Under the
Skin (15) 108 mins ****
The Zero
Theorem (15) 107 mins **
To describe Jonathan Glazer’s Under the Skin
as an adaptation of Michel Faber’s novel would be misleading. Mutation might be
more like it. This hybrid of sci-fi freakery, documentary cunning and pop-promo
flair establishes its singularity from its first, abstract stirrings of light
and darkness. Planets collide. Wormholes open up. Minutes pass before we
realise we’ve been watching a process only Lasix patients will have recognised
immediately: the construction of an eye. It’s an apt startpoint for a film
eternally seeking out new ways of looking: at women, men and the human body; at
Glasgow, Scarlett Johansson, and the courtship ritual.
Since 2000’s explosively verbal Sexy Beast, Glazer has been searching for a purely visual means of
expression. He almost got there with 2004’s elegant chiller Birth; his latest pushes further still. Under the Skin initially exists as no
more than a tension stemming from an incongruity: what is the glamorous
Johansson doing driving a transit van through the crowds exiting Celtic Park?
The character seems lost: she keeps stopping to pick up young men – many
apparently unaware they’re on camera – for directions. These lads eye her up (a
stock refrain: “yer gorgeous”), then disappear; it transpires this woman who
fell to earth is an alien succubus, sent to dispatch her victims via a literal
sinkhole of an estate.
You don’t need enhanced vision to spot how the
premise contains intimations of misogyny. As in the recent Her, Johansson has been called upon to embody an avatar of
femininity, rather than a woman per se:
the siren whose call leads those looking to get their rocks off firmly onto the
rocks. Yet somewhere along the line, this deadliest of first contacts becomes
humanising. After she lets one disfigured passenger (Adam Pearson, an actor
with neurofibromatosis) escape into the night, it becomes clear the film is
reaching for something profound, and profoundly tender: the quantum
evolutionary leap we take whenever we begin to look out for one another.
Where previous ad men and promo-makers have
traditionally traded in indiscriminate flash, Glazer’s precision imagery
pitches up on the intersection of realism and surrealism: the film exudes the
uncanny fascination of a UFO parked outside a Londis. This director can stage a
stunning widescreen setpiece, as with the sequence that sees the alien looking
on as a couple are caught in a riptide while trying to rescue their dog, but he
also knows to leave in the one detail (the pair’s 18-month-old son, screaming
unattended on the shore as the sun sets on the scene) that will linger in the
mind for days, and nights.
Amid the horror, there is, too, a delight in looking
comparable to The Great Beauty, but
where that film glided serenely across Rome’s gilded surfaces, Glazer’s gaze is
more clinical: it peels back reality to expose those strange and sublime forces
at play in the universe. Both hypnotic and needling, Under the Skin renders the whole world, from the girls in Greggs to
a televised Tommy Cooper routine, as other as its heroine, thereby opening up a
philosophical exploration of who we really are. That, emerging as it does from
within the British film industry’s oft-blinkered confines, should strike any
eye as a significant achievement.
Odd flourishes recall the Gilliam of yore: Matt
Damon, ever-chameleonic, shows up as a corporate overlord wearing a zebraskin
suit indistinguishable from the armchair he’s installed himself in. Elsewhere,
a wiggy David Thewlis surfs the cartoonish tumult in a way the squirmingly
uncomfortable Waltz and Mélanie
Thierry’s icky, fetish-figure love interest never manage. Yet
these are rare dabs of distinction in an otherwise maddening splurge. The cosmic
black hole Gilliam’s camera keeps circling becomes a visual analogue for the
film entire: how disappointing that something capable of generating such
relentless movement at its edges should offer no more, at its centre, than a
glimpse of oblivion.
Under the Skin and The Zero Theorem open in selected cinemas from today.
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