Cosmopolis
is David Cronenberg at his most basic. It’s cold and detached, populated with
characters that exhibit no feeling during sex, and even contains some body
horror elements. (In one scene, Robert Pattinson
says, “My prostate is asymmetrical” with the same feeling as someone talking
about the weather.) Strip away the gooey
special effects, warped sexual predilections, and psychological underpinnings
of his best work, and I’m afraid all you’re left with is a stifling,
self-loathing, and lethargic bore. This
is easily his all-time worst film.
Pattinson
stars as a billionaire who takes his high-tech limo to get a haircut. There’s a lot going on in the city on that
particular day. The President is in town,
a rapper’s funeral procession is going through, and there’s a big anarchist
protest happening in the middle of the streets. All this causes the limo to move at a crawl. Because of that, he’s able to have several meetings
with people inside the limo and even have lunch with his wife (Sarah Gadon) in
a cafe and not miss a beat. After
several bizarre run-ins, the billionaire comes face to face with a disgruntled
former employee (Paul Giamatti) who wants to kill him.
Cosmopolis
is a lifeless, allegorical bore. If you thought
Pattinson looked half asleep in those Twilight movies, wait till you see him
here. There are times where you almost
want to check his pulse. There’s a scene
late in the film where he asks his head of security to zap him with a taser so
he can feel something. I swear to God I
never rooted for someone to be tasered so bad in my entire life. Too bad the film is so inert that it can’t
even deliver on that simple pleasure. If
his performance of a self-absorbed billionaire with lots of high-tech gadgets
at his disposal is any indication, we are in serious trouble when that new
Batman flick comes out.
Pattinson’s
various run-ins with employees and lovers are long, dull, and
interchangeable. Even when it looks like
something is going to finally happen in the climax, it doesn’t. The finale confrontation with Giamatti goes
on far too long and the ending is downright infuriating.
Gadon
gets the best line of the movie when she suspects him of having an affair and
says, “You reek of sexual discharge.”