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Children of Men (2006)

Children of Men

Thriller / Adventure / Drama / Sci-Fi

1 hr. 54 min.

Sci-fi thriller by Y Tu Mama Tambien director Alfonso Cuaron, starring Chiwetel Ejiofor as the the last hope for the human race and Clive Owen as her protector.

Rated R for strong violence, language, some drug use and brief nudity

Directed by:  Alfonso Cuaron

Starring:  Julianne Moore, Clive Owen, Michael Caine, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Charlie Hunnam

Theatrical Release Date:  12/25/2006

Release Type:  Limited

U.S. Box Office: $35,286,428

Video/DVD Release Date:  3/27/2007

Distributor:  Universal Pictures

Country:  UK / USA

Language:  Italian / Romanian / English / Spanish

Offsite:  IMDB | Official Site



CRITIC
RATING
QUOTE
Chicago Sun-Times
Richard Roeper
7 ...crammed with big ideas, but isn't particularly interested in exploring those ideas.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
8 ...is that rare futuristic thriller: grim in its scenario, yet exhilarating in its technique.
E!
Dezhda Mountz
10 Not your typical Christmas-day release, but think of it this way: After the fruitcake has been trashed and the presents opened, there will be a few more gifts waiting for you�phenomenal acting, an intelligent script and a small, but profound dose of hope, all in one package called Children of Men.
filmcritic.com
Chris Cabin
8 The beauty of Children of Men is that it understands the problems we're undoubtedly going to have to face but it also sees the hope that these challenges will no doubt bring out in some individuals.
New York Post
Kyle Smith
6 ...grabs you at first, but its grip slackens as the unanswered questions and murky plot developments add up.
TV Guide
Maitland McDonagh
7 The screenplay, which differs significantly from the novel, is uneven, but the distorted mirror it holds up to the present is disturbingly clear.
Reel
Pam Grady
9 The film is ... that rare thing, one that entertains even as it leaves you thinking.
Slant Magazine
Keith Uhlich
6 It would be foolish to deny the supreme technical achievements of Children of Men ... [that] cover up [its] many glaring ideological and narrative deficiencies.
Rolling Stone
Peter Travers
8 ...spellbinding...
Entertainment Weekly
Lisa Schwarzbaum
10 Thrilling, important, and invigoratingly bleak, Children of Men is one of the very best movies to come out in 2006.
New York Times
Manohla Dargis
10 ...a superbly directed political thriller...
Los Angeles Times
Kenneth Turan
9 ...two things elevate Children of Men: One is the sheer forcefulness of the storytelling, the other the film's brilliant visual look and style.
LA Weekly
Scott Foundas
9 ...one of the year's most imaginative and uniquely exciting pieces of cinema.
Village Voice
J. Hoberman
10 ...a superbly crafted action thriller...
Onion AV Club
Keith Phipps
10 By the film's end, Owen has been transformed and the possibility raised that the world might change with him. Cuar�n has created a dire warning of the world that could be, but he's also made a film about faith, love, sacrifice, and all the other hard-won virtues that keep the world alive. It's a heartbreaking, bullet-strewn valentine to what keeps us human.
Maxim
Pete Hammond
8 ...magnificent...
Premiere
Glenn Kenny
8 It's the rare sci-fi film that transcends its genre with its ideas, able to sweep one up in its not-too-distant future and yet remain remarkably prescient about the present day.
Christian Science Monitor
Peter Rainer
10 At times the film is so supercharged that it glosses over the story's thematic richness and turns into a very high-grade action picture. But if that's the worst thing you can say about a movie, you're doing all right.
     

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ALL AVERAGE CRITIC RATING 8.5
AVERAGE USER RATING
(22 ratings)
7.1
USER REVIEWS:

jefferyb  8

Great combination of drama and action


dack  6

From a pure filmmaking standpoint this is a pretty incredible piece of work; probably a 9 or a 10. Unfortunately the script is seriously deficient and the movie never really grabbed me, so it averages out to a 6.


