Review: 'Chappie' Sees Neill Blomkamp Falter Again
James Canellos ‘17 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
In a crime infested Johannesburg, Deon Wilson (Dev Patel) has designed a mechanized police unit that are single handedly dropping the crime rate in the city. As even the simplest crimes are getting more difficult to pull off, a group of gangsters, Ninja, Yo-Landi and Amerika (members of the band Die Antwoord as versions of themselves & Jose Pablo Cantillo) owe a drug lord $20 million. To pull off the heist that will guarantee them this amount, these not-so-bright criminals steal one of the malfunctioned police droids along with Deon.
Chappie is a modern day Pinocchio tale of a robot who’s having a philosophical dilemma of what makes someone human. At first it seems like Bloomkamp is going for a commentary on our reliance of technology, a la WALL-E. The always socially conscious director could have easily made a statement about modern day police brutality or something that risks a lot more. Instead, Chappie feels like a knockoff of Bloomkamp’s debut hit District 9, repeating a lot of the same plot points and build up that falls flat and feels unearned. Bloomkamp and his writing partner Terri Tatchell also fall deeper into Hollywood cliches and uncharacteristic changes in order to keep the story moving. These same cliches began to appear in Bloomkamp’s last film Elysium and have only gotten much worse in Chappie.
When Bloomkamp started out with with District 9, it felt like he was going to be the latest and strongest voice in the genre of science fiction. Elysium was alright, but now Chappie is another bright red flag in the wrong direction, making everyone question why this director is now in charge of the Alien franchise (whose star Sigourney Weaver appears here briefly). It feels like Bloomkamp is becoming the next M. Night Shyamalan, full of potential after his first huge masterpiece, then a quick downfall due to his need to repeat himself. Chappie’s first word was watch, but you will prefer to look away.
Overall Grade: C-