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Pandorum

Other // R // September 25, 2009
List Price: Unknown [Buy now and save at Anrdoezrs]

Review by Brian Orndorf | posted September 25, 2009 | E-mail the Author

"Pandorum" is primarily sponsored by claustrophobia and glow sticks. Created with slippery, slicing European instincts, this sci-fi/horror voyage into the dark recesses of the mind is perhaps best appreciated with the sound off. A gorgeous production design can't save the picture from trying too hard to dazzle with very little inspiration, and while "Pandorum" is easy to stare at, it can be a seriously punishing sit.

Forcefully awoken out of hyper-sleep, astronauts Bower (Ben Foster) and Payton (Dennis Quaid) are left with little memory and power to help acclimate them to life onboard a massive spaceship heading to an unknown destination. Sent to restart the power source, Bower crawls into the bowels of the ship with only minimal light to guide him. Instead of help, Bower stumbles upon a group of warrior-types who are trying to elude a mob of killer mutant creatures multiplying throughout the ship. As for Payton, he has to deal with a paranoid crew member (Cam Gigandet) who might be lost in the throes of "Pandorum," a special form of madness that turns his initial confusion into a major threat.

Directed by Christian Alvart ("Antibodies"), "Pandorum" is more easily described as a riff on the 1997 chiller, "Event Horizon." Both films share a curiosity with deep space madness and the isolation of interstellar travel, observing characters hurtling toward the unknown, facing horrors both real and imagined. While "Horizon" was a more literal descent into Hell, "Pandorum" itches to play deadly mind games and flop around in mutant spit.

Alvart shows a promising eye for forbidding spaces, shoving the audience into impossibly tight confines and encouraging his actors to freak their way out. If there's anything to admire about "Pandorum," it has to be Alvart's obsession with depicting discomfort and panic, getting the characters into narrow situations that immediately lack sufficient air flow. However, that's the last of my appreciation, as "Pandorum" is all too eager to engage in hysteria to cover the holes in the script.

Wearing his Ridley Scott cape, Alvart aims for a coolly stylish look to "Pandorum," with hard cinematography, steamy hallways, and strange light sources joining together to add a layer of menace to the tale. Ostensibly a monster movie, "Pandorum" is better off as an obvious haunted house experience, with liberal usage of shock jumps and gore to keep viewers on their toes, but it never terrifies. There are a few futuristic touches that keep things interesting, but the majority of the film is Bower dodging ghouls, running around the cavernous ship on the hunt for power. At least with the mutants, "Pandorum" is numbingly predictable. Once it goes inside the mind, it just gets embarrassing.

While everyone looks the part, the casting flatlines quickly. Watching Foster's bug-eyed, clenched-jawed performance is almost comforting in its inevitability -- the actor always gravitates toward roles that require painfully obvious, showy behaviors. Quaid does his grunt routine with limited effort. It's Gigandet who smashes the film to bits, offering an agonizingly vacant performance for perhaps the most crucial character of the feature. His limited abilities are stretched beyond comfort, with Alvart displaying more effort timing out his strobe lights than keeping Gigandet panicked within reason. I never thought I'd see the day when it wasn't Foster ruining a movie.

The who? The what? The where? "Pandorum" enjoys a healthy portion of sci-fi twists and turns as the production reaches for a fitting finale. I didn't buy the closer, but at least Alvart is finally trying to challenge the audience beyond spooky, sweaty beasts jumping into the camera. A derivative production from the get-go, "Pandorum" loses steam with every forward step, leaving the conclusion more welcome for its finality than its resolution.


For further online adventure, please visit brianorndorf.com

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