Cannes Film Festival 2013

Review: Tom Hanks and Halle Berry take a soulful journey in the transcendent 'Cloud Atlas'

Tom Tykwer and Lana and Andy Wachowski join forces for a challenging, daring new vision

  • Critic's Rating A+
  • Readers' Rating A
<p>Halle Berry and Tom Hanks are just two of the actors who took the incredible journey of 'Cloud Atlas' with Lana and Andy Wachowski and Tom Tykwer</p>

Halle Berry and Tom Hanks are just two of the actors who took the incredible journey of 'Cloud Atlas' with Lana and Andy Wachowski and Tom Tykwer

Credit: Warner Bros.

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I can tell you this:  we'll definitely be running a Second Look piece about this film after it's in theaters, because it is a remarkable movie experience, one that cannot be digested easily, and any attempt to dig in fully would rob you of the sense of discovery that washed over me as I sat in the theater.

No matter what the subject matter, the combination of Lana and Andy Wachowski and Tom Tykwer would be reason enough to be excited.  The novel they adapted, though, is something very special, and a huge challenge for anybody looking to turn it into a film.  Walking into the film, I was hoping for something ambitious and different.  What I got was one of my two favorite films of the year so far, a movie I'll be returning to again and again, a unique and beautiful work of film art that dares to dream big in a way we rarely see from either studios or independent sources.

There are six interlocking stories that make up the movie, and at the start of the film, we are taken through each of them chronologically.  The first takes place in the south Pacific in the year 1850, and it deals with the journey of Adam Ewing (Jim Sturgess), a notary who has no business being at sea, and his unorthodox relationship with another passenger.  In the second story, set in 1931, Robert Frobisher (Ben Whishaw) finds work as the assistant to a composer (Jim Broadbent) who is in his waning years.  The third story is set in the mid-70s, and it's about Luisa Rey (Halle Berry), an investigative reporter who is determined to learn the truth about a potential health hazard at a nuclear power plant with the help of a whistleblower played by Tom Hanks.  In the fourth story, Jim Broadbent stars as Timothy Cavendish, a publisher who finds himself in trouble with gangsters over a book he's publishing, and he ends up locked away in a nursing home run by the loathsome Nurse Noakes (Hugo Weaving).  The fifth story takes place in a gorgeous futuristic version of Seoul and deals with Sonmi-451, a service clone who becomes a significant figure in a rebellious uprising against the status quo.  Finally, the movie jumps into the far future, after the end of what we think of as modern civilization, to tell the story of Zarchry (Hanks again), a tribesman who is asked to help Meronym (Berry again) with a very specific quest.

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The film deals first with the notion of how stories serve as both history and as a way of making sense of who we are.  Characters from one segment appear in letters in another or in movies that we see in passing or even as stories shared around a campfire.  But the bigger connection here is that these completely different characters in all of these radically different times and places are all the same souls, colliding again and again as they move through time.  Identity is a malleable thing, with bodies serving merely as temporary containers for the essence that remains constant through time.  It seems particularly appropriate that this is the first film to feature a credit onscreen for Lana Wachowski as writer and director, and it fits neatly into the overall thematic interests that both Tykwer and the Wachowskis have explored in the past.

The idea of using a small cast to play roles in each of the different segments, some of the actors changing race and gender over the various stories, is definitely risky, but I honestly believe that if you're going to make something truly great, you have to be willing to be completely embarrassed.  I'd always rather see real ambition that falls short as opposed to someone playing it safe with something we've seen before.  "Cloud Atlas" is hard to describe if your only touchstones are other films because it doesn't feel like any other movie I can name.  It's not just the way the film was made or cast… it's the types of stories being told.  Don't expect conventional punchlines here.  Instead, these stories push moral and ethical buttons in some unusual and even oblique ways, and there is plenty of room in the film for every viewer to have a different experience with what they see.  There's a sense of trust on the part of the filmmakers that the audience will be willing to work for the pleasures that are strewn throughout, and there's also a deeply heartfelt optimism even in the film's darkest moments that makes it stand apart from the typical dystopian vision of most modern science fiction.

