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South China Morning Post
South China Morning Post
Entertainment
Richard James Havis

Anon film review: Clive Owen, Amanda Seyfried in messy sci-fi thriller that skims the surface of total surveillance

Clive Owen in a still from Anon (category: III). Directed by Andrew Niccol, the film co-stars Amanda Seyfried..

2/5 stars

With the Facebook scandal, the Chinese government’s new facial recognition technology, and the Russian’s alleged manipulation of the US election, surveillance and online data collection are timely subjects for a science-fiction story.

But the lumpen techno thriller Anon, written and directed by New Zealand filmmaker Andrew Niccol, doesn’t make anything of the social and political ramifications of such activities, and quickly turns into a tepid crime movie that uses technology and graphics merely to add a bit of zest.

Amanda Seyfried in a still from Anon. A subplot about her character sleeping with victims of her data hacking is an excuse for corny sex scenes.

In a bleak, near-future society, Clive Owen plays Sal, a cop whose vision is wired into a database – “The Mind’s Eye” – that captures everything that citizens see, like a powerful Google Glass. Crimes are easy to solve, as everyone’s activities have been recorded.

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When a hacker called The Girl (Amanda Seyfried) infiltrates the database and starts replacing visual data to hide wrongdoing, the system starts to collapse. What’s more, everyone who has their data erased ends up dead. Sal goes undercover to find The Girl, only for her to interfere with Sal’s own recordings – and that leads to the cop’s arrest.

A still from Anon.

In spite of intricate graphics filling the screen from the get go – each time Sal sees someone, their data pops up – the storyline is too straightforward, and too inconclusive, to keep boredom at bay. A subplot about The Girl sleeping with the victims just before they die seems only to exist as an excuse for some corny sex scenes straight out of 1980s soft-core porn.

Anon opens on May 31

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