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VIRTUOSITY
Rating: ½
USA. 1995.
Director Brett Leonard, Screenplay Eric Bernt, Producer Gary Lucchesi, Photography Gale Tattersall, Music Christopher Young, Visual Effects Supervisor Jon Townley, CGI Effects L2 Communications (Supervisor Georg Gerber), Tendril Animation Sony Pictures Imageworks, Makeup Effects Chris Walas Inc, Production Design Nilo Rodis. Production Company Paramount.
Cast:
Denzel Washington (Parker Barnes), Russell Crowe (SID 6.7), Kelly Lynch (Dr Madison Carter), William Forsythe (Chief Billy Cochran), Stephen Spinella (Daryl Lindenmeyer), Kevin J. OConnor (Clyde Reilly), Louise Fletcher (Elizabeth Deane), William Fichtner (Wallace), Kaley Cuoco (Karen Carter)
Plot: Jailed former cop Parker Barnes acts as a volunteer to test out a new Virtual Reality police training program. Inside the simulation, participants must pursue a serial killer, SID 6.7. But the games neural stimulus has been set too high and when SID kills Barness co-volunteer inside the simulation, the shock kills him in real life. The program is ordered shut down. But its creator, Daryl Lindenmeyer, is too attached to it and fools a lab tech into incarnating the SID chip inside a nanotech android body. In its nanotech body SID immediately breaks out of the laboratory and goes on a killing spree. The police free Barnes in return for his help, seeing as he has had the most experience dealing with SID. But then Barnes discovers that SID has been created with artificial intelligence and a personality that is a hybrid of 180 serial killer profiles. And as he starts tracking it, the personality of Matthew Grimes, the killer who slaughtered Barness wife and daughter, rises to the surface and begins to relish the opportunity for revenge.
Virtuosity was the fourth film from Brett Leonard. After premiering with the low-budget horror The Dead Pit (1989), Brett Leonard had enormous success with The Lawnmower Man (1992), a stupid film that nevertheless brought Virtual Reality themes and computer animation to screen in a big way. Leonard then followed it up with the dull Dean R. Koontz adaptation Hideaway (1995) and Virtuosity.
Ever since the success of The Lawnmower Man, it seemed that Brett Leonard was aspiring to some self-styled title as a pundit of the new CGI technology. For a time during the mid-1990s Leonard was clearly trying to make CGI filmmaking his own niche in much the same way as say Ingmar Bergman created a niche out of existential gloom or Woody Allen did of neurotic angst. He even created his own CGI house, L2 Communications. Regrettably though Leonards work fell far short of the mastery of the form that he aspired to. His films were either so lacking in intellectual content or so bogged down in cliches that all his flashy CGI whiz-trickery proves nothing more than eye-candy unsupported by substance. Indeed Brett Leonards films appear so indifferent to plots that in the cases of both The Lawnmower Man and Hideaway the authors upon whose works the two films are based (Stephen King and Dean R. Koontz) sued to have their names removed from the credits. At least with Virtuosity, Leonard is free of that problem, the film being based on an original screenplay, although it still makes it no less brainless a film.
Virtuosity is so embedded in cliches that it starts to feel like it has been constructed by a design team piecing together elements of the most commercially successful films of the last few years. There is the hero who is wrong criminally convicted a la the likes of Demolition Man (1993), No Escape (1994), Judge Dredd (1995). As in Escape from New York (1981) and Wedlock (1991), the hero has a bomb implanted in his neck. There is the killer android a figure that has become a cliche of almost every B-budget sf film since The Terminator (1984). And as with the cliches established following The Terminator, the killer android gets into the killing with exuberant relish a totally OTT performance from Russell Crowe here. (One scene with Russell Crowe walking though a mall in a new suit while the Bee Gees Stayin Alive plays on the soundtrack topples over into self-parody. Just once one would like a film that would feature a killer robot that is emotionless and coldly ruthless). And like the killer android of Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), this android is also a shapeshifter.
Not merely content with a killer robot theme, the android also contains a composite of serial killer personalities. The serial killer of course became the cinematic bogeyman of the 1990s after the successes of The Silence of the Lambs (1991), Se7en (1995) and imitators. Why the mad technologist of the piece has to create a police Virtual Reality program that contains a composite of serial killer personalities is never made clear. Certainly one wonders what purpose such a serial killer AI would serve. One might expect a police training program that would require a mass of serial killer personalities would use such a program for studies in police methodology or detection, but all we see the program used for is only a standard shootem-up. Nor is the idea of an AI that is a composite of other killers followed up on. You might ask what a program composited of serial killers personalities actually means? Such an idea as presented here displays almost no understanding of human psychology. Serial killers are quite dissimilar in motivation and methodology forensic psychology divides them into two quite different types, organized and disorganized, for instance. The result would surely be a program that would be confused and often completely contradictory in what it does. But it later becomes apparent that the composite serial killer idea has only one purpose in the film that of providing another cliche, of the cop having to face the villain from his past. At no point do any other of the serial killer personalities emerge, the Matthew Grimes personality from Denzel Washingtons past quickly becomes the dominant one and stays that way, while all the other personalities are conveniently forgotten about.
In another piece of idiotic motivation, something that Virtuosity is filled with, the AIs creator, for no apparent reason other than that he appears to have an unhealthy relationship with computers, chooses to incarnate his AI as a nanotech robot when the AI program is threatened with closure (has he never heard of backups?) and loose it upon the world, seemingly indifferent to the fact that the program has been designed solely for the purpose of being a killing machine. The sequence does at least contain the films best moment a neat technical demonstration of what nanotechnology is but the piracy of a good scientific idea does not excuse the cloddishly stupid motivation that it is put to. Not to mention the fact that such technology is far too absurdly advanced for the films supposed setting date of 1999.
Denzel Washington is passable throughout, but the role is far beneath him he apparently only took it because his son wanted him to appear in a film that he would want to go and see. Brett Leonard adds lots of dumb explosions, chases and improbable stunts, but he is not particularly adept at directing action and the whole film eventually collapses under the weight of its own ridiculousness. Of course co-star Russell Crowe would later go onto become an A-list star and a Best Actor Academy Award winner his role as the campy killer AI here is surely Crowes worst ever role.
Virtuosity was Brett Leonards last theatrical film for a decade. Subsequently Leonard specialized in directing IMAX theatrical shorts, including the likes of T-Rex: Back to the Cretaceous (1998) and Siegfried and Roy: The Magic Box (1999). He would later return to feature-filmmaking with the unremarkable Marvel Comics adaptation Man-Thing (2005), followed by the fascinatingly perverse Feed (2005) about fat fetishism and Highlander: The Source (2007).
Copyright Richard Scheib 1996
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