The cinematography by Frank Griebe and John Toll is daring and lush, and the score is equally rich and rewarding, with contributions from Reinhold Heil, Johnny Klimek, and Tykwer himself, who wrote the "Cloud Atlas Sextet," a key puzzle piece in the larger canvass of the film.  In the end, "Cloud Atlas" is a film that dares to imagine something beyond what is typically done in big-budget filmmaking, dense and daring, and as with "Speed Racer," I'm sure some people will be thrown by the basic cinema vocabulary on display.  Nothing is spoon-fed to you, and I walked out of my screening almost drunk on the potential of movie storytelling and the idea that there are plenty of frontiers left for us to explore.  It is easy to be worn down by Hollywood's constant stream of remakes and sequels and comic books, but all it takes is one "Cloud Atlas" for me to once again believe that anything is possible if the right artists are given room to experiment.

While it may not be for everyone, "Cloud Atlas" is one of my very favorite films this year.  You'll be able to judge for yourself when it opens on October 26.

Drew-mcweeny-sm
Drew McWeeny
Film Editor
A respected critic and commentator for fifteen years, Drew McWeeny helped create the online film community as "Moriarty" at Ain't It Cool News, and now proudly leads two budding Film Nerds in their ongoing movie education.
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  • Annie8bit_talkback_profile

    Stormshadow4life

    I do wanna see this movie, but I wonder if it'd better to read the book (which I have) first....or just see the movie...

    September 9, 2012 at 12:18AM EST Reply to Comment
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      dave Definitely read the book - one of my favorites

      September 9, 2012 at 12:57AM EST
    • Stas_talkback_profile

      AshyLarry81 I was wondering that too

      September 9, 2012 at 8:38PM EST
    • Default-avatar

      DefRef Any movie that requires reading the book has failed as a movie. Period.

      September 10, 2012 at 1:25PM EST
    • Annie8bit_talkback_profile

      Stormshadow4life That's not really why i asked....I prefer to read or watch whichever one is overall the better experience. Usually that's the book...sometimes (rarely) it is the movie

      September 10, 2012 at 2:24PM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Mark "Any movie that requires reading the book has failed as a movie. Period."

      A film's success or failure pretty much always comes down the the individual's experience with it and how they choose to experience the story. Period.

      September 11, 2012 at 1:33PM EST
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    Gareth

    Great to hear that you liked it. What's your other favorite movie of the year?

    September 9, 2012 at 12:22AM EST Reply to Comment
    • Default-avatar

      JJR My guess is Holy Motors, or maybe Looper.

      September 9, 2012 at 1:51AM EST
    • All_purpose_icon_talkback_profile

      drew JJR nailed it. "Holy Motors." And they'd make an astonishing double-feature.

      September 9, 2012 at 11:49AM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Shawn Holy Motors, Looper, Cloud Atlas, The Dark Knight Rises, Moonrise Kingdom, West of Memphis, Paul Williams Still Alive, Wrong, Sinister, Rust and Bone = Unofficial Top 10??

      September 11, 2012 at 10:49PM EST
  • Batboy_talkback_profile

    Rev. Slappy

    Broadbent is so fantastic in this.

    September 9, 2012 at 1:10AM EST Reply to Comment
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    Eyes

    Sounds great, and it's inspiring if it helps carve a future for big-budget independent movies.

    I don't doubt its special ambition, but at least the future pidgin English part of the book is well known to riff on Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (also, by the way, very much a groundbreaking movie). I hope it wasn't beneath the Wachowskis to reference that.

    And could the nostalgia freaks hold off on trying to reclaim Speed Racer as work of greatness? It's liquid manure from start to finish, a disaster on every level and (I assume) played a big part in the Wachowskis not getting big studio funding. Maybe their movie about karma will be a useful reminder.

    September 9, 2012 at 1:14AM EST Reply to Comment
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      Brendan That's silly. You're allowed to not like something, but that doesn't mean that someone else is wrong if they feel differently. And that's from someone who didn't really like it either...

      September 9, 2012 at 1:39AM EST
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      Guest Guesto Speed Racer is fucking amazing. Love that film to pieces.

      September 9, 2012 at 1:42AM EST
    • Speed racer was an almost perfect adaptation of its source.

      September 9, 2012 at 3:22AM EST
    • Shaggy_werewolf_talkback_profile

      That Werewolf Guy I never saw an episode of the original Speed Racer cartoon, but I love the movie to death!

