Plurality (2021) by Aozaru Shiao


Director: Aozaru Shiao
Year: 2021
Country: Taiwan
Alternate Titles: N/A
Genre: Science Fiction/Thriller

Plot:
After a bizarre bus accident, a man awakens from a coma to find himself under the care of workers at a government facility intending to ask him questions about the incident. During the questioning, he discovers that his mind now shares the consciousness of four fellow passengers – all of them dead; all of them suspects in a serial kidnapping and murder case. To prove his own innocence, Ming evades capture by the police and tries to track down the killer’s only surviving victim. But in order to unmask the murderer’s true identity, he must first fight the monster within himself.

Review:

For the most part, this one was rather confusing to follow but still maintains enough interest. The main gist of that is a storyline that immediately interjects us into this strange world without much preparation. The whole concept of using a prisoner as a host to upload the consciousness of deceased citizens after an accident in order to retrieve information and evidence that is crucial to their case is quite unique and clever. However, this doesn’t make that concept imminently clear until way too late into the film to give us time to acclimate to this strange situation. Instead, the film insists on treating this as though it’s a common everyday occurrence of involving prisoners as host bodies for these interrogations and completely skips out over the process of acquiring the perfect host, how they get inducted into the setup and what is expected as a result since these are important questions to answer. The only aspect that’s clear is that they’re needed to answer questions involving a child killer running loose in the city snatching children with various birth defects which is all we really get out of the setup.

On top of this confusing narrative, the film is way too focused on other aspects rather than dishing out action based on its setup. The impressive look of the scenes set within his mind, featuring an elaborate maze of futuristic corridors, doorways, and dazzling color schemes, do nothing to add much to the film’s coherency as they just end up feeling like add-ons from a different kind of film entirely. Rather than depict the struggle within himself to keep the various personalities inside him from taking over his own memories and experiences, they come off like weird arthouse showcase pieces since he never interacts with anyone else inside. Moreover, rather than feature a sense of urgency at catching a maniacal killer running loose in the city, there’s a focus on trying to keep his personality in order and how he’s responding to the treatment for far too long before he eventually escapes, making this one feel quite sluggish in the first half as a result.

While this one might be confusing to think about, when dealing with the action on display it’s quite fun. The stuntwork for the opening bus crash is quite nice and opens the film up quite nicely like the rest of the action scenes. Featuring a tight, intense car chase to conclude his escape from the facility, a brutal hand-to-hand fistfight that has some brutality to add to everything else, and a multi-layered finale full of revelations and brawling, it packs in some impressive sequences. The series of revelations about who’s the actual figure in control of his actions and who was the killer all along which comes off quite surprising once it’s all revealed. The last positive to enjoy here is the original turn in the story at the end where despite several characters meeting a deadly end there’s still a happy ending for the survivors since the usual tactic is to offer up somebody losing out on a goal the fact that this brings a cathartic end to everything is quite commendable. These aspects manage to give the film some likable qualities for the most part.


Overview: ***.5
Despite being confusing at times, sticking with the film will bring about some enjoyable aspects with the unique storyline containing some likable aspects and tons of action along the way. Give this a watch if you’re a fan of the style of Sci/Fi/Action thrillers or intrigued by the setup at play, while only viewers that are turned off by the positives and want more of a straightforward Action should heed caution.


This review was originally published on Asian Movie Pulse and is gratefully reprinted with their cooperation.

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