High Life Image

High Life

By Andy Howell | April 6, 2018

Right from the start, the aesthetic is ugly and inconsistent.  The space suits look like cheap props, the corridors look like a normal building hallway, despite the rooms looking like a real space station, and the computer controlling the mission has the font and interface of something from the 60s, but with today’s hardware (though set in the far future).  It would almost seem like a deconstruction of 2001, as if to subvert the meticulous attention to detail and homicidal computer at the core of the grandfather of the genre, except that it never follows through.

“…we get the story of how, through a series of rapes and murders, we’re left with only these two.

Speaking of Kubrick, it is almost as if this film was made on a dare to see if Denis could make a mashup of 2001 and Dr. Strangelove with none of the awe of the former or humor of the latter. Juliette Binoche’s Dibs has all the obsession for “precious bodily fluids” as Jack D. Ripper — at one point she carries a character’s semen through the halls cupped in her hands.  She combines that with and all the deranged zeal of Strangelove himself (though played totally straight). Other characters ride into oblivion with all the determination of Slim Pickens astride the bomb. Is the black hole here the vaginal equivalent of Strangelove’s phallic bomb?  Isn’t that the stupidest sentence you’ve ever read? Yet these are the kind of things you wonder when you’re trying to find meaning in nonsense.

High Life has all the subtlety of a 4chan post. It is calculated to outrage, yet done so very incompetently.  Rape, murder, and animal cruelty are the big guns of audience manipulation. They are used in cinema all the time, often to great effect.  But if you’re going to pull one out, it had better pay off. Here they’re thrown in as if calculated outrage is the only point. Is the black hole supposed to be a metaphor for the human soul?  That was sophomoric in 1997 when Event Horizon tried it.  

High Life has serious thematic problems. I’ve heard some suggest it is supposed to be our reaction to confinement or exposure to the void.  That doesn’t even make any sense, because the astronauts were all selected from rapists and murderers in the first place. Why would humanity send such awful people to do the most challenging and expensive thing they’ve ever attempted?  Is the message that striving for greatness is folly?

Is the black hole here the vaginal equivalent of Strangelove’s phallic bomb?

Spoiler alert (for two paragraphs) for something that happens late in the movie:  in between black holes, in the vast void, our protagonists just happen upon another identical ship.  Except the only living occupants are dogs. They are in really bad shape, having eaten each other to stay alive. Until this point, the movie has taken great pains to establish that life support will only renew every 24 hours if you have a special chip in your finger, and you type instructions into a computer.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. chris says:

    TBH, I thought this film was too boring for me, but I think this review is much worse than the film. The fact is, there was a LOT to chew on intellectually here, it is not thematically consistent and is not just stuff thrown together. I think this reviewer doesn’t like art films and was assigned to write a review of one.

    This is especially clear because he doesn’t even bother to pay attention. For example, as pointed out by another respondant, the “6” ship was full of dogs — that doesn’t mean they had the same instructions/rules as the next ship sent. It is clear that nobody back on Earth gave a s**t about these dogs or prisoners, and that whatever they think they are supposed to be doing is not at all what the actual mission is. Just as likely as it is about “energy” it is probably just an experiment to find out about black holes, reproduction in space, how astronauts will treat each other on such a voyage, etc. Remember: We sent dogs into space before we sent humans. The 24-hour rule was in fact probably just to keep them from killing the captain or aborting the mission, etc.

    I’ll tell you one powerful theme I saw in this film which resonates for me: Humans are terrifyingly capable of adapting to the most inhumane circumstances, and this is one of the main reasons we are not able to adapt to our current existential environmental crisis: We are built to adapt to shitty situations rather than change our drives and culture to fix the situations themselves. In other words, we simply will adapt to apocalypse rather than change enough to prevent it. In this world already, from prisons to garbage dumps to war zones, their are humans having babies and growing old in situations which many of us with softer backgrounds would rather kill ourselves (in theory) then face.

  2. Laika says:

    I hope ship number 10 has Claire Denis in it.

  3. Fergus M Byrne says:

    I think Shelley is a nod to Mary Shelly who wrote Frankenstein.

  4. Luigi "Il Professore" Parenti says:

    …….one major issue still confuses me at the end???? The main character calls out: “Shelly!?!” and the female character who responds looks a lot like his daughter, Willow, from minutes earlier but only a bit older and now with red lipstick on????? Is it his daughter or perhaps his first girlfriend from High School before he killed his friend who killed his dog and the reason why he was sent to prison???? I can’t figure that one out for the life of me…..and where in space does one get that shade of red French lipstick???? I’m still baffled?????…..and what about the “plastic vagina” dialogue between the mad doctor and female patient???? Kubrik would never have left us with such questions or puzzles.