      September 9, 2012 at 3:29AM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Eyes Some people like Speed Racer, and that's great for them and nobody can question that affection. As long as it isn't expressed as 'Speed Racer Is Unappreciated Genius', because that's a fandom trying to redefine a standard in a way other people don't accept.

      September 9, 2012 at 8:42AM EST
    • A_monty_talkback_profile

      Monty Jack Speed Racer is the biggest piece of shit I've seen in the last decade...it's a CATASTROPHIC failure.

      September 9, 2012 at 9:18AM EST
    • All_purpose_icon_talkback_profile

      drew I disagree, Eyes. I will defend "Speed Racer" both as text and as style. I think it makes some really strong points about family, and I think it does so wrapped up in an almost-experimental palette with visuals that dare you to keep up.

      I don't really care if you "accept" it or not. You're free to not like it, but you can't tell me that my affection for the film is just nostalgia, since I'm not really a fan of the show. It's all about that movie and the wild sugar-rush cinematic vocabulary on display.

      September 9, 2012 at 11:51AM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Eyes Well, we could say that Tony Scott's Domino has text and style and experimentation, but it's trash from start to finish. Even so, it shows that Scott was a master craftsman and well ahead of the curve. Much like the Wachowskis. I'm looking forward to Cloud Atlas because at least the material is solid and suited to thoughtful moviemaking.

      By the way, when I said nostalgia, I meant nostalgia for 2008, not 1967. We moviegoers are all expected to have forgotten the 20th century by now. It doesn't seem like the movie had much of a nostalgia brand to trade on, at least not in its intended demographic.

      September 9, 2012 at 1:53PM EST
    • Shaggy_werewolf_talkback_profile

      That Werewolf Guy That doesn't make any sense. Do your really think that anybody outthere thinks "Oh yeah, 4 years ago, when I was a kid, I watched SPEED RACER and it totally rocked back then"? I know, we live in fast times, but I think you have to give nostalgia at least 10 years of incubation time. People have nostalgic feelings for TRANSFORMERS and GI JOE because of the 80s cartoons and not the movies that came out just a handful of years ago!

      September 9, 2012 at 3:55PM EST
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      Al There was nothing to Speed Racer....at all. They got lost in effects, sorry, I wanted it to be great, it just seriously wasn't.

      September 9, 2012 at 5:08PM EST
    • All_purpose_icon_talkback_profile

      drew http://www.aintitcool.com/node/36652

      That's my original review of the film, and I feel just as strongly about it now. As I said, I'm totally fine with someone not feeling the same way, but when someone tells me "there's nothing to Speed Racer," I'm going to have to disagree wholeheartedly. If you can't see past the style, that's not because there's nothing there.

      September 9, 2012 at 7:40PM EST
    • Yodachilliresize_bigger_talkback_profile

      BigAl6ft6 Speed Racer really irritated me. My head hurt. Not from it bending my brain but my eyes wanted to crawl out of my skull by the end. Ow.

      September 10, 2012 at 1:59AM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Johnson Pacco If your not high on LSD, you won't like Speed Racer. Period.

      September 11, 2012 at 10:42PM EST
  • Default-avatar

    S

    Bae Doona good?

    September 9, 2012 at 5:39AM EST Reply to Comment
    • A_monty_talkback_profile

      Monty Jack Die Wanna Wanga!

      September 9, 2012 at 3:01PM EST
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    JoeK

    Wow this is exciting to hear. It's kind of cool to read this after all The Master talk of late and after seeing The Life of Pi trailer today theatrically for the first time (at Raiders IMAX D, which also previewed Skyfall and The Hobbit, which were equally awesome).

    Lots to look forward to.

    September 9, 2012 at 7:52AM EST Reply to Comment
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    David D.

    This is really encouraging. Drew, do you have any idea why this has never been mentioned -- even on this very site -- as a major Oscar contender, and do you think its status will change?

    September 9, 2012 at 11:31AM EST Reply to Comment
    • All_purpose_icon_talkback_profile

      drew No idea. I do not cover the awards scene because I hate trying to navigate the politics of it. I can only tell you that the movie exhilarated me and that I think it's bold and beautiful.

