Equilibrium

by Kurt Wimmer (Director)

Other authorsSean Bean (Actor), Emily Watson (Actor), David Hemmings (Actor), Klaus Badelt (Composer), Christian Bale (Actor), Dominic Purcell (Actor), Jan de Bont (Producer), William Fichtner (Actor), Lucas Foster (Producer), Brian Conley (Actor), Kurt Wimmer (Author)11 more, Kurt Wimmer (Actor), Sean Pertwee (Actor), Taye Diggs (Actor), Dion Beebe (Cinematographer), Matthew Harbour (Actor), Tom Rolf (Editor), William Yeh (Editor), Angus Macfadyen (Actor), Maria Pia Calzone (Actor), Emily Siewert (Actor), Alexa Summer (Actor)
DVD, 2002

Description

In the future, after a Third World War has decimated much of the Earth's population, a new nation arose. Believing human emotions and their expression were to blame for the failings of past societies, it is decreed that all citizens must take a daily dose of a drug which levels out the emotional landscape, and that all forms of creative expression are against the law. An elite law enforcement officer who tracks down and punishes "sense offenders" one day, accidentally, fails to take his drug, and for the first time begins experiencing emotions himself.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2002

Publication

Lionsgate (2002)

Library's rating

½

Library's review

Part of my enjoying this movie so much does of course have to do with when I saw it -- I hadn't seen a lot of dystopian action films at that point in my life, and so this likely seemed more different than it actually was. But that's only part of it; the movie's really quite good. It has some minor
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believability issues and plot holes, but they all tend to be regarding the unimportant stuff -- the logic of the "gun kata", how the world arranges marriages and children if emotions are prohibited, and so forth -- while the emotional and thematic core of the movie holds steady. The mood of the film is excellent -- grim without being insufferably depressing, the pacing deliberate without feeling slow. For all their questionable logic, the fight sequences look amazing. The movie has enough callbacks in dialogue and plot that it feels like it rewards you for paying attention, and enough twists that, while perhaps none of them individually very surprising, even on my fifth watch (admittedly 15 years after the first one) I didn't feel sure I remembered exactly what would happen at any given time. It's not a Great film, but it's a solid and good one, and I'm pretty sure going to keep being happy to keep rewatching every five to ten years.
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Rating

½ (24 ratings; 3.6)

User reviews

LibraryThing member capewood
2021 movie #185. 2002. Preston (Bale) is a Cleric who hunts down sense crimes in this dystopian future where the gov't drugs everyone to deaden feelings. When Preston goes off his meds he begins a journey to the underground resulting in revolution. OK film but very violent.
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