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  • The Electric State review: a bold but underwhelming blockbuster

    The Electric State review: a bold but underwhelming blockbuster

    2/5

    ★★☆☆☆

    Score Details

    “The Electric State is a vast, sci-fi spectacle that fails to light a big enough spark.”

    ✅ Pros

    • Fantastic visual effects
    • Some fine, emotional moments

    ❌ Cons

    • Lackluster cast performances
    • One-dimensional characters
    • A clunky, rushed dialogue

    Acclaimed directors Anthony and Joe Russo (Avengers: Infinity War, Avengers: Endgame) presented another sci-fi blockbuster with The Electric State. A loose adaptation of Simon Stålenhag’s graphic novel, this film depicts Millie Bobby Brown (Stranger Things) as teenager Michelle, who teams up with the robot Cosmo and a smuggler, played by Chris Pratt (Guardians of the Galaxy), to find her long-long brother in a world in which sentient robots revolted against humanity in the 1990s.

    The Russo Brothers have had a mixed run with their films following Endgame‘s massive success. Nevertheless, The Electric State had been hyped as one of Netflix’s biggest original films with its enormous budget and all-star talent. Though the film is a sight to behold, The Electric State suffers from several problems that have made it an underwhelming sci-fi epic.

    The Electric State is a visual spectacle

    Herm and Keats fighting-robots in "The Electric State."
    Netflix / Netflix

    Since The Electric State is a post-apocalyptic, robot-filled blockbuster, the filmmakers had to do the visual effects right to have any hope of hooking its audience. Fortunately, they didn’t disappoint in that department, as it seamlessly presents the film’s live-action humans with its many CGI robots. While the mechanical characters were mostly silly, The Electric State at least presented a wide variety of bots with creative designs that harken back to Pixar’s WALL-E.

    The movie’s visuals are consistently top-tier, especially during the Endgame-style final battle between Sentre and the machines, presenting a bombastic sci-fi spectacle that has been expected from modern Hollywood blockbusters. On top of that, The Electric State succeeds in building a vast and ruined world filled with giant robot scraps, with images that look like they were taken straight from the pages of Stålenhag’s book.

    The writing is all over the place

    Millie Bobby Brown looks back with a robot behind her in "The Electric State."
    Netflix / Netflix

    The Electric State‘s story is notable for its relevant commentary about humanity’s addiction to technology. As characters hook themselves up to machines, working in isolation from home and escaping in the virtual world, this story feels ever more timely following the pandemic and the frightening advancement of artificial intelligence.

    Unfortunately, The Electric State spends too much time explaining things and repeating information. The opening sequence about the war with machines is a glaring example of how the film fails to follow the “show, don’t tell” rule. The pacing is also very jarring. Everything happens so fast, with the characters throwing lines at each other at breakneck speed as the film jumps from one scene to the next. The movie hardly gives viewers a moment to breathe and take in what they’ve witnessed.

    It’s clear that the Russo Brothers tried to recapture the childlike magic of Steven Spielberg’s films, as The Electric State features many parallels to  E.T., Ready Player One, and A.I. Artificial Intelligence. It also helped that the film delivered a thrilling score from legendary composer Alan Silvestri, which invokes the best notes from the ’80s and the Avengers movies.

    However, The Electric State overloads on its campiness, presenting several goofy sci-fi characters with so many corny, nonsensical jokes that it’s hard to take this dystopian sci-fi film seriously. Screenwriters Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely have shown remarkable talent with their work on the last two Avengers films, and the duo clearly could’ve tapped into so much more than what was on display in The Electric State.

    The actors hardly light a spark

    A girl and two men stand and stare in "The Electric State."
    Paul Abell/Netflix / Netflix

    Considering their success working with A-list ensembles in the past, the Russo Brothers could’ve harnessed so much more from their incredible cast on The Electric State. Unfortunately, much of the acting seems unconvincing and doesn’t always match the tone of the scene. Even when Michelle is fighting for her life against terrifying odds, she still has a habit of giving moody, wisecracking complaints.

    Stanley Tucci and Giancarlo Esposito also fell flat with their respective performances as Ethan Skate and Marshall Bradbury, though they didn’t have much to work with playing such lackluster villains. Millie Bobby Brown and Woody Norman still deserve praise for their performances together, as they present plenty of pathos in their scenes as sister and brother. There’s no doubt the cast could’ve done so much better had they had the right material, but there was hardly enough electricity in what they delivered.

    Is The Electric State worth seeing?

    Ultimately, The Electric State is perfect for those hoping to watch an easy blockbuster. The film is a bold and timely undertaking, but don’t go into this film expecting the next hit franchise. Whatever great story the filmmakers intended to tell seems buried beneath a pile of awkward jokes, one-dimensional characters, and expositional dialogue. It is worth reiterating that the Russo Brothers have succeeded in crafting some of the world’s best blockbusters and have shown extraordinary skills as filmmakers. Though The Electric State featured great promise, one can hope that the Russos will at least learn from this experience as they continue their craft.

