Ready Player One Movie Review 2018 | Tye Sheridan | Olivia Cooke | Sean Connery | Steven Spielberg



Ready Player One English Movie Details:


Directed by: Steven Spielberg

Produced by: Steven Spielberg
                Donald De Line
                Dan Farah
                Kristie Macosko Krieger

Screenplay by: Zak Penn
                Ernest Cline

Music by: Alan Silvestri

Cinematography: Janusz Kamiński

Edited by: Michael Kahn
                Sarah Broshar

Production company:  Warner Bros
                    Village Roadshow Pictures
                    Amblin Entertainment
                    Amblin Partners
                    De Line Pictures
                    Farah Films & Management

Distributed by: Warner Bros. Pictures

Release date March 29, 2018 (US)

Country: United States

Language: English


Movie Review:


For an entire generation, Steven Spielberg is perhaps as mythical as his movies. The stories that we’ve heard about him are unanimously devotional, told years later, after enough time had passed for the negativity to evaporate. I wasn’t born when Jaws or Close Encounters became phenomenons. And I wasn’t there when, continuing an unprecedented streak of success, Spielberg directed Raiders of the Lost Ark and ET. But in the future, when many of the ideas that he once imagined have perhaps become a reality, I can say that I was there for Ready Player One. It doesn’t for a moment come close to achieving the greatness of some of his best movies, but it would never have existed without them.

         More than anything else, Ready Player One feels like the culmination of the era we live in, a time when being an outsider doesn’t immediately get you mocked. It’s a celebration, a carnival of creativity that only Spielberg could have made - but then again, there is nothing that he cannot do (reminder: The Post came out two months ago).

Having read Ernie Cline’s source novel at the peak of its popularity, it was only reasonable to wonder how - not if - this remarkable vision could be reproduced on the big screen. What the novel couldn’t accomplish in terms of prose - it really was quite plain - it more than made up for in sheer imagination and a propulsive pace. But it needed a filmmaker who understood this world on an elemental level, someone who could scratch beneath the surface and explore the aspects of nerd culture that its overlords would prefer remain buried. And in a stroke of unbelievable good luck, not only did they manage to get someone who, in my book, is the finest living filmmaker in the world, that someone also happens to be the person who invented this sort of movie. It’s almost like if we’d sent Stephen Hawking to meet the first alien expedition that arrived on our planet.

           What the trailers didn’t really highlight all that excitedly - for reasons that a committee full of marketing sorts would be better equipped to explain - Ready Player One isn’t simply a story about a dystopian future in which the people of Earth have retreated into a virtual reality. It’s a breakneck chase adventure that’s modelled after, of all things, Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. In fact, if I remember correctly, one of the blurbs on the book made that same observation, calling it ‘Willy Wonka meets The Matrix.’

And as co-screenwriter, Cline seems to have spent all his time trying to live up to that blurb. It’s unusual for a Spielberg movie to have a noticeably weak element - he normally does not pull the trigger on a project unless he is pleased with every department - but Cline’s script, which he co-wrote with Zak Penn, falls into several predictable traps - unlike its characters, who successfully avoid most obstacles thrown their way with relative ease. In order to streamline the plot down to its essentials - Ready Player One, the book, is notoriously clogged with details - Cline displays crippling indecision, retaining unnecessary plot points while at the same time sacrificing the most euphoric moments of his novel. This will probably not mean much to those who haven’t read it, but even then, the movie does rely a tad too heavily on exposition - ‘This is the Orb of Osuvox, a level 99 magical artefact that creates a forcefield that protects the holder.’ That sort of thing.

            The trouble is, the Orb of Osuvox plays a significant part in the plot, especially in the loudest, most overwhelming third act Spielberg has directed in years - a 20 minute chunk of non-stop action that has more blink-and-you-miss pop-culture references than it is humanly possible to absorb in one viewing. But before all the mayhem, Ready Player One is a typically entertaining Spielbergian adventure - breathtakingly bold in its visuals, with stunningly choreographed action, and an emotional knot tying all these elements together. Consciously or not, Spielberg seems to have sneakily made a blockbuster film about the state of modern blockbuster filmmaking - pitting a wide-eyed young white male against an army of greedy corporate suits out to purchase his services for monopolistic purposes.

It tells the story of a young man called Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan), whose father wanted him to have a name that sounded like it could’ve belonged to a superhero - you know, like Bruce Banner or Peter Parker, mild mannered men whose alter egos unleash hidden potentials. Like most superheroes, Wade was born into a world of sorrow, sorrows that he tries to drown not in alcohol, but in another kind of drug: virtual reality. Wade, and the rest of what is left of humanity - unhealthy and unclean losers who spend every waking hour pretending like the real world doesn’t exist - are jolted out of their self-induced stupor when James Halliday dies.

