Love has taken a battering lately. Blue Valentine, Rabbit Hole and The Kids Are All Right have all shown it busting up, breaking down and dying hard. Love’s had it tough. Love’s had Twilight, for pity’s sake. But things weren’t always like this.
One of the most wonderful romantic fantasies in cinema history, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger’s A Matter Of Life And Death was illuminated by an idea so simple and so beautiful that it makes your heart beat harder just to say it: that a single tear shed for love might stop heaven in its tracks. More than 60 years later, The Adjustment Bureau swings for something just as special. That a kiss can change the course of your fate. And that True Love will find a way. On a marginally less profound level, it also proves that even if he was an angel, Terence Stamp would still scare the bejesus out of you.
Adapting Phillip K Dick’s shortie Adjustment Team, writer/producer/director George Nolfi’s genre-jumping mystery sells itself as a thriller but is in fact one of the most heartfelt romances
for some time. It starts with an accidental meet-cute in a men’s room, as hotshot US-senate candidate David Norris (Matt Damon) runs into a flirtatious ballet dancer named Elise (Emily Blunt). One surprise kiss – and she’s gone forever. At least, that was what was supposed to
happen.
But two things happen instead. Just by chance, Norris meets Elise again. Just by chance, he stumbles on the existence of an army of mysterious men dressed in grey hats and suits whose job it is to stop things happening just by chance. As employees of “The Chairman”, these unseen agents of fate keep mankind on “The Plan” by constantly nudging us in the right direction.
At this point, The Adjustment Bureau sets off on an aching, urgent surge as both desperate love story and sci-fi thriller. Pursued and roadblocked by Mad Men’s John Slattery and his cohorts – and helped by Anthony Mackie – Norris chases the woman he loves but was never supposed to meet through the streets of New York. With Oscar-winning cinematographer John Toll brushing the mood between light and dark (the weather seems to track Norris’ storming emotions and the
uncertain heavenly shifts), Damon probably has as much running to do here as he did in any of the Bourne movies.
“We actually tried Free Will before,” rumbles Terence Stamp, the Angels’ dark destroyer brought in to prevent Norris from disrupting Destiny. “You gave us the Dark Ages for five centuries.” From theological metaphors to pre-determinist minefields, we’re on seriously tricky ground here. It tackles some difficult, adult questions about life and choices. Between being a president or a
husband. Between changing the world or settling down.
And for sure, The Adjustment Bureau is chock full of holes. Why doesn’t Elise ever phone the well-known Norris after the Angels prevent him calling her? Aren’t the Angels causing infinitely more “ripples” than Norris as they charge around trying to stop him? What exactly are the Angels’ powers? One minute they have amazing telekinetic gifts (knocking out phone lines, lifting paving slabs) and can predict the future (thanks to magic books that map our interweaving fates). The next minute they can’t even stop a taxi and must sprint after Damon like normal men. In fact, the whole movie is set in motion when one of them nods off on a park bench.
But if The Adjustment Bureau often feels like a long episode of The X-Files, it’s the beautiful, believable romance between Damon and Blunt that keeps us gripped. Like few other films in recent memory, The Adjustment Bureau makes us believe in a thing called love.
It helps that Damon and Blunt don’t look like gorgeous superstars. They’ve just two ordinary people who’ve both felt that rarest of sounds: click. When Elise playfully flips Norris the bird at the end of their second chance meeting, you get why he’ll never stop running till he catches her. Blunt is funny and anarchic, Damon is determined and disarming. The chemistry is perfect and Nolfi, who previously wrote screenplays for Ocean’s Twelve and The Bourne Ultimatum,
gives them some lovely, pure, romantic dialogue (“If I’m not supposed to be with her, why do I feel like this?” asks Norris, angry and hurt).
Truth be told, it’s hard to say who’ll turn up to see them. Guys expecting a sci-fi thriller will be wrong-footed by the romance, girls who’d watch the romance will try to dodge what looks like a sci-fi thriller. Take a chance – it might be in The Plan anyway.
VERDICT: [rating stars=”3″]
Despite wobbling under the weight of some hefty ideas while straddling two genres, this sci-fi mystery surprises by emerging as one of the most romantic films of the year.
Publication: Total Film