    The Electric State is now streaming on Netflix.

  • Netflix’s most expensive movie ever ‘The Electric State’ is a ‘dumb, unfunny’ $320 million flop

    Millie Bobby Brown as Michelle in "The Electric State."
    Millie Bobby Brown as Michelle in “The Electric State.”

    • Netflix’s new sci-fi movie “The Electric State” reportedly had a budget of $300 to $320 million.
    • Critics are panning the film, which has a 17% score on Rotten Tomatoes as of publication.
    • It’s reportedly Netflix’s most expensive movie ever. One critic called it “a monumental disaster.”

    Netflix reportedly shelled out hundreds of millions for their new film, “The Electric State,” but its return on investment isn’t looking very promising.

    “The Electric State,” released on Friday, is a retro-futuristic movie set in the ’90s. It stars Millie Bobby Brown as Michelle, an orphaned teen who goes on a journey in search of her long-lost brother, Christopher, after a robot rebellion. She’s joined on the journey by a smuggler named Keats (Chris Pratt) and his sidekick, a robot named Herman (voiced by Anthony Mackie).

    The sci-fi movie is directed by sibling filmmaking duo Joe and Anthony Russo, who got their start as directors and producers on the TV shows “Arrested Development” and “Community” before graduating to the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

    With two well-known stars as the faces of the movie, a thriving duo directing, and a bunch of celebrity cameos, “The Electric State” seemed ripe for success — on paper, at least.

    As of publication, the film has a critics score of 17% from 69 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, suggesting Netflix might have miscalculated its latest big swing.

    ‘The Electric State’ reportedly had a budget of $300 million to $320 million

    A still from "The Electric State" showing Millie Bobby Brown, Chris Pratt and Ke Huy Quan in retro outfits.
    Millie Bobby Brown, Chris Pratt, and Ke Huy Quan in “The Electric State.”

    In May 2024, Puck News reported that the movie’s budget at a “traditional studio” would probably have been less than $200 million. But at Netflix, it reportedly could have ended up around $300 million.

    More recently, Deadline and Total Film reported “The Electric State” budget as even higher — $320 million, which, if true, would make it one of the most expensive movies ever made. To further put it into context, the reported budgets for the 10 most recent Oscar winners for best picture collectively amount to under $230 million, which is still much less than “The Electric State.”

    It’s not unheard of for a Russo brothers movie to have a big budget, though. The duo directed Marvel’s “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” which was a critical and commercial success, earning $714 million globally on a reported $170 million budget. They’ve since directed three more ensemble Marvel films: “Captain America: Civil War,” “Avengers: Infinity War,” and “Avengers: Endgame.”

    “Infinity War” and “Endgame” are two of the highest-grossing films of all time, with both crossing $2 billion at the global box office.

    However, the duo has found success outside the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), particularly on streaming services, more difficult to achieve.

    Their 2022 action movie “The Gray Man,” starring Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans, received middling reviews and a 45% critics score on Rotten Tomatoes. It reportedly cost $200 million to make.

    The Russo brothers’ spy series “Citadel,” starring Priyanka Chopra and Richard Madden, reportedly cost $300 million to make and scored an early renewal before the first season debuted on Prime Video. Two spin-offs have since premiered, but the “Citadel” universe hasn’t prompted much buzz.

    Reviews of ‘The Electric State’ are overwhelmingly negative, calling it a waste of money

    Millie Bobby Brown as Michelle in "The Electric State."
    Millie Bobby Brown as Michelle in “The Electric State.”

    The movie is inspired by Simon Stålenhag’s 2018 illustrated novel of the same name. To call it based on the novel would be a stretch, though, as the movie completely revamps elements of the book.

    Instead, critics have called it “derivative” and “soulless,” with “mind-numbingly repetitive” action scenes. Brown and Pratt, who have delivered impressive performances in “Stranger Things” and the MCU, respectively, fail to bring a spark to “The Electric State.”

    Dylan Roth of The Observer deemed it “a dumb, unfunny action movie for children,” and the latest victim in the trend of “unfathomably expensive streaming titles that feel like they were designed by an algorithm and assembled in a factory.”

    It’s hard to know how exactly Netflix quantifies success. Is topping the weekly top 10 during the premiere week considered a win, even if the movie doesn’t have longtail viewership? Or does it need to become one of the streamer’s most popular films to be considered a bona fide slam dunk? And how much does social media chatter matter?

    In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter published on Friday, Joe Russo said that “logically, it probably doesn’t make a ton of sense” for streamers to spend astronomical amounts of money on projects, “but I think they might — because people still believe in ambition. Executives still believe in ambition.”

    “‘The Electric State’ is certainly a big test case for this whole thing,” Anthony Russo said, adding that the filmmakers and the streamer have tried to hype up the film in the way that big theatrical releases generate attention.

    “So we’ll see how this plays, we’ll see what this does for Netflix and we’ll see where it all goes,” he said.

    Reps for Netflix and the Russo brothers didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Read the original article on Business Insider