               Halliday (played by Spielberg’s new muse, Mark Rylance) was the greatest mind of his time, the man who invented the OASIS, a virtual reality world that offers respite from the troubles that have overrun the real one. Wade was born after OASIS opened its cyber gates, so it’s the only reality he knows. That makes him perfectly equipped for the challenge Halliday has left behind: Three clues, three easter eggs hidden somewhere within the endless virtual world of the OASIS which will win the person who finds them the keys to Halliday’s kingdom, and ostensibly, to the most powerful economic resource in the world.

Together with his friends, he embarks upon an epic quest that takes him from unwinnable car races that routinely attract King Kong and the T-Rex, to a house of horror modelled after Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining - all the while being chased by Nolan Sorrento and his evil corporation. It’s a film that is, at a fair estimate, roughly 70% animated, but with the real world always knocking at the door.

                              But there’s a reason why fantasy and science-fiction is often described as escapist entertainment. The implication is that, had we been living in a perfect world, there would no longer be any need for such tales. We would no longer need to escape. But the art of storytelling goes back millennia - presumably because as a species, we’ve never really been content enough to stop wanting something better than the reality in which we live. So we drew sketches on the walls of our caves, and we carved giant rocks into temples for fantastical beings (that we invented); we wrote words on paper, and we pranced about on stages and in front of crowds. We invented the movies, and through them, we travelled to worlds both familiar and unknown. We escaped. It’s what we do best. And Steven Spielberg knows where to take you.

Production:


Warner Bros. and De Line Pictures won an auction for the rights to Ernest Cline's novel Ready Player One in 2010, before it had been published.Cline was set to write the script for the film, which Donald De Line and Dan Farah would produce.Eric Eason rewrote Cline's script,and Zak Penn was hired to rewrite the previous drafts by Cline and Eason. Village Roadshow Pictures came aboard to co-finance and co-produce the film with Warner Bros.Steven Spielberg signed on to direct and produce the film, which Kristie Macosko Krieger would also produce along with De Line and Farah.Ready Player One is Spielberg's first action-fantasy film since The Adventures of Tintin in late 2011.


Casting:


Three actresses were top-runners for the role of Art3mis: Elle Fanning, Olivia Cooke, and Lola Kirke;In September 2015, Cooke was announced as having been cast in the coveted female lead role.In January 2016, Ben Mendelsohn joined the cast. In February 2016, Tye Sheridan was confirmed for the lead role of Wade, after a lengthy nationwide casting call failed to produce an unknown for the part.In March 2016, Simon Pegg joined the cast.In April 2016, Mark Rylance joined the cast.In June 2016, T. J. Miller, Hannah John-Kamen and Win Morisaki joined the cast.In July 2016, Philip Zhao joined the cast.Later, Lena Waithe, Ralph Ineson, McKenna Grace and Letitia Wright were revealed as being part of the cast.


Filming:


Production was set to begin in July 2016.Screenwriter Zak Penn tweeted on July 1, 2016, that the first week of filming was completed.In August and September 2016, filming took place in Birmingham, England, which included Livery Street in the Jewellery Quarter area which also utilized the backpackers hostel Hatters for internal filming; other locations in the city included the former industrial area of Digbeth. The film is set in Ohio.Principal photography ended on September 27, 2016.


Music:


On June 9, 2016, Variety stated that Spielberg's regular collaborator John Williams was planning to compose the film's score.However in July 2017, it was reported that Williams had left the project to work on Spielberg's The Post instead, with Alan Silvestri hired to take over scoring duties for Ready Player One. The official soundtrack will be released by WaterTower Music on March 30, 2018.


Box office:


In the United States and Canada, Ready Player One is projected to gross around $35 million in its opening weekend, although Warner Bros. is projecting a debut of $50 million.


Ready Player One Official Trailer (2018):




Cast:

  • Tye Sheridan as Wade Watts / Parzival, a Gunter who wishes to win the Quest so he can leave the stacks.
  • Olivia Cooke as Samantha "Sam" Cook / Art3mis, a famous Gunter who works with various allies to ensure the OASIS is kept free and out of the hands of IOI.
  • Ben Mendelsohn as Nolan Sorrento / Sorrento, the CEO of Innovative Online Industries, who seeks full control over the OASIS.
  • Lena Waithe as Helen / Aech, a Gunter who is male in the OASIS and female in reality, and longtime friend of Wade's. Aech runs a virtual garage in his free time to create and fix various vehicles and items.
  • T. J. Miller as i-R0k, a freelance weapons / magic item dealer and bounty hunter that is often employed by IOI.
  • Philip Zhao as Sho, a Gunter and younger brother to Daito.
  • Win Morisaki as Daito, a Gunter and older brother to Sho.
  • Hannah John-Kamen as F'Nale Zandor, the head of IOI's operations in the physical world, as well as their indentured servitude programs.

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