By: Robert Murphy
It isn’t hard to believe when you think about the
possibility of having robot beings walking around and helping you out in your
day to day life, heck, take one look at Japan and you can almost see it
happening sooner than you might think. So when you watch Chappie, a film set in the not to distant future, you sit there and
wonder if this sort of future seems possible. In the city of Johannesburg ,
South Africa ,
humanoid machines called Scouts are a working part of the police force. A sleek
and simple design coupled with durable armored bodies make them the perfect
helping hand to the police and crime has severely gone down because of it. This
is thanks to the weapons company Tetra Vaal and the creator of the Scouts, Deon
Wilson (Dev Patel), who is praised for his work but you can tell he isn’t
extremely proud. Sure, he’s glad that his machines are success and that they’re
helping people but he wants more for his machines than for them to be walking
bullet magnets, even though he’s at a weapons company. This is exactly the line
he gets from his boss, Michelle Bradley (Sigourney Weaver), when he brings his
program for an artificial intelligence to her, essentially making a robot that
can think and feel. After he gets shot down though he secretly takes a Scout that
was about to be destroyed to run the experiment anyways, a plan that is sure to
go well.
Yes, Deon makes the classic smart persons mistake and goes a
little too far too fast with his ideas and big ambitions. There is nothing
wrong with trying to create something unique, something inspirational for the
entire world but Deon lives in the cushiness and safer aspects of the world. He
never stops to think what would happen after he turns the machine on and what
if he got out and got away from Deon. The world isn’t so nice, as the movie
points out quite clearly. The first few moments of the film, after the FOX news report opening, shows a group
of criminals escaping from a deal gone bad, leading to a den full of thugs with
automatic weapons. The group gets taken down by a swarm of officers and Scout
robots which is done rather quickly and effectively too as you see why these
robots are so praise worthy. The scene though introduces our criminals, Ninja
and Yo-Landi (South African rap-rave group, Die Antwoord) along with their
partner Amerika (Jose Pablo Cantillo) who are all now in big trouble with their
boss for not only screwing up a drug deal but leading cops to their base
probably doesn’t help things. They now owe him twenty million dollars and have
one week to get it before they’re killed. This is when they hatch a scheme to
get all the robots turned off and pulling a big job, this of course leads to
Deon’s involvement since they figure, he made them and he can break them too.
This occurs right as Deon is hatching his own scheme to
activate his robot by taking the junker model home with him. He gets kidnapped
by this rag tag assortment of characters and when he can’t do what they ask
they find out about his little secret and want him to activate the robot so it
can help them with their scheme. This is the part I instantly enjoyed, when
life springs into this blank slate of a robot (performed by Shartlo Copley) it
is almost like every Disney movie
rolled into one. Almost like watching Bambi’s
first steps or the hunk of wood Pinocchio
come to life, something to that affect. Chappie is essentially an infant
when he is first starting out but an infant that will come to learn at an
alarming rate. What he learns however, that is the problem. Chappie is given a
combination of teachings, while Deon and the suddenly maternal Yo-Landi try to
teach him about art, right from wrong and all that. Ninja wants him to pick up
a gun and starting being a badass gangster and teaches him all the bad stuff. Admittedly,
it is fun watching Ninja and Amerika try and teach Chappie how to car jack
people and to walk with some swagger, almost puked while writing that but it
was still pretty funny.
You do start to feel insanely bad for Chappie though who is
sort of stuck in a dead beat dad scenario, watching the one scene where Ninja
and Amerika leave him out in no mans land and make him find his own way home
was the worst part. He gets beaten up, a molotov thrown at him and his arm cut
off later by a jealous coworker of Deons. Chappie cries out for help and
doesn’t know what is happening to him or why, he is a child and needs nurturing
and it can hit you pretty hard as you watch.
No, I didn’t forget about Vincent (Hugh Jackman) but I might
as well have as he is the one who maims poor Chappie as I just mentioned above.
He plays former soldier turned engineer that hates the Scout robots because
their success has cut back the release of his lumbering chicken legged robot.
It looks like the ED-209 robots from Robocop
if you’re wondering. His beef cake villain never inspires much love and is
in fact a big negative for the story; he doesn’t come off as worried about what
a robot that can think and feel can do as being a bad thing till near the end
of the movie. The entirety of what he does beforehand is just arrogant self
righteous nonsense, scenes where he does Hail Mary prayers and spouts
semi-religious nonsense make it all even worse.
This does lead to the final showdown for Chappie though as Vincent gets the go
ahead to use his prototype to hunt down Chappie and destroy him. It’s a large
action scene like the beginning of the film but unlike the opening, this entire
sequence felt very cliché. The scene doesn’t last too long but it does hit way
too many bad notes for my liking, the slow motion sequence where Yo-Landi gets
shot for instance. Also, the need for Vincent to try out all the little toys on
his robot such as the pincer arm that cuts Amerika in half and the mortar shot
function. It was making me wish the whole thing was cut even shorter or cut
completely; it certainly didn’t make me love Vincent any more either.
Overall, Chappie is
the only main attraction to Chappie in
my opinion. Watching him learn, think and react to everything around him was
just a joy and was the driving force behind my sticking around till the end.
Ninja and Yo-Landi are not my type of characters to watch but they did serve
their purpose as a decent foster family with Amerika being the odd uncle and
creating the harder elements to the story. Everything else though just flops, I
felt bad for Hugh Jackman who got stuck with such a horrible character that is
no way likeable or interesting. Dev Patel doesn’t inspire much either because
once he creates Chappie, he just feels like a useless character. Add some
played out final action scenes on top of it all and you’re left with a crummy
movie.
Good:
- Chappie was an all
around funny and enjoyable character for me
- Not all the action
scenes are bad; there are some enjoyable fast paced moments and scenes
throughout Chappie
Bad:
-
An overall weak story
- Jackman’s villain
character was just terrible
- Played out final
action scene
- Dev Patel’s
lifeless “creator” role
Scully Rating: 2.0 out of 10
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