D: Josef Rusnak; with Craig Bierko, Gretchen Mol, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Vincent D'Onofrio, Dennis Haysbert, Steve Schub, Bob Clendenin, Rachel Winfree. (R, 120 min.)
With "The Matrix," "eXistenZ," and now "The Thirteenth Floor," filmgoers' collective sense
of reality has been taking a real pummeling of late. That thematically similar films
tend to arrive in clusters is old news, but these three deal with almost identical
themes of false realities and that age-old stoner question (these days I guess we
ought to revise that to cyber-question) that asks, "Hey, what if we're all just figments
of someone else's imagination?" "The Thirteenth Floor," adapted from Daniel F. Galouye's
novel of the same name, lacks the stylish overkill of "The Matrix" and skirts the Cronenbergian
cyber-angst of "eXistenZ" in favor of a vague futuristic bent that involves video-game
simulations and Teutonic existentialism. Unfortunately, it's a mix that comes off
as sublimely ridiculous when it's not struggling to be highbrow (sporadic flurries
of giggling accompanied the semi-full screening I attended). Bierko plays Douglas
Hall, a software developer who, along with techie pal Whitney (D'Onofrio) and boss
Hammond Fuller (Mueller-Stahl), has developed a full-body video simulation of 1937
Los Angeles. Think of it as the ultimate virtual reality, one where you can lie down,
go to sleep, and have your consciousness "transferred" via computer scan to a pre-existing
game character in good old L.A. The film is sketchy on the "whys" of all this, but,
presumably, it's a great way to pick up virtual one-night stands without all the
icky real-world repercussions. When Fuller turns up dead after leaving Hall a mysterious
message within the game's structure, Hall takes it on himself to enter into L.A.
'37 in search of both the message and possible clues to who-dun-it. Enter Detective
McBain (Haysbert) who thinks Hall himself may be responsible for the murder. While
Hall's busy poking around in the past (for only two hours at a time -- any more and
the Beta-test game could presumably fry his neurons), he encounters a mysterious
blonde (Mol), who then turns up in the real world, which leads to the question --
wait for it! -- "What is the real world?" Despite intricate but creaky plotting, Hall
quickly discovers that reality, as is so often the case these days, isn't what it's
cracked up to be. Rusnak's CG-enhanced vision of old-time L.A. looks picture-perfect
(after an early experience jacked in to the system, Hall pronounces "the color's
a bit off"), but the rest of his film is a jumbled mess with as many plot holes as
a year-old chunk of Swiss cheese. Granted, it's tough to pull off such an ambitious
storyline, but The Thirteenth Floor fumbles on so many levels it's just plain silly.
To paraphrase the film's tagline: The Thirteenth Floor: You can go there, but why
would you want to?
1.5 stars
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
The Thirteenth Floor 
Capsule Reviews
The Thirteenth Floor 
Film Vault Suggested Links
eXistenZ 
Johnny Mnemonic 
Strange Days 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Josef Rusnak at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|