      September 9, 2012 at 11:52AM EST
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    blake

    Drew are you reviewing The Master

    September 9, 2012 at 12:31PM EST Reply to Comment
    • Default-avatar

      DefRef He already reviewed The Master a day or two ago. He was disappointed by it.

      September 10, 2012 at 1:27PM EST
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    Mark

    "Transcendent" was the word that I got me the most pumped. I read the book during a recent trip to Peru (an experience in itself transcendent and life-changing). In the downtime of airports and transcontinental flights, Cloud Atlas was a beautiful diversion. Then we got that amazing trailer, which itself elevated the notion of what a trailer can make us feel. So it's heartening to know that the movie is having a similar affect on so many people who have seen it. I wanted this film to swing for the fences. It appears to be dividing many critics, but art SHOULD divide people.

    September 9, 2012 at 1:22PM EST Reply to Comment
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    kyled13

    So happy you gave it such a good review. I usually agree with you guys so I'm hoping its the same for this. The book was so good and I'm glad they found the perfect directors for such a complicated idea. Can't wait now!

    September 9, 2012 at 4:52PM EST Reply to Comment
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    filmboy34

    This is the movie of the Fall for me. I am currently reading the novel by David Mitchell. Right now I am in the section with Frobisher. It has been a tedious read to this point, but I am willing to go the distance with it.

    As far as the film, I cannot wait. The Wachowskis may have some failures, but they always seem to swing for the fences. They never seem to shy away from big ideas and subject matters that have as much intelligence to them as they have heart.

    I love what they tried to do with Speed Racer and I felt there were good things to pull out of those much maligned final two Matrix films. The Wachowski's are brave filmmakers, unafraid to fail. I love filmmakers, and quite frankly people, like that. I am glad to hear that this film may be every bit of the masterpiece I thought it might.

    Thanks Drew for the review.

    September 10, 2012 at 10:30AM EST Reply to Comment
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    DefRef

    If anything, this review makes me more wary of Cloud Atlas that I was before. For the longest time I've found Drew's opinions tracking with mine, but recently not only has he diverged (not that he has to agree with me, but Melancholia was 10 seconds of Kirsten Dunst's boobs and two hours of the Wagner score trying to make nothingness seem substantial) but has gotten belligerent in his tone about it. Really? Slagging people who weren't dazzled by the acid-trip colors of Meth Racer as missing the family story? Methinks Drew was transferring his personal family feelings into the void of the Wachowski's shining nothingness.

    I'm also worried about the impression that reading the book will be mandatory for having a clue as to what' happening on the screen. As I replied to someone above, a movie that requires reading the source has failed as a movie. Period. I have Cloud Atlas, but it's extremely unlikely that I'll get it read ever, much less before the film drops.

    I agree that I'd rather see a movie swing for the fences of originality and strike out than play it safe and boring, but there is also a temptation to grade movies for their ambition rather than their execution. The audience isn't plunking down $10 to see try; they want to see succeed for their money. I think critics who get in for free tend to forget that investment since it's not costing them anything other than wasted time and they're getting paid to opine to boot.

    September 10, 2012 at 1:39PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Steve Spending money at the ticket window does not automatically give someone a more educated view of the art of Cinema. And when someone's viewpoint begins to diverge from your own you have the right to stop following his writings. No need to call his motivation into question.

      September 11, 2012 at 1:18PM EST
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    tonytr87

    This is already rotten on RT. It's not getting Oscar attention. It's a mess they say.

    September 12, 2012 at 10:03AM EST Reply to Comment
    • Pic_talkback_profile

      forg It started as rotten but now it's up to 74%, too early to tell since the reviews are still few. But a premise like this will always be divisive

      September 12, 2012 at 11:11PM EST
  • Default-avatar

    JamesT

    I saw this a TIFF on Saturday Drew, and I couldn't agree more. My mind has been running over the details of the whole film and I can't believe such an intricate and emotional piece of filmmaking was created. It's a powerful experience that deserves so much praise for not only it's ambition, but it's success in achieving it's ambition. Few films affect me like "Cloud Atlas" did.

    September 17, 2012 at 12:05AM EST Reply to Comment
  • Default-avatar

    Dan Tanguay

    Now that I've seen it, I'm looking forward to your in depth Second Look.

    October 29, 2012 at 8:12AM EST Reply to Comment

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