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CYPHER
Rating:   
Canada. 2002.
Director Vincenzo Natali, Screenplay Brent King, Producers Paul Federbush, Wendy Grean, Casey La Scala & Hunt Lowry, Photography Derek Rogers, Music Michael Andrews, Visual Effects Supervisor Bob Munroe, Visual Effects C.O.R.E. Digital Pictures (Supervisor Bret Culp), Special Effects Supervisor Brock Jolliffe, Production Design Jasna Stefanovic. Production Company Gaylord Films.
Cast:
Jeremy Northam (Morgan Sullivan/Jack Thursby), Lucy Liu (Rita Foster), Nigel Bennett (Finster), Timothy Webber (Frank Calloway), David Hewlett (Virgil Dunn), Kari Matchett (Diane Thursby), Anne-Marie Scheffler (Amy Sullivan)
Plot: Morgan Sullivan applies and is accepted for a job as an industrial espionage operative for Digicorp Technologies. He is given a new identity as Jack Thursby and sent to attend various conferences all across the country where he has orders to activate a device in his pen and record the seminars. But then at one conference he meets the mysterious Rita Foster who explains to him that his mission by Digicorp is a ruse. She breaks Digicorps narcotic conditioning and helps him see that the conventions are really sham events where the attendees are in fact being brainwashed and given new identities of Digicorps choosing. She tells him that he must maintain the pretence of having been brainwashed to be Thursby, whose life he is now to inherit, otherwise he will be killed by Digicorp. As Thursby he is sent as a spy to obtain a job with Digicorps rival, Sunway Systems. But Sunway see through the deception and realize that Digicorps conditioning has been broken and recruit him as a double agent to feed false information back to Digicorp. Caught between Digicorp, Sunway and Rita and her enigmatic controller, the never-seen Sebastian Rooks, Sullivan is no longer sure who he is and which side is telling him the truth about anything.
Canadian director Vincenzo Natali took the arthouse world by storm with the conceptually dazzling Cube (1997). Cube was a rare science-fiction film of ideas and one that Natali conducted with a remarkable economy, shooting only on a single set. Cube developed a considerable international reputation and screened at numerous film festivals. Long in the coming, Cypher is Vincenzo Natalis follow-up to Cube. Cypher places Vincenzo Natali rapidly on the way to becoming one of the most promising genre directors of the 00s. Outside of these two films, Natali has also made the earlier 20 minute short film Elevated (1997), which takes place in the single set of an elevator where three people are hunted by monsters that may or may not exist. And subsequent to Cypher, Natali has made Nothing (2003), a fascinating film about two slackers who suddenly find that the entire world outside of their home has vanished and become a white void of nothing. In all of his films Natali demonstrates a fascination with the conceptual challenge of setting a story in a contained environment using minimalist sets, as well as a clear preference for conceptual science-fiction.
Vincenzo Natali is one of a group of modern (late 1990s onwards) filmmakers whose films draw themselves not from the influence of modern cinematic blockbusters but from the work of science-fiction writer Philip K. Dick. The Dick influence holds clear sway over recent works like Open Your Eyes (1997), Dark City (1998), The Truman Show (1998), The Matrix (1999), Final (2001), and to some extent M. Night Shyamalan in films like The Sixth Sense (1999), Unbreakable (2000) and The Village (2004). These are films that move away from outward spectacle and turn inwards, constantly questioning the nature of reality and personal identity, often taking the view that what is perceived is an elaborate illusion that has been created for the purpose of fooling the protagonist. Vincenzo Natalis films draw strong influence from Dicks games of illusion and identity and the good old conceptual New Wave science-fiction what if exercises regarding what might happen if the world were changed in some fundamental way.
Cypher is also a fallback of sorts to a body of films that came out in the 1960s/early 1970s concerning themselves with brainwashing and identity efforts like The Mind Benders (1962), The Face of Another (1966), The Groundstar Conspiracy (1972), The Mind Snatchers (1972), Who? (1974), and most famously, the cult classic thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962). Cypher could almost be The Manchurian Candidate reworked as a deeply paranoid Philip K. Dickian puzzle box science-fiction film. Maybe The Manchurian Candidate by way of Dick and David Mamets The Spanish Prisoner (1997), where Natali gives the impression he has studied and been inspired by Mamets coolly subdued sense of disquiet and labyrinthine Chinese box of unfolding corporate conspiracy puzzles.
Cypher shows that Cube was not a mere one-off chance upon Vincenzo Natalis part. Indeed Natali has polished his visual style considerably in the interim. In its unfolding twists the sudden revelation where Lucy Liu turns out to be a spy who knows everything that is going on, Jeremy Northams realization that the pen transmissions are meaningless, and especially the eerie scenes where the attendees at a dull-as-dishwater conference are suddenly brainwashed with VR helmets or the superbly suspenseful scene where David Hewlett opines that he can spot a double agent Cypher settles in with an intensely compulsive grip. Eventually some of the twists and turns do become decidedly improbable about the time that Jeremy Northam finds that he is becoming a double agent being reprogrammed by at least three different organizations all seeking to undermine the other. (Cyphers grip works less when one considers its plausibilities backwards than when one looks at it in terms of forward momentum ie. in terms of a narrative of unveiling surprises).
Natali adopts a superbly cool, mannered and disquietening look one where the colour is muted out of the frame and the sets often stripped to a bare black-and-white minimalism. In the early scenes Natali focuses on the patterned banality of the surroundings all around Jeremy Northam the block-like structure of a high-rise tower of mirrored glass, the patterns made by the streets of a housing tract as seen from above, and the almost comical dullness of the topics being lectured about at the conferences such that the hero of the film seems to almost to be drowning amid his ordered existence.
And Jeremy Northam gives a performance in glasses, plaid jacket that is so milquetoast that he could almost be mistaken for auditioning for the role of Clark Kent in Superman Returns (2006). Northams performance is one of subtle gradations he is required to pass all the way between suited anonymity, barroom sophisticate and eventually assured handsomeness where he impresses both by his and Vincenzo Natalis observation of quiet nuance, rather than any large acting flourishes.
Lucy Liu is an actress whose star has been overly acclaimed in recent years as a result of two main hits her recurring role on Ally McBeal (1997-2002) and as one of the stars of McGs inanely empty-headed Charlies Angels films something that has yet to be entirely supported either by a body of work or any standout acting. Cypher at least gives her a decent acting role, although it is one where she crafts a cool, mysteriously aloof presence, but still leaves one uncertain about whether she has any lasting stature. Something that most certainly could not be said of the talent that Vincenzo Natali has on display. Cypher has immediately pushed Vincenzo Natali to the forefront of genre filmmakers with a rare intelligence and something to say that is worth listening to.
(Winner in this sites Top 10 Films of 2002 list. Winner for Best Original Screenplay at this sites Best of 2002 Awards).
Copyright Richard Scheib 2003
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