The Fountain

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
51
Mixed or Average Reviews
out of 100
This 'Fountain' Overflows
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Does death represent "the road to awe"? Or is it a disease like any other — just waiting for a cure?

Darren Aronofsky's "The Fountain" asks the big questions and, for an hour and a half, provides only the most tentative of answers. His movie keeps building to some Dolby-speaker-shattering revelation, as its time-tripping hero, Tommy (or Tomas), played by Hugh Jackman, moves from 16th-century Spain to the 21st century to somewhere in 26th century space.

But in the end, it's hard to say what Aronofsky is trying to say, or why he was given $35 million to trap the audience in what appears to be a riddle without a solution. As a puzzle movie, it's far less entertaining than his earlier and equally trippy pictures, "Pi" and "Requiem For a Dream." No wonder Brad Pitt got cold feet and bailed when the picture was originally scheduled to go into production four years ago.

Much of "The Fountain" plays like a long-winded tease, built around Tommy's modern-day attempts to save his wife, Izzy (Rachel Weisz), from the brain cancer that threatens to destroy her. These episodes are bombastically interwoven with his adventures as a conquistador who confronts the ancient Mayans (Weisz turns up as Queen Isabella) and his sudden appearances as a monk-like astronaut in deep space.

There's a hint that Tommy and Isabel are also Adam and Eve, banished from the garden of Eden. There's even a gnarly tree that plays a pivotal role in their odyssey and is apparently meant to represent the Fountain of Youth. Tommy keeps returning to it, always on the brink of communing with its ancient bark.

Like all of Aronofsky's movies, this one is a visual stunner. Especially captivating are his rhyming images of dying stars and floating candles and Christmas lights, which seem interchangeable in the cramped universe he's created. When Jackman performs a shadowy, choreographed kung-fu number, blotting out the tiny lights with his limbs, the magic of the moment is irresistible.

Top honors go to production designer James Chinlund, who worked on "Requiem," and cinematographer Matthew Libatique, who shot both "Pi" and "Requiem" and again does wonders with limited resources. They've once more realized their director's vision; they're just not required to provide an explanation for it.

Jackman and Weisz do what they can to rise above the cardboard used to mold the various incarnations of the characters they play, but they never make a compelling case for the lovers. While we're supposed to care whether Tommy and Izzy can or cannot live together forever, the relationship lacks resonance. Only the repetition of a key moment, during which Tommy must decide between work and play with the tempting Izzy, gathers any emotional force.

"The Fountain" already has a growing fan base made up of admirers who willingly compare it to such hypnotic classics as "Solaris" and "2001: A Space Odyssey." Its midnight-movie future seems assured. But mostly it proves that one person's profundity is another's fortune cookie.

More movies on MSNBC 

Does death represent "the road to awe"? Or is it a disease like any other — just waiting for a cure?

Darren Aronofsky's "The Fountain" asks the big questions and, for an hour and a half, provides only the most tentative of answers. His movie keeps building to some Dolby-speaker-shattering revelation, as its time-tripping hero, Tommy (or Tomas), played by Hugh Jackman, moves from 16th-century Spain to the 21st century to somewhere in 26th century space.

But in the end, it's hard to say what Aronofsky is trying to say, or why he was given $35 million to trap the audience in what appears to be a riddle without a solution. As a puzzle movie, it's far less entertaining than his earlier and equally trippy pictures, "Pi" and "Requiem For a Dream." No wonder Brad Pitt got cold feet and bailed when the picture was originally scheduled to go into production four years ago.

Much of "The Fountain" plays like a long-winded tease, built around Tommy's modern-day attempts to save his wife, Izzy (Rachel Weisz), from the brain cancer that threatens to destroy her. These episodes are bombastically interwoven with his adventures as a conquistador who confronts the ancient Mayans (Weisz turns up as Queen Isabella) and his sudden appearances as a monk-like astronaut in deep space.

There's a hint that Tommy and Isabel are also Adam and Eve, banished from the garden of Eden. There's even a gnarly tree that plays a pivotal role in their odyssey and is apparently meant to represent the Fountain of Youth. Tommy keeps returning to it, always on the brink of communing with its ancient bark.

Like all of Aronofsky's movies, this one is a visual stunner. Especially captivating are his rhyming images of dying stars and floating candles and Christmas lights, which seem interchangeable in the cramped universe he's created. When Jackman performs a shadowy, choreographed kung-fu number, blotting out the tiny lights with his limbs, the magic of the moment is irresistible.

Top honors go to production designer James Chinlund, who worked on "Requiem," and cinematographer Matthew Libatique, who shot both "Pi" and "Requiem" and again does wonders with limited resources. They've once more realized their director's vision; they're just not required to provide an explanation for it.

Jackman and Weisz do what they can to rise above the cardboard used to mold the various incarnations of the characters they play, but they never make a compelling case for the lovers. While we're supposed to care whether Tommy and Izzy can or cannot live together forever, the relationship lacks resonance. Only the repetition of a key moment, during which Tommy must decide between work and play with the tempting Izzy, gathers any emotional force.

"The Fountain" already has a growing fan base made up of admirers who willingly compare it to such hypnotic classics as "Solaris" and "2001: A Space Odyssey." Its midnight-movie future seems assured. But mostly it proves that one person's profundity is another's fortune cookie.

More movies on MSNBC 

83
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
I'm as touched and charmed by its failures as I am transfixed, at times, by its successful inventiveness and audacity.Read Full Review »
63
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
A noble, shipwrecked folly.Read Full Review »
63
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
When a film telling three stories and spanning thousands of years has a running time of 96 minutes, scenes must have been cut out. There will someday be a Director’s Cut of this movie, and that’s the cut I want to see.Read Full Review »
63
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
The overall experience fails to satisfy on a basic level. This is one of those films it's easier to be impressed with than it is to like.Read Full Review »
63
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
In telling a tale of love across time, Aronofsky is sometimes guilty of creating arty, pretentious psychobabble. But in visual terms, he's trying to expose his own raw, romantic heart. Folly? Maybe. But a risk worth taking.Read Full Review »
50
Slate: Dana Stevens
With The Fountain, Aronofsky has become the hero of "Pi," without the desistance or the humility. He not only wants to ask the big questions, he tries to tie it all up with The Big Answer. And that's worse than bad metaphysics, it's bad filmmaking.Read Full Review »
50
The New York Times: A.O. Scott
The problem, though, is that its techniques run too far beyond its ideas, which are blurry and banal, rather than mysterious and resonant. The Fountain is something to see, but it is also much less, finally, than meets the eye.Read Full Review »
50
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano
Bloated and logy, and art-directed within an inch of its life, the movie shovels heaps of phony portent and all-purpose mystical imagery onto a thin and maudlin plot.Read Full Review »
40
Village Voice: J. Hoberman
Solemn, flashy, and flabbergasting, The Fountain--adapted by Darren Aronofsky from his own graphic novel--should really be called The Shpritz. The premise is lachrymose, the sets are clammy, and the metaphysics all wet.Read Full Review »
40
Washington Post: Ann Hornaday
It's a sprawling experiment in philosophical time travel and metaphysical noodling. And it's an earnest, magnificent wreck.Read Full Review »
See all The Fountain reviews at metacritic.com »