an investigation into the murder of an illegal immigrant girl. It is quite clear as is often the case in Cyberpunk films that the story is not about the uncovery of the murder but rather about the details of the background of the world that we are in. But Chrysalis keeps refusing to tell us much about this world indeed other than a few details of surface gadgetry it is a world that is not too different from our own and all that that means is that we are left following a rather dull and mundane mystery. There are frequent cutaways to a B plot about a teenage girl (Melanie Thierry) waking up in a mysterious hospital with a blank memory but again the film keeps refusing to give away what is happening here up until the end.
The main problem with Chrysalis is that its double plot leads one to expect a big twist revelation of what is going on. One does eventually arrive but what the film throws up [PLOT SPOILERS] the revelation of a blackmarket operation involving the transplant of memories is rather underwhelming. It is not even particularly clear what the blackmarket operation, blanking and transplanting peoples memories and abducting East European immigrants, is trying to achieve. During the latter scenes the plot sidetracks off into scenes with detective hero Albert Dupontel having his memory wiped, although not enough is made of the confusion and blankness that must surely result and then with a casual flick of the plotting pen his memory is restored again at the end. Theres also a bizarre twist where Albert Dupontel kills Alain Figlarz, the bad guy he has been hunting (as he holds Marie Guillard at gunpoint in a cell in one of the films most charged scenes) and then not longer after Figlarz turns up still alive in Dupontels apartment and attacks him. This briefly seems a wild twist that makes us wonder if the operation in the hospital has not been creating clones or some such, but then the film explains this in a contrived twist that dismisses the other as improbably just being Figlarzs twin brother.
Copyright Richard Scheib 2008
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