
High Life 3 ½ stars
I missed High Life in the theaters but finally got the chance to see it on video. This highly unusual film by Claire Denis is a confusing science fiction story concerning a group of people, all young and attractive, on a space ship hurtling through the solar system. The movie has a slow pace and includes little in the way of special effects for a science fiction film. It is filled with symbolism and morally ambiguous characters. High Life starts with Monte (Robert Pattinson) and his baby daughter on the mysterious spaceship. The ship is completely self-sustaining including a green house and recycling of human waste. Before long it is discovered that there was a whole crew on the ship who are now all dead, leaving the two remaining passengers to carry on. The rest of the movie is a flash back that shows us the crew on the voyage and reveals (sort of) what happened to them. We learn that this is an experimental space ship where all of the crew are criminals who have committed capital crimes and they are on a mission to a mysterious black hole, never to return. There is a doctor named Doctor Dibs (Juliette Binoche), also a murderer who is the one in charge and who also performs medical experiments on her subjects which include trying to get some of them pregnant without their knowledge. The crew all have some type of aberrant behavior leading some to commit murder and suicide. Some seem to be trying to atone for their past misdeeds such as Monte being a caring father or Dibs trying to create new life after taking lives while on Earth. I have not seen many movies by Denis, but have read that she always tries to make the audience uncomfortable which she has certainly done this time. I also must warn you that the ending may be less than satisfying! Once again here is a fine performance by Robert Pattinson.