Review: Predestination starring Sarah Snook and Ethan Hawke
REVIEW: In the new film Predestination, Australia’s Sarah Snook is extraordinary – but Ethan Hawke can barely summon any interest.
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THERE is many a deep and meaningless moment in Predestination, but this line takes the cake: “It’s never too late to be who you might have been.”
A nice sentiment ... if you happened to find it inside a cheap fortune cookie.
However, it’s a bit rich when said out loud in a time-travel movie that wastes a lot of time, and barely travels anywhere.
Predestination is the third work from Brisbane’s talented Spierig brothers. It’s also their third straight effort where a smattering of good, left-of-centre ideas is spread far too thinly.
Whether by design or delusion, the Spierigs conspicuously back away from the calendar-shredding urgency of modern time-travel classics such as Looper and Source Code.
ANDROGYNOUS: Sarah Snook’s new role in Predestination
Instead, almost 50 valuable minutes of their movie is blown on a stilted, slogging exploration of a backstory that should have been shaved down to a swift flashback sequence or two.
Lead actors Sarah Snook and Ethan Hawke spend the first half of Predestination nattering away in a scuzzy booze joint in the 1970s.
Snook plays a man who used to be a woman who once had a baby and almost became an astronaut. Hawke plays a time-travelling secret agent working undercover as a barman while pursuing a dangerous terrorist known as the Fizzle Bomber.
Once the filmmakers finally remember to shift gears and get going with the good stuff — and it must be said the actual schematics of the script’s time-travel content is fascinating stuff — it is far too late.
How late? Too late for Predestination to be what it might have been.
Bit of a shame, really, as the breathtaking range displayed by Snook to meet the imposing demands of her unusual character deserved a better showcase than this.
The Australian actor remains decisively engaged to proceedings throughout, whereas the best vibe Hawke can summon is faintly interested on the odd occasion.
Director: The Spierig Brothers (Daybreakers)
Starring: Ethan Hawke, Sarah Snook, Noah Taylor.
2 stars
Originally published as Review: Predestination starring Sarah Snook and Ethan Hawke