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Teknolust
This SF film plays like a throwback to 1960s mod film making. It
is every bit as colorful as intended, but not nearly as intelligent.
It plays like a college skit but for the digital special effects that
allow four Tilda Swintons on the screen at one time.
Tilda
Swinton gets an opportunity to play four characters, frequently
all on the screen at the same time in this colorful but poorly thought-out
attempt at a science fiction film. A scientist downloads her own
DNA into a computer program and with self-reproducing automata creates
three versions of herself in a computer.
They somehow have the ability to jump out of the computer and to
walk around as real humans. It is not clear anyone associated with
the production understood what a self- reproducing automata is.

Nor did they understand much of the other science alluded to in
the script. Instead this film is really closer in style to a tall
tale. TEKNOLUST is intended to be whimsical with a sort of Pop Art
view of the science fiction issues, though more often the humor
fails. The bright colors and somewhat vacuous scripting reminds
one of the mod filmmaking of the 1960s.
Scientist Rosetta Stone (Swinton) creates in a computer three computer
images of herself (called self-replicating automatons, SRAs, though
they never actually replicate in the course of the film). Each has
a key color, dresses in that color, lives in a room of that color,
and has a name that suggests that color. The programs have a life
of their own and can leave the computer.
If that makes little sense, it is not expected to. Technical issues
are pretty much ignored but for the occasional throwing in of a
misunderstood technical term exploited in much the way James Bond
uses "Project Grand Slam."
Swinton, who plays four roles, three of them as computer programs,
can be a fine actress with her best known films being ORLANDO and
THE DEEP END. Here she got a chance to take a break from serious
acting and play with digital technology.
Her acting is usually a little staid and almost deadpan, in this
film it is actually wooden, though that is probably a consequence
of a process that has her talking to thin air where a digital image
of herself will later be placed.
Probably the best similar acting job under those conditions was
Jeremy Irons in DEAD RINGERS. Swinton is nowhere near as accomplished
at the same task, but perhaps the director was also less demanding.
The timing of these self-conversations is poor with pauses just
a beat too long between a line and its response.
That makes them easier to mesh but less spontaneous sounding. The
film was written, produced, and directed by Lynn Hershman-Leeson.
This is a film with smirk, a sly nod, and a wink to the audience
saying, "We know this is all pretty silly stuff and we are laughing
right along with the audience." The problem is that the audience
isn't laughing. I rate TEKNOLUST a 3 on the 0 to 10 scale and a
-1 on the -4 to +4 scale.
Mark R. Leeper
Copyright 2003 Mark R. Leeper
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OTHER CONTENT - May 2003
Do Bear's Write in The Woods? An interview with Greg Bear about some of the fascinating ideas contained in his SF novel, Darwin's Children. Human Endogenous Retrovirus anyone? (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Of Clockwork Men Artist Tom Abba on winning both the the Ken McIntyre Award and the Paper Tiger Art Award at the UK's Eastercon, plus how he has never considered himself to be a real science fiction artist. Crikes, how did we resist slipping some Nordic pop group jokes into this interview? (INTERVIEWS)
The Slow Death of Science Fiction Art The 'Nest's readers respond to Stephen Hunt's plea for decent cover art on SFF novels. Bad covers get named and shamed. (COMMENT)
Making Merry SF in Melbourne Australian SFF came under the spotlight, with the recent close of the 2002 Aurealis Awards. Damien Broderick got best novel for 'Transcension' (Tor), which rather begs the question, why's the most popular Ozzie SF coming out of the USA? (AWARDS NEWS)
The Core: Mark's Thoughts A spectacular set of disasters and a heroic expedition to save mankind. Some real science and some nonsense mix. If the film does not quite click, it is probably because we have higher standards than we had for science fiction films in their heyday of the 1950s and 1960s. (FILM REVIEWS)
The Core: Frank's Thoughts The Core definitely had the making for fascinating sci-fi stimulation. The attempt to turn the scientific discipline of electromagnetism into a robust and cheeky mainstream entertainment seemed quite challenging in concept. (FILM REVIEWS)
Teknolust This SF film plays like a throwback to 1960s mod film making. It is every bit as colorful as intended, but not nearly as intelligent. It plays like a college skit but for the digital special effects that allow four Tilda Swintons on the screen at one time. (FILM REVIEWS)
Sold Down the Riverworld Philip Jose Farmer's interesting premise of adventures set on a strange life-after-death-world is squandered on a fairly commonplace barbarian-planet story that appears to be the pilot for a most uninteresting and humdrum TV series. (TV REVIEWS)
Agent Cody Banks So the likable Malcolm in the Middle pint-sized TV star Frankie Muniz is at it again on the big screen? This time, the movie handlers are trying to package him as a junior James Bond for the kiddie crowd. (FILM REVIEWS)
Offworld
Report for April 2003
Interviews with authors Larry Niven, Whitley Strieber, Christopher Priest, Ted
Chiang, Robert Sheckley, Stephen Baxter, as well as the owners of Golden Gryphon
Press, not to mention the cast of the movie Bulletproof Monk; plus Christopher
Reeve guest stars on Smallville. Nice.
(SITE REVIEWS)
Big
Engine is going down
Sad news has reached us at the 'Nest that innovative British SFF publisher Big
Engine is shutting up shop, taking the relatively new 3SF magazine with it.
(PUBLISHING NEWS)
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