Children of Men

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Critics' Reviews

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Movie Title
Avg. Score
1.
Blind Side, The
2.
Twilight Saga: New Moon, The
6.
49
Metascore
®
84
Universal Acclaim
out of 100
'Children of Men' a Stunner
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Following a fascinating and quite detailed opening sequence, which proposes that utter chaos will rule the world by 2027, Alfonso Cuarón's "Children of Men" boils down to an elaborate chase movie. But what a chase.

The Mexican director behind both "Y Tu Mamá También" and "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" uses his extraordinarily mobile cameras to capture a modern police state that rounds up refugees and deports them or sends them to Homeland Security camps.

Long, uninterrupted takes are used for everything from intricately choreographed action scenes to a ping-pong game to a scene of the British bureaucrat hero, Theo (Clive Owen), stealthily swiping liquor from his oblivious aging-hippie pal, Jasper (Michael Caine). The lack of editing tricks succeeds in suggesting that real time is passing.

As the movie opens, it's Day 1000 of the siege of Seattle. London-based television propaganda, ignored by much of the populace, insists that "the world has collapsed" and "only Britain soldiers on." Objections to the Iraq war still turn up, and bombs explode whenever politicians need to drum up a little fear.

For reasons that are never explained, everyone's infertile. No babies have been born anywhere for a couple of decades. "Baby" Diego, a young man and the youngest person in the world, is mourned like Princess Diana when he dies.

After nearly getting killed in a terrorist attack, Theo visits Jasper at his country home, where the fatalistic older man is able to satisfy his addiction to homegrown pot and "Ruby Tuesday" (which gets a lot of play on the soundtrack). When Theo is kidnapped by a terrorist group led by his former lover, Julian (Julianne Moore), he's recruited to help a refugee, Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey) — who happens to be the first pregnant woman in 18 years.

Loosely based on an early-1990s novel by P.D. James, "Children of Men" establishes a ruthless tone when one key character is killed off, "Psycho"-style, early in the picture. This certainly heightens the film's intensity (who could be next?), but several interesting peripheral characters disappear too quickly, and it's left to Owen and Ashitey to carry the film's second half.

Fortunately, they're both up to the task. Owen subtly suggests Theo's renewed activism, as he finds himself instinctively protecting Kee while she nears the end of her pregnancy. Ashitey, who was praised for her work in the 2005 Rwanda drama "Shooting Dogs," creates a spirited character who matches Theo's ability to improvise in a tough situation.

Several writers, including Cuarón, worked on the script, which could have done more to flesh out the history between 2006 and 2027. They're good at hinting that 2006 is already Orwellian enough, and that 2027 is a logical extension of today, but what they're very, very good at is creating dazzling chase sequences. Whether it's an old favorite (the bad guys are in pursuit and the car stalls) or a more futuristic bit (storm troopers invading British trains), they know exactly what they're doing.

More movies on MSNBC 

Following a fascinating and quite detailed opening sequence, which proposes that utter chaos will rule the world by 2027, Alfonso Cuarón's "Children of Men" boils down to an elaborate chase movie. But what a chase.

The Mexican director behind both "Y Tu Mamá También" and "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" uses his extraordinarily mobile cameras to capture a modern police state that rounds up refugees and deports them or sends them to Homeland Security camps.

Long, uninterrupted takes are used for everything from intricately choreographed action scenes to a ping-pong game to a scene of the British bureaucrat hero, Theo (Clive Owen), stealthily swiping liquor from his oblivious aging-hippie pal, Jasper (Michael Caine). The lack of editing tricks succeeds in suggesting that real time is passing.

As the movie opens, it's Day 1000 of the siege of Seattle. London-based television propaganda, ignored by much of the populace, insists that "the world has collapsed" and "only Britain soldiers on." Objections to the Iraq war still turn up, and bombs explode whenever politicians need to drum up a little fear.

For reasons that are never explained, everyone's infertile. No babies have been born anywhere for a couple of decades. "Baby" Diego, a young man and the youngest person in the world, is mourned like Princess Diana when he dies.

After nearly getting killed in a terrorist attack, Theo visits Jasper at his country home, where the fatalistic older man is able to satisfy his addiction to homegrown pot and "Ruby Tuesday" (which gets a lot of play on the soundtrack). When Theo is kidnapped by a terrorist group led by his former lover, Julian (Julianne Moore), he's recruited to help a refugee, Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey) — who happens to be the first pregnant woman in 18 years.

Loosely based on an early-1990s novel by P.D. James, "Children of Men" establishes a ruthless tone when one key character is killed off, "Psycho"-style, early in the picture. This certainly heightens the film's intensity (who could be next?), but several interesting peripheral characters disappear too quickly, and it's left to Owen and Ashitey to carry the film's second half.

Fortunately, they're both up to the task. Owen subtly suggests Theo's renewed activism, as he finds himself instinctively protecting Kee while she nears the end of her pregnancy. Ashitey, who was praised for her work in the 2005 Rwanda drama "Shooting Dogs," creates a spirited character who matches Theo's ability to improvise in a tough situation.

Several writers, including Cuarón, worked on the script, which could have done more to flesh out the history between 2006 and 2027. They're good at hinting that 2006 is already Orwellian enough, and that 2027 is a logical extension of today, but what they're very, very good at is creating dazzling chase sequences. Whether it's an old favorite (the bad guys are in pursuit and the car stalls) or a more futuristic bit (storm troopers invading British trains), they know exactly what they're doing.

More movies on MSNBC 

100
The New York Times: Manohla Dargis
Children of Men may be something of a bummer, but it’s the kind of glorious bummer that lifts you to the rafters, transporting you with the greatness of its filmmaking.Read Full Review »
100
Washington Post: Ann Hornaday
Working with his longtime cinematographer Emmanuel "Chivo" Lubezki, Cuaron creates the most deeply imagined and fully realized world to be seen on screen this year, not to mention bravura sequences that bring to mind names like Orson Welles and Stanley Kubrick.Read Full Review »
100
Slate: Dana Stevens
I don't just mean it's one of the best movies of the past six years. Children of Men, based on the 1992 novel by P.D. James, is the movie of the millennium because it's about our millennium, with its fractured, fearful politics and random bursts of violence and terror.Read Full Review »
100
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
Made with palpable energy, intensity and excitement, it compellingly creates a world gone mad that is uncomfortably close to the one we live in. It is a "Blade Runner" for the 21st century, a worthy successor to that epic of dystopian decayRead Full Review »
100
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
This is an extraordinary artistic breakthrough from a Mexican director who was already fearlessly good to begin with.Read Full Review »
100
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
The performances are crucial, because all of these characters have so completely internalized their world that they make it palpable, and themselves utterly convincing.Read Full Review »
100
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's a work of art that deserves a space cleared for its angry, nervous beauty.Read Full Review »
90
Village Voice: J. Hoberman
It's a measure of Cuarón's directorial chops that Children of Men functions equally well as fantasy and thriller. Like Spielberg's "War of the Worlds" and the Wachowski Brothers' "V for Vendetta" (and more consistently than either), the movie attempts to fuse contemporary life with pulp mythology.Read Full Review »
88
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Cuarón has a gift only the greatest filmmakers share: He makes you believe.Read Full Review »
88
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
A chase movie, a spy movie, a futuristic thriller full of colorfully bizarre characters and deftly choreographed stunt work, Children of Men works on multiple levels - as action and allegory.Read Full Review »
See all Children of Men reviews at metacritic.com »