  5. Luigi "Il Professore" Parenti says:

    Bravo !! Bravissimo ! Brilliant! Evocative! A bit confusing too. In Sci-Fi film almost every theme has already been exploited…so….in that same vane they exploited this to death (beating a dead dog or horse….pun intended) using and relying on theatrical style props and some body fluids rather than super-realistic sets. Although I truly don’t fully understand the ending myself (I can only ponder it in a Kubrick 2001 kind of way) it does make a point or conclusion to the plot. It even opens up the possibility for an equally horrible sequel…let’s not go there! If you notice…..the number “7” and number “9” craft are small and relatively inexpensive boxes set out into space as experiments. They are low-budget and disposable craft…as well as the occupants who chose to die in them rather than die in prison – they all knew it was a one-way trip. They didn’t need trained astronauts…. and even the evil doctor admits to being a felon no less at one point. Although they are mere test subjects like animals in a cage (ie. the Dog ship references) the survivors of the experiment end-up enjoying being the first successful time travelers through a worm hole (note the swirling tunnel didn’t pop-out their eyeballs as the black hole did to the previous test-pilot?) and end up safe and sound in another place, time or dimension – let’s not even consider the Adam-Eve biblical concept here at the end since his cute little (hybrid: “she’s perfect”) daughter would have presented an incestual dilemma or outcome…..oh those French film-makers…almost as bad as the Italians!!! The film was about sending animals, humans and offspring in to worm and black holes just to see what happens. In real life we already know eye-balls do pop-out and make a big mess of the space suits when entering black holes.

  6. GotDramaAllergy says:

    The fresh direction in this modern film.Why always be led like sheeple?Why not spark our own imagination from the “Glimpse” or “Display” they provide? We became to idle and lazy and this display was a new path many film makers should explore.This film may be a attempt to show that lifelong criminal’s should be used to better our human condition ,rather than be wasted or dependent upon our lifelong support.I was left with visual puzzle of honest isolation traits,all to come to my own conclusion.This is how life in deep space would play out.It was a glimpse into a cold and chilling reality.If your expecting a common ride off into the sunset ending or a lame attempt to lead by the hand,this is NOT for you.More artistic theme to this work than the average moviegoer would expect but does not mean it is bad,just different.Very cold,chilling,real humanity and what is needed to keep some version of sanity.This was complete display for us to see,to the contemplate our own opinion of what we just saw.Hello people,this is “Us”, and what we are capable of if thrown into the similar situation.Very Honest work here.Miss Binoche is still lovely and the binding veteran anchor to this cast.The Untrained eye will compare her time on “The Box” to Elizabeth Berkley and her debokkle in Stripper film, but this was far from that.To witness the pleasure fluids in hindsight was sexy combined with her lovely locks.She was a mad scientist ,fixated on assuring her goal was completed.Massaging her crop like a crazed farmer.I thought how this film was made for the homegrown film lover and not as much for the mainstream viewer.Unless your willing to think for yourself,you will spin your wheels in this one.I truly liked it.Left me with a puzzle of visual disturbing Element to savor.lol…Watched it twice.

  7. jim says:

    one of the worst movies Ive ever seen

  8. Zackary O'Donnell says:

    This movie is a piece of crap. This review is spot on. No real direction or plot. It goes nowhere. It is a waste of 2 hours and depressing as well. If that was the point in making the movie then I blame those that funded it. It sucked.

  9. Natalie Martin says:

    Does the baby die????????????? I must know…….

  10. Doug Chance says:

    Wow. Seems like someone was more interested in applying their energy to the level of snark they could generate, rather than actually considering the subject of the review.

    Free clue #1: Just because the human ship required someone to check in every 24 hours to sustain life support (and tbh, we don’t even know if that was really true or just an insinuated means of behavioral control) doesn’t mean that a canine version would have the same “feature”.

    Free clue #2: The appearance of dogs may have something to do with the protagonist’s crime.

  11. Ash says:

    Smells like frustration here 😀

  12. PF says:

    Maybe Mr. Howell missed what the movie is really about, and his taste is better suited to a superhero movie, with special effects, that give you nothing to think about

  13. hb says:

    Mr. Howell can’t find one performance or one tidbit that he found redeeming? Perhaps it says something about his objectivity.

  14. Di French says:

    Thanks. I found the trailer intriguing but with a warming light going off. You explained the warning light. Now I know — don’t bother to see this film; you won’t enjoy it. Shame, really. It has a good cast.

Join our Film Threat Newsletter

Newsletter Icon