Chappie (2015)

chappie-poster

Release date: March 5, 2015
Director: Neill Blomkamp
Screenplay by: Neill Blomkamp, Terri Tatchell
Cast: Sharlto Copley, Dev Patel, Ninja, Yo-Landi Visser, Jose Pablo Cantillo, Brandon Auret, Hugh Jackman, Sigourney Weaver

I’m shocked (no, not really) that Chappie doesn’t even cross the 30% RT Tomatometer, while Elysium stands at over 65%, but I suppose people are much more into class clashes where the poor battle it out with the rich than… exploring artificial intelligence. While a lot of people like to bring up RoboCop (not exactly A.I. in the strict sense of the word- he was human before being a robot, no?) and Short Circuit, I’m seeing Chappie as a very early prelude for Time of Eve, which I think is the finest story on artificial intelligence I’ve seen so far.

Blomkamp’s third feature sci-fi entry is a fleshed out (and often convoluted) version of his 2004 short Tetra Vaal, in which the city of Johannesburg is being patrolled by police robots, developed in the film by Deon Wilson (Patel) making loads of money for Tetravaal’s Michelle Bradley (Weaver) and its investors. South Africa has managed to reduce crime rates with minimum police deaths, and Tetravaal is looking for expansion into other markets, but the only person that seems unhappy with the developments is ex-military Vincent Moore (Jackman), whose chunky and -still- human-dependent MOOSE project is choking for funds.

When his quest for a true free-will conscious program is over, Deon secretly tests it on a police robot that’s been recently damaged on the field, resulting in the child-like Chappie (Copley).

In a recent interview, Blomkamp admits [1][2] he can get carried away with an idea at the cost of a strong script, and it seems to be present here as well- visually, Chappie holds that similar grit of his previous entry showcasing the growing violence of a developing nation that’s about to collapse. That feeling of insecurity is so familiar to anyone that lives in Latin America (at least), and thus creates a world that wouldn’t be too far off. What I would’ve wanted more of is Chappie and his relationship with gangsters Yo-Landi and Ninja (South African hip hop duo Die Antwoord, whom everyone seems to be hating) alongside Amerika (Cantillo), instead of the big booms (but still underwhelming) battle with the giant robot that Jackman commanded as the stereotypical fear-monger. I did feel certain excitement when I saw that body split into two, though. Teehee, guilty.

What sets the film apart is the build up of these unlikable thugs who are set to corrupt this kid-robot to their advantage, they have the biggest arcs in this story- Patel’s character is never build strongly, while Jackman and Weaver just fizzled, so it’s the South Africans that have to carry the big weight around… and critics seem to hate them! I can’t believe people are comparing him to Jar Jar Binks. In one of the strongest scenes, Chappie is captured by Moore and is literally violated to the point he loses the back of his head and an arm, fluid spilling as if it were blood.

There was a certain All Is Full of Love [MV] beauty by the end, though I felt that resolution was done way too quickly and was a little convenient. Then again~ I’m the crazy one that actually liked the ideas discussed in Transcendence.

Rating: ★★★½☆ 

amy

YAM Magazine editor, photographer, blogger, translator and part-time web designer. Film junkie, music junkie… and lately series (a.k.a. TV) junkie.

3 Responses

  1. Rodrigo says:

    Chappie made me think of RoboCop, Wall-E, District 9, Big Hero 6, Transcendence and even Boyhood, especially with the shot of Yolandi reading a book to Chappie.

    Today, I played Die Antwoord songs at work. Some people can get annoyed with them, sort of. Lol. I thought they were kinda fun to watch with Chappie, but not fine in the acting department. Then again, I think we’ve seen worse acting from singers sometimes. But the transition between being a full-blown comedy and then going back to being a serious action-drama-thriller doens’t feel so smooth in Chappie. Still was interesting to watch at the first time. IDK how a second viewing will hold for Chappie, though.

    • Amy says:

      If Elysium is a 65, then Chappie deserves a 70. According to my mom the whole premise of Deon installing consciousness in Chappie is faulty because… “it’s stupid” LOL She wondered why he even offered free-will robots to a company offering tools. Tetravaal wasn’t interested in artificial inteligence, it wanted useful machines- so everything goes wrong from the get-go xD

      I couldn’t even comment on Die Antwoord’s acting because… they’re basically playing themselves. I mean, they didn’t even change character names LOL I know I rage on Timberlake for his sucky acting, but if someone made him act as a Justin pop musician who used to be a teen pop idol in a boyband and he plays himself, I can’t help it. JT playing JT without trying to hide it. You could argue then whether Leo D did the performance of a lifetime by playing a Wall St. version of himself in Wolf.

      But I agree, may not have playability factor- same with many many other sci-fi movies, cough- I’m talking about the new Planet of the Apes. xD Or Avatar. Ugh, that one looks even grosser on television.

  1. March 10, 2015

    […] Chappie is about all the shenanigans that happen after a robot named, well, Chappie (voiced by Sharlto Copley) is discovered to have child-like curiosity, innocence and other characteristics, which threatens what humans perceived as the norm. It looks quite err… emotional and “lovely,” despite IMDb labeling this a thriller. […]

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