The Adjustment Bureau (****)
Directed by: George Nolfi
Starring: Matt Damon, Emily Blunt, Anthony Mackie, John Slattery,
Michael Kelly, Terence Stamp
Seen: June 10th 2011
**** Out of ****
I go to the movies in the hope of seeing good stories presented in
interesting and inventive ways, and this happens often enough. But at rare
intervals a movie also includes another thing: a strong, lasting idea, a
thought that stays with you for its life-changing capability. The Adjustment
Bureau is, to me, one of those movies.
David Norris (Damon) is a promising upcoming politician, the youngest yet
in the position he holds. Opponents find something embarrassing though, causing
his constituents to lose faith, and suddenly he loses a Senate election he was
leading. Rehearsing his concession speech in a bathroom, he meets a woman,
Elise(Blunt), hiding there from hotel security after crashing a wedding. The two
immediately spark, they kiss, and this inspires David to adapt his speech – putting
him back in the voters’ graces and setting him up for an almost perfect run in
the next elections.
As the movie progresses, the Adjustment Bureau’s agents are slowly
introduced. At first they are mysterious onlookers, and what they discuss seems
strange: “David has to spill the coffee on his shirt by seven-oh-five AM”. In time
the onlookers’ apparent power is revealed, as they can move objects by telepathy
and thus influence patterns people live by. Harry (Mackie), one of these grey suit-wearing
hat-sporting men, falls asleep and misses David, who gets on a bus, coffee not
spilt, just after 07:05. He meets Elise on the bus and after some great romantic
banter gets her number, Harry running behind the bus in desperation – the two
should never have seen each other again.
The Adjustment Bureau’s job is to ensure that things happen according
to plan, and this hiccup in Harry’s execution has the Bureau scrambling, the
higher up company man Richardson (Slattery) called in to ensure that David and
Elise do not come together. David is adamant in his quest and when he accidentally
discovers the Bureau doing what they do, he tells them plain and simple that he
won’t give up on Elise. The Bureau are certain about how they believe things
should pan out, and the stakes are upped for David if he ever wants to be with
Elise – he has to really go for it like no-one before. As David’s stubborn
persistence continues, the Bureau assigns more influential agents to the case,
going right up to Thompson (Stamp), who poses a real threat to David’s romantic
ambitions.
Throughout the movie the pace slowly increases, resulting in nearly
heart-stopping tension and chases at the movie’s climax. Damon is brilliant as
the politician willing to risk everything for the girl, and Blunt is equally
fantastic as the beautiful temptress struggling to understand the bigger
picture with the small amount of information she’s presented with. This is science
fiction, but only as background to a fantastic love story. The movie poses some
deep questions around predestination and free will in constant battle, with
predestination seeming the stronger one, the villain. In our lives, do we just
follow “The Plan”, as laid out by generations before us, or do we actually
allow free will to guide us towards something infinitely better, even if the
mathematics behind it, the cold logic behind it, might not agree? The movie
makes a bold statement, one that really had an impact on me: “Free will is a
gift you never know how to use until you fight for it”, and man, what a fight
this movie puts up to make you think about it in your life every time you remember
the movie, even if only for a while, just until you spill a coffee on your
shirt…
Comments
Great movie indeed!