Upgrade
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Cured
Quadriplegic Crime Victim Seeks Revenge in Futuristic Sci-Fi Thriller
Mechanic
Grey Trace (Logan Marshall-Green) is a dying breed. He's an an old
school, grease monkey who can roll up his sleeves and repair classic
cars without the help of diagnostic computers.
One
fateful day, he asks his wife Asha (Melanie Vallejo) to follow him in
her car so he can return the Pontiac Firebird that he's just finished
working on to its owner, high-tech mogul Eron King (Harrison
Gilbertson). The eccentric billionaire has a subterranean laboratory
hidden just beneath the ocean shoreline. He proudly tells the Traces
about his company's latest invention, an implantable computer chip
with a mind of its own.
On
the way home, Asha's self-driving sedan inexplicably-malfunctions and
drives them to a seedy side of town where it crashes after careening
around a corner. The couple is subsequently set upon by a sadistic
gang that murders her and leaves him a quadriplegic.
When
Eron learns of Grey's misfortune, he offers the grieving widower an
opportunity to walk again. All that's involved is installing a tiny,
talking, computer circuit in his spinal cord called Stem
(Simon Maiden). The only hitch is that having Stem inside is like
sharing your body with another brain.
The
operation successfully transforms Grey from a bed-ridden cripple into
a superhuman vigilante capable of tracking down and exacting
vengeance on his muggers in a bloody reign of terror. But
to get even with the creeps, he has to temporarily allow Stem to take
charge.
The
plot thickens when Stem seems to have a hidden agenda. Might this
powerful entity be attempting to wrest total control of Grey's body
permanently? And towards what end?
That
is the engaging premise of Upgrade, a riveting, revenge thriller
written and directed by Leigh Whannell, creator of the Saw and
Insidious horror flick series. As this timely film further unfolds,
it magically morphs right in front of your eyes from a futuristic
sci-fi into a thought-provoking, exploration of the hidden dangers of
artificial intelligence.
A
timely cautionary tale you don't want to miss!
Rated R for profanity, graphic violence and grisly images
Running time: 95 minutes
Production Studios: BH Tilt / Goalpost Pictures / OTL Releasing
Distributor: Blumhouse Productions / Universal Pictures
To see a trailer for Upgrade, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEnRNIvEKu8
No comments:
Post a Comment