Wynns  7

Not as good as I'd hoped. Still, how many movies like this need to be made before people notice the parallels?

Worth seeing in the theater because it's timely.


madmitch  8

Disturbing to say the least. You have to fill in a few gaps but its still pretty spooky stuff.


lalligood  6

I'm completely in line with dack's comments so I won't waste your nor my own time. The war scene at the end was particularly fierce albeit more or less wasted on a mediocre plot.


Oracle  7

There are many things that happen in our future: for those technological buffs out there, there will be large hi-def T.V screens and sophisticated wireless devices. But on the not so shinny side, and for those present day future predictors, women will become infertile, and eventually we will all vanish from Earth. It's difficult to establish such a premise in 114 minutes, and Cuarón happens to know this. So what he creates is more of a preview of it. Despite its astute sympathy for what-if film lovers, "Children of Men" does work, and rather effectively.

It's 2027, women are infertile, death comes everyday, migrants are a complex deal, rebellions arise all over the world, and there is a suicide drug named "Quietus." Motto: "You decide when." Shelled by the excellent Clive Owen is Theo, a lazy and mundane man who has lost his son to, yes, a flu pandemic in 2008. His first portrayal is a scene in which he is walking into a coffee shop -the youngest person in the world, age 18, has just died- buying a usual cup of coffee, and putting a sip of rum in it. An instant later, an explosion. It nearly kills him. Cuarón lays clues and evidence all over the film, especially through vivid examples of people, mostly illegal immigrants, being locked up on the street, and random, but important advertisements. Theo really doesn’t care much about the world, that is, until his ex-wife (Moore with no English accent), the leader of pro-immigrant rebels, presses him into retrieving a pair of illegal travel passes in the hopes of reaching a group of much-rumored, never-confirmed off-shore scientists called The Human Project. Their motives, tied to the well-being of a young immigrant (Claire-Hope A****ey), will soon become clear, but only after the cost of failure has been made equally clear. Kee, played by A****ey, is visibly pregnant, and after a serious of insolent truths about the rebels themselves, Theo is now bound to help Kee. They set off, and eventually reach their destination, which marks the end of the film.

Cuarón's graceful camera, the movement of characters across the frame, and the magnificent acting collectively evoke a genial sense of place. But while the film's exo-skeleton is a memorable and vivid one, the film does have its minor narrative flaws. But what ultimately saves the film from darkness (just imagine if it were Ridley Scott) is Cuarón himself. Without overemphasis, Cuarón beautifully bends gritty realistic scenes and predictable ones to his own canon; he changes the rules of the game, and he is very well aware that only he can do such a thing in a film with a what-if standpoint. He includes mettlesome action scenes (all which are masterfully detailed) with exuberant dialogue, and we truly realize what an brilliant director he is. While "Children of Men" is not his best film, his diversified directing is fluently proven in this piece work. His previous works, including the terrific "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" and "Y Tu Mama Tambien", have all spanned from drama to fantasy, and all over again with this rare and futuristic film.

There is a striking scene late in the film, after a serious of some major 'bam bams' and deaths, where Theo tries to find the newly-born infant that Kee had unwillingly exerted out of her young abdomen the night before. Everything but the young baby's cries fill the screen. He soon finds her, and he brings Kee along with the baby out of the decrepit building which they were using as shelter. Soldiers cease fire. People hold out there arms and cry. They all forget why they are fighting, and if there is any cause for it in the first place. It is evident that Cuarón has a gift only the greatest filmmakers share: he makes you believe.

-Oracle

P.S. Watching the film on DVD made it only better. I was uniquely grabbed this time more than the first.


stevilbot  8

the filmwork in this is amazon. you have to see it for the long takes that are all over the place. the story is compelling, though you're forced to fill in the blanks on some of the plot lines.

highly recommended.


aplesko  6

Dack knocked it out of the park with his analysis. I had a hard time following the script at times.