2073 Reviews


Publisher: misubisu
**Score: 6/10 — A Visceral, Uneven, and Deeply Frustrating Warning Shot** Asif Kapadia, the director behind masterful documentaries like *Amy* and *Senna*, takes a sharp left turn with *2073*. This is not a straightforward documentary. It's a hybrid—what Kapadia dubs "speculative non-fiction"—that intercuts a fictional dystopian narrative with real archival footage and interviews to argue that we are sleepwalking toward catastrophe . The ambition is admirable, the craft is often stunning, and Samantha Morton delivers a heartbreaking performance with almost no dialogue. Yet the film ultimately frustrates as much as it haunts, earning a **6/10** for its noble intentions and undeniable power, weighed down by a structural messiness and a lack of narrative payoff. **What Works: The Mood, The Performance, The Warning** The fictional thread of *2073* follows a mute woman named "Ghost" (Samantha Morton) living in the ruins of San Francisco after an undefined "Event" in the 2030s . She hides in a decaying mall, scavenging and writing her memories as a warning to the past, while surveillance drones and military police hunt survivors. It's bleak, claustrophobic, and visually arresting. Morton is extraordinary. She communicates decades of grief, rage, and desperate hope through nothing but her eyes and posture . The future she inhabits, a totalitarian tech dominant police state where billionaires rule and the rest scavenge is rendered with an effective, low fi eeriness. The film's engine, however, is its use of real footage: protests, police brutality, climate disasters, data mining scandals, and clips of tech billionaires and world leaders. The message is hammered home with force; the seeds of 2073 are being sown right now, and we are not doing enough to stop it. For viewers who feel overwhelmed by the news cycle, the experience is like "doomscrolling: the movie" relentless, anxiety inducing, and designed to jolt you awake. **Why It's a 6 (The Frustrations)** *2073* is a film that **has its moments**, but the whole is less than the sum of its ambitious parts. The core problem is the awkward marriage of its two halves: 1. **The Documentary Bleeds Out the Narrative:** The fascinating dystopian premise with Ghost is constantly interrupted by lengthy montages of real-world news clips. It feels less like a cohesive film and more like a video essay interrupted by a movie or vice versa. By the time we return to Ghost, the emotional momentum has dissipated. 2. **Preaching to the Choir:** The film's politics are unapologetically left leaning, targeting Trump, Musk, Bezos, Zuckerberg, and authoritarian leaders like Putin and Modi. For viewers who already agree, it can feel like an exhausting, 85 minute lecture without new insights. For those who disagree, it will be easily dismissed as propaganda . 3. **All Warning, No Compass:** The film is exceptional at diagnosing the disease but offers no prescription. It leaves the audience feeling not empowered to act, but paralysed by despair which, while perhaps *intentional*, makes for a deeply unsatisfying cinematic experience. **The Verdict:** *2073* is less traditional entertainment and more of an urgent, anxious essay. If you view it as a feature length op ed designed to make you put down your phone and worry about the future, it succeeds brilliantly. If you want a coherent story, character arcs, or a glimmer of hope, you will be disappointed. **Watch if:** You are fascinated by hybrid documentary/fiction forms, appreciate Samantha Morton's acting, or want a cinematic representation of the anxiety you feel scrolling through the news. **Skip if:** You need a traditional narrative structure, dislike political polemics, or are currently feeling overwhelmed by the state of the world and need escapism rather than a mirror.

2073

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2073
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Inspired by Chris Marker's iconic 1962 featurette La Jetée; the year is 2073—a not-so-distant dystopian future—and the setting is New San Francisco, the scorched-earth tech-dominant police state where democracy and personal freedom have been well and truly obliterated.

  • Genre: ,
  • Release:
  • Stars: Samantha Morton, Naomi Ackie, Hector Hewer
  • Duration: 83 min
  • Director:
  • Country: United Kingdom, United States of America
  • Quality: HD

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Mark Kermode reviews 2073 (2024) | BFI Player

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