USA | 2009
115 minutes Director: Richard Kelly Producers: Sean McKittrick, Richard Kelly, Dan Lin Screenplay: Richard Kelly.
Based on the short story “Button, Button” by Richard Matheson Photography: Steven Poster Editor: Sam Bauer Production designer: Alexander Hammond Costume designer: April Ferry Music: Win Butler, Régine Chassagne, Owen Pallett With: Cameron Diaz, James Marsden, Frank Langella, James Rebhorn, Holmes Osborne, Gillian Jacobs, Sam Oz Stone
Richmond, Virginia. The main business in town is the nearby NASA facility. It’s 1976 and the Viking photos from Mars have brought home the possibility of alien life. Elaborating on a classic Twilight Zone premise, Richard Kelly invests the time and place of his own birth with his patented blend of hyper-realism, sci-fi queasiness and Y-generation cultural overload (Kubrick, Revelation, Jean Paul Sartre).
“The latest film from Donnie Darko director Richard Kelly arrives on these shores bearing the clawmarks of American critics. But don’t panic: while it’s true that the film’s sci-fi antics are far from watertight in the logic department, there’s enough eccentricity and ambition at play to charm and bemuse in equal measure. Building on the short story “Button, Button” by The Twilight Zone writer Richard Matheson, Kelly whisks us back to late 1970s Virginia. There we meet mid-ranking NASA scientist Arthur (James Marsden) and his crippled schoolteacher wife, Norma (Cameron Diaz), whom Kelly recruits as two blow-dried lab rats for a deliciously overwrought interplanetary experiment. It begins when Frank Langella (missing a left cheek) knocks on their door, drops off a contraption with a red button on it and says that if they push the button, they’ll receive a million dollars – but someone they don’t know will die...
Kelly’s crackpot-inventor approach to filmmaking (note the second-half pile-up of nosebleeding bodysnatchers, watery gateways to Hell and sundry Arthur C Clarke quotations) has produced a provocative, Lynch-lite paranoia flick that flaunts some fascinating ideas on the destructive power of technology, the bourgeois desire for conformity and the potential horrors of parenthood. It also features a great soundtrack by Arcade Fire.” — David Jenkins, Time Out
“Derives great verve from delivering audacious, unexpected craziness... Uniquely bonkers, and the better for it.” — Nick Schager, Slant
“An unwieldy, ambitious, one-of-a-kind film waiting for a cult to find it.”— Keith Phipps, The Onion AV Club
Who would accept $1,000,000 to press a remote button that kills an unseen stranger?