Current:Home > reviewsIn a bio-engineered dystopia, 'Vesper' finds seeds of hope -Mastery Money Tools
In a bio-engineered dystopia, 'Vesper' finds seeds of hope
View
Date:2025-04-11 15:05:38
Hollywood apocalypses come in all shapes and sizes – zombified, post-nuclear, plague-ridden – so it says something that the European eco-fable Vesper can weave together strands from quite a few disparate sci-fi films and come up with something that feels eerily fresh.
Lithuanian filmmaker Kristina Buozyte and her French co-director Bruno Samper begin their story in a misty bog so bleak and lifeless it almost seems to have been filmed in black-and-white. A volleyball-like orb floats into view with a face crudely painted on, followed after a moment by 13-yr-old Vesper (Raffiella Chapman), sloshing through the muck, scavenging for food, or for something useful for the bio-hacking she's taught herself to do in a makeshift lab.
Vesper's a loner, but she's rarely alone. That floating orb contains the consciousness of her father (Richard Brake), who's bedridden in the shack they call home, with a sack of bacteria doing his breathing for him. So Vesper talks to the orb, and it to her. And one day, she announces a remarkable find in a world where nothing edible grows anymore: seeds.
She hasn't really found them, she's stolen them, hoping to unlock the genetic structure that keeps them from producing a second generation of plants. It's a deliberately inbred characteristic – the capitalist notion of copyrighted seed stock turned draconian — that has crashed the world's eco-system, essentially bio-engineering nature out of existence.
Those who did the tampering are an upper-class elite that's taken refuge in cities that look like huge metal mushrooms – "citadels" that consume all the planet's available resources – while what's left of the rest of humankind lives in sackcloth and squalor.
Does that sound Dickensian? Well, yes, and there's even a Fagin of sorts: Vesper's uncle Jonas (Eddie Marsan), who lives in a sordid camp full of children he exploits in ways that appall his niece. With nothing else to trade for food, the kids donate blood (Citadel dwellers evidently crave transfusions) and Jonas nurtures his kids more or less as he would a barnyard full of livestock.
Vesper's convinced she can bio-hack her way to something better. And when a glider from the Citadel crashes, and she rescues a slightly older stranger (pale, ethereal Rosy McEwan) she seems to have found an ally.
The filmmakers give their eco-disaster the look of Alfonso Cuaron's Children of Men, the bleak atmospherics of The Road, and a heroine who seems entirely capable of holding her own in The Hunger Games. And for what must have been a fraction of the cost of those films, they manage some seriously effective world-building through practical and computer effects: A glider crash that maroons the Citadel dweller; trees that breathe; pink squealing worms that snap at anything that comes too close.
And in this hostile environment, Vesper remains an ever-curious and resourceful adolescent, finding beauty where she can — in a turquoise caterpillar, or in the plants she's bio-hacked: luminescent, jellyfish-like, glowing, pulsing, and reaching out when she passes.
All made entirely persuasive for a story with roots in both young-adult fiction, and real-world concerns, from tensions between haves and have-nots to bio-engineering for profit — man-made disasters not far removed from where we are today.
Vesper paints a dark future with flair enough to give audiences hope, both for a world gone to seed, and for indie filmmaking.
veryGood! (21)
Related
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- North Carolina GOP seeks to override governor’s veto of bill banning gender-affirming care for youth
- Patrick Hamilton, ex-AP and Reuters photographer who covered Central American wars, dies at 74
- Patrick Hamilton, ex-AP and Reuters photographer who covered Central American wars, dies at 74
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- 9-year-old child fatally shoots 6-year-old in Florida home, deputies say
- Aaron Judge: 'We're not showing up' as last place Yankees crash to .500 mark
- What is a conservatorship? The legal arrangement at the center of Michael Oher's case.
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Haiti gang leader vows to fight any foreign armed force if it commits abuses
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Armed, off-duty sheriff's deputy fatally shot by police in Southern California
- Protesters march through Miami to object to Florida’s Black history teaching standards
- Hurricanes cause vast majority of storm deaths in vulnerable communities
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Jet aborts takeoff at Boston airport when another airliner gets a bit too close
- US wildlife managers agree to review the plight of a Western bird linked to piñon forests
- You've never seen anything like these immersive theater shows, from 'Here Lies Love' to 'Gatsby'
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Kansas prosecutor says material seized in police raid of weekly newspaper should be returned
An abandoned desert village an hour from Dubai offers a glimpse at the UAE’s hardscrabble past
When is the World Cup final? Everything to know for England vs. Spain
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Man kills his neighbor and shoots her two grandkids before killing himself
'Barbie' takes another blow with ban in Algeria 1 month after release
Foreign invaders: Japanese Beetles now laying eggs for next wave of march across country