Monday, October 31, 2011

MOVIE OF THE MONTH: NOVEMBER 2011

            
Director        :Andrew Niccol
Writer          : Andrew Niccol
Camera        : Roger Deakins
Distributor    : 20th Century Fox
Runnng Time: 115 minutes

There are only a handful of science fiction movies that deserve or achieve the level of being called a cult classic. Such futuristic “controlled society” programs as Logan’s Run, Escape From New York and The Island came to mind quickly when the trailers were released for Justin Timberlake’s new sci-fi adventure In Time. It’s easy to compare the story ideas of a world where people stop aging at 25 and are running on a society where an implanted life clock replaces currency.

Previously titled Now and I'm.mortal, In time has a story set in a retro-future when the aging gene has been switched off. At the age of 25, aging stops, meaning that everyone looks 25 forever and could be immortal. But to prevent overpopulation, each person is genetically engineered so that by default they have just one more year to live after 25. Embedded in their arm is a bioluminescent clock displaying how much time they have left. Once the clock reaches zero, they die.  

But this does not mean that everyone automatically dies at 26. Time can be transferred into and out of persons, and therefore, it has become the new currency. People earn time by working and spend it to pay for everyday necessities. For example, in the film, a coffee costs four minutes and a day's labor in a factory will earn a worker a little over 24 hours. Time can also be stolen or robbed from another person. Consequently, the poor are constantly trying to earn, steal, beg, or borrow enough time to stay alive for one more day, while the rich can theoretically live forever (unless they are murdered or killed in accidents).     

Different economic classes are segregated into different "time zones." To preserve the status quo, it costs a whole year just to cross the border into a wealthy time zone.A wealthy man named Henry Hamilton (Matt Bomer) goes to a bar in the impoverished time zone of Dayton, having over a hundred years left on his clock. He attracts some unwanted attention from a gang of robbers who try to steal his time, but is saved by local poor man Will Salas. After they find shelter in an abandoned warehouse, Hamilton explains to Salas that he is 105 years old and tired of life.

Later, while Salas is asleep, Hamilton transfers his time to Salas.  Waking up, Salas discovers he now has over 116 years on his clock. Out the window, he sees Hamilton sitting on the edge of a bridge as his time runs out. Before Salas can do anything, Hamilton dies and falls into the shallow water of a storm drain.Salas uses Hamilton's time to access the wealthy time zone of New Greenwich, but then finds himself accused of Hamilton's murder.  

He is forced to go on the run from an FBI-like police force known as the "Timekeepers" led by Raymond Leon, as well as from a hoodlum-like middle-aged mob called the "Minutemen", led by a senior citizen named Fortis, who is 75 years old. Along the way, Salas become acquainted with Sylvia Weis , and her father, timelending magnate Phillippe Weis.

Courtesy: http://www.rockstarweekly.com

Trailer: http://www.intimemovie.com


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