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Review
THE 6th DAY
Rating:   
USA. 2000.
Director Roger Spottiswoode, Screenplay Cormac Wibberley & Marianne Wibberley, Producers Jon Davison, Mike Medavoy & Arnold Schwarzenegger, Photography Pierre Mignot, Music Trevor Rabin, Visual Effects Supervisor David Drzewicki, Visual Effects Cinesite (Supervisors Jerry Pooler & Thomas J. Smith), Rhythm and Hues (Supervisor Todd Leeser) & VCE.com (Supervisor Peter Kuran), Miniatures Fantasy II Film Effects (Supervisor Gene Warren Jr), Special Effects Supervisor Michael Lantieri, Makeup Effects Amalgamated Dynamics (Supervisors Alec Gillis & Tom Woodruff Jr), Production Design James D. Bissell & John Willett. Production Company Phoenix Pictures.
Cast:
Arnold Schwarzenegger (Adam Gibson), Tony Goldwyn (Michael Drucker), Michael Rooker (Marshall), Robert Duvall (Dr Graham Weir), Michael Rapaport (Hank Morgan), Sarah Wynter (Talia Ellsworth), Rodney Rowland (Wiley), Wendy Crewson (Natalie Gibson), Taylor-Anne Reid (Clara Gibson), Jennifer Gareis (Virtual Girlfriend)
Plot: Helicopter pilot Adam Gibson returns home on his birthday to find a double of himself in his place. He is then pursued by people trying to kill him and realizes that he has been cloned, something that is prohibited by law. His determination to reclaim his identity plunges him into the midst of a conspiracy involving a corporation that is promoting illegal cloning and is now determined to eliminate all evidence of its mistakes.
In the 1980s and early 90s Arnold Schwarzenegger was the name in action movies. But in the 90s Schwarzeneggers star faded with commercial and critical flops like Last Action Hero (1993), True Lies (1994) and Batman & Robin (1997). During this time Schwarzeneggers efforts to reclaim his action mantle have met with mediocre success. Eraser (1996) was acclaimed as a new stripped-back Arnie but was just another flop. So too were End of Days (1999) and Collateral Damage (2002). Neither was The 6th Day the hit that Arnie was looking for, although it was actually the best film he had made in some time.
The 6th Day seems to herald a revisit to the heyday of Arnies Total Recall (1990) with more than a few dashes of Blade Runner (1982) thrown into the mix. As in Total Recall, The 6th Day features Arnie as a family man who suddenly finds the comfort of his life overturned and he on the run in a labyrinth of confused identity questions. [There are many similarities between The 6th Day and The Clones (1973), which was the first film to ever refer to and use the term clone]. With Canadian director Roger Spottiswoode, who previously made the Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) and before that the acclaimed Under Fire (1985) and the slasher film Terror Train (1980), at the helm, The 6th Day moves rather well. There are all the expected helicopter chases, car chases, explosions and shootouts but these never overrun the film and are always constricted within a fair plot. Its certainly a plot that swings a few improbabilities the ability to produce an identical clone within two hours and holes it is never really made clear why it was necessary to clone Arnie in the first place, surely such a powerful company could have far more easily made him vanish instead. The 6th Day is at its best when it is playing games of identity confusion like Arnie trying to avoid his other self when he turns up at his own house. Although ultimately it is a script that tends to concentrates on thriller mechanics rather than character it never gets inside the question of identity in the way that say Blade Runner delved into the soul of the replicant and its hunter.
The fun to be had in the film (at least in the first half) are the same pleasures of Cyberpunk the nifty gadgetry and aspects of the future culture casually littered throughout nacho-flavoured bananas, references to a woman President and the Rainforest Wars, a trip to a pet-cloning store, lifelike Simdolls with real hair, remote-control cars, virtual girlfriends and, during a trip to a police station, a virtual attorney and a virtual psychologist.
Ultimately though The 6th Day is a conservative film. It resorts to the nebulous notion that cloning is something that defies divine provenance. At one point Tony Goldwyn challenges Arnie: Who should decide these things? [the right to clone] to which Arnie roars back God. The film sees that defying natural order that things are best off left the way they are, imperfect and all as being a moral outrage, something that far outweighs any benefits that might be gained. In a more muted way, The 6th Day is akin to 1930s mad scientist films, which called lightning bolts and social chaos down on scientists who resurrected the dead, transplanted brains and sought to extend the aging process. Oddly though the films arguments against cloning are not that coherent it is seen as just wrong because ... whereas the arguments in favour are made surprisingly persuasive thanks to a fine performance from Tony Goldwyn.
As with many of Arnies modern films, The 6th Day emerges as the peculiar upshot of an action movie trying to toe a certain PC line with regard to violence. The pre-release publicity had Arnold Schwarzenegger pontificating about not wanting to be seen holding a gun on the poster (as though the lack of gun on the poster makes any difference to the number of guns that Arnie by implication promotes the use of in waving them around for a substantial part of the film). There is an amusing scene with Arnie trying to rescue his family and telling two guards: My daughter is on the other side of that door. I dont want to expose her to any graphic violence, she gets enough of that in the media. Its a scene that straddles a line just between the amusing and the self-consciously silly. Last updated: Sunday, 14 September 2008
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