Summary Capsule
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The (convenient) setup here is that all plants and oceans on the earth have died due to pollution, mankind lives underground, and people are really big into virtual reality for entertainment. I blame California for earth’s demise; they seem to have a lot of environmentalists out there, yet you can’t see most of the cities due to the smog. Maybe the environmentalists have to drive around a lot to get to their meetings, I’m not sure. Our heroine, Tough Chick, is tasked with taking some special computer chips to NYC to sell. Since she’s really good for nothing more than growling and glaring — the hallmark traits of a bad actress lacking direction to give her battle-hardened character any depth — Tough Chick enlists the help of a Romeo (hooker android) and some weirdo who smokes pot and plays with a flamethrower. Our motley crew flees cross country through a series of parking lots (called "The Maze") that can get you from Los Angeles to New York if you know how to drive it. While this sparks the imagination, to think of an entire highway system underground, it also begs the question of why people would build parking lots everywhere in America. Including places where no one has ever lived, nor driven a car. And then, why or how they hooked up thousands of miles of parking lots together. My guess is, there’s a giganto mall somewhere up top where Missouri, Kansas, and Colorado used to be. They get chased by our semi-psychotic villain, a cyborg named Plughead. Hey, let’s play a fun game! Guess what Plughead does? If you guessed "Um, plugs something into his head", then you win the teddy bear! He’s supposed to be the real star power of the show, what with his bulging eyes and shaved chrome covered with ancient computer RAM chips, but you just can’t convince me that he’s any threat. At worst, I can see him as a surly bus boy at a Denny’s, but that’s the limit of his evil presence. My recommendation is that you should have some good, loyal friends to watch this with. It’s a pretty funny movie for the most part, and while some of it’s due to the goofy tone and jokes they sprinkle about, the lion’s share comes from the juvenile acting. Honestly, all of the people in Circuitry Man talk and act like they’re 7 years old. The villain pops out one-liners on the level of "I don’t throw up, I grow up", and everyone else sports exaggerated reactions to everything, while being somewhat serious about it. The best analogy I can think of — and I’ve spent at least ten minutes trying — is if you saw a class of third graders try to put on a production of A Midsummer’s Night Dream with all earnestness. It’s hilarious through the juxtaposition. What Circuitry Man lacks in polish or any sort of decent special effects, it more than compensates with sheer moxy and a strange fun value. If you can let go of the one and embrace the other, your time will be well spent with this uncanny post-apocalyptic flick.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Groovy Quotes
Girl: What’s it like, being a synthetic?
Bandit: I’m going to fill your plugs with slugs! Soundtrack Review
If you liked this movie, try these: This review page was last updated on 9.9.04 MRFH Home . Reviews . Findaflik . Features! . MRFH Forum © 2004 Mutant Reviewers From Hell (Original Content). All Rights Reserved. |