Review: Déjà Vu

Tony Scott doesn’t even wait for Déjà Vu to properly begin before employing the spastic visual stylings that are his calling card.

Déjà Vu
Photo: Touchstone Pictures

Tony Scott doesn’t even wait for Déjà Vu to properly begin before employing the spastic visual stylings that are his calling card, inaugurating his newest exercise in aesthetic freneticism by rewinding and repeating the production companies’ logo sequences like a DJ scratching vinyl. Perhaps his eagerness stems from the fact that, for this time-traveling terrorist thriller’s first portion, opportunities for cinematographic gimmickry and schizophrenic editing are few and far between, with Bill Marsilii and Terry Rossio’s script initially following New Orleans-bred ATF agent Doug Carlin (Denzel Washington) through a standard investigation into the bombing of a civilian and naval officer-populated ferry.

After a series of superfluous pans around conversing characters, the story finally kicks into frenzied gear after F.B.I. agent Pryzwarra (a pudgy, reserved Val Kilmer) lets Carlin in on an enormous secret: Through a combination of satellites and wormholes, the government can watch the past—specifically, a constantly running feed of four days ago—via a god’s-eye camera that can zoom in and around a restricted geographic radius. It’s a nifty device that offers Carlin the means to both crack the ferry attack case and prevent the seemingly related murder of Claire (Paula Patton), whom the lonely Carlin, desperate to save someone, falls in love with while watching her on the feds’ supernatural History Channel.

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Along with its trippy mobile headset version, it’s also a gadget (dubbed “Snow White”) that allows Scott to freely indulge his techno-surveillance fetish. Throughout, he piles high-speed computer graphics on top of digitally enhanced images that are fractured, slowed down, and sped up with less reckless abandon than any given scene in Domino, but it’s still gratuitous.

As the minions of Adam Goldberg’s religiously inclined programmer joystick their way through recent events, Washington fruitlessly strives to bring some desperate, burning romanticism to the off-the-wall action and our hero’s quest. That eventually involves taking a risky one-way trip through the wormhole, simply leading to some mind-bending paradoxes, plenty of corny melodrama, and a few encounters with James Caviezel’s Timothy McVeigh-style patriot.

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Though dedicated to the citizens of New Orleans and featuring brief ventures onto Bourbon Street and into the devastated Ninth Ward, Déjà Vu avoids too many glib Katrina references, as well as sensibly distracts attention from its dubious quantum physics-related time travel theories with regularly scheduled bursts of hectic action. If, however, there’s a familiarity to the film’s wired mise-en-scène, use of both Denzel and a cute Fanning girl (here, a cameoing Elle), and a climactic act of redemptive martyrdom, don’t worry—it’s not an instance of the titular phenomenon but, rather, the more mundane result of Scott merely replicating Man on Fire.

Score: 
 Cast: Denzel Washington, Paula Patton, Val Kilmer, James Caviezel, Adam Goldberg, Elden Henson, Erika Alexander, Bruce Greenwood  Director: Tony Scott  Screenwriter: Bill Marsilii, Terry Rossio  Distributor: Touchstone Pictures  Running Time: 126 min  Rating: PG-13  Year: 2006  Buy: Video

Nick Schager

Nick Schager is the entertainment critic for The Daily Beast. His work has also appeared in Variety, Esquire, The Village Voice, and other publications.

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