...and by the way, it's a pretty good one.
Philip K. Dick is an amazing science fiction writer, and when I saw his name as the inspiration to this film, it gave me hope. He creates sci-fi that has a humanity as its creamy and tasty center. Many of his stories have been the muse for films: Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report...and now Adjustment Bureau.
Although the story is very different from the movie - the premise is still there: that in some small way, our destinies are chosen, but in an even smaller part known as "free will" we have the ability to alter it to create a destiny all our own.
The first character is David Morris (Matt Damon), who is on the losing end of a U.S. Senate congressional campaign which he is a candidate. He visits a men's room in the hotel where the campaign is being held, in order to think of what he will say to the public before moving on. And in this restroom, out of one of the stalls, comes his destiny - dressed in high heels and a satin dress no less - in the name of Elise Sellas (Emily Blunt). She's overheard some of his ramblings about what he was going to say to the press and the longer she waited the weirder it would have been to just "pop out". So they talk. He laughs. She explains she has crashed another party in the hotel and must flee. He smiles (and isn't that all that Matt Damon really has to do), and there is an instant connection. Then she is gone.
That inspiration causes David to make a most engaging speech, which swells his popularity when he runs for the same campaign again...then comes the wrinkle: That meeting was not suppose to happen, because now he can't stop thinking about her.
Run Forest...I mean David...Run! |
It is at this time we meet The Adjustment Bureau or "The Men In Hats". Richardson (John Slattery) is one of these men, the leader of sorts, who assigns another adjuster Harry Mitchell (Anthony Mackie), to distract David enough so that he misses the bus on which Elise is riding. Mind you...this is three years later, and David is still awe-struck. When these two meet...oh my goodness, the fireworks may light up the eastern skies. But being an adjuster is a tiring job I would hazard to guess; going through life causing such minor distractions in ordinary lives, so that those distractions can keep these chance meetings from interrupting what appears to be destiny that touches other lives, changing their destiny...and so on, and so on...whew!
Touched By An Angel |
In a separate facility, David is told about the Adjustment Bureau, and how his destiny is to be great, but it cannot happen if his continues to see Elise. Her destiny too will be great...if she does not see him. But to David, love creates its own destiny, and although he is warned not to tell her (or his mind will be erased completely), he isn't strong enough to do it. He isn't strong enough to be without her. He isn't strong enough to forget her...and as events unfold, he is on the run - with Elise pulled along with him, as she too is pushed into the back curtain of reality and sees what lies there. She is scared - but she too believes in love. They are already thinking as one.
The Adjustment Bureau is very fast paced, as the two lovers first find the strength to pursue their own paths, and run from the path given them. Anthony Mackie - who plays Harry, the one who misstep at the bus stop caused much of this - soon becomes an ally, and his portrayal of a man who has empathy for his boss and his "client", becomes the voice of the audience. He delivers a great performance, one that is reserved but filled with a quiet inner strength of a man who struggles with decisions he is not sure he can no longer agree with.
Matt Damon isn't doing his Borne-Thing this time, but his versatility as an action hero really pays off in this movie, because we feel his will and determination as an unstoppable force. It is this force, and the inner conflicts these characters have, that make this less of a science fiction adventure (although the various elements are there), it is grounded in this time, this moment, and that makes it real to us too.
We are running along with them, determined to make it on our own...and if we fail, at least we tried.
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