Starring John Lithgow, Christopher Collet, Cynthia Nixon
Directed by Marshall Brickman
Written by Thomas Baum, Marshall Brickman
Produced by Marshall Brickman, Jennifer Ogden
117 minutes
4 stars
When you think of the Manhattan Project, probably one of two things springs immediately to mind: the 1942-46 US research project which led to the origin of the atomic bomb, or that breezy 80’s movie about the kid whose science fair project is one. If you’re the latter, congratulations. You’ve already discovered the charm of this heartwarming cult classic and need read no further.
The key ingredient for a film to be considered “cult,” in my humble opinion, is soul. And The Manhattan Project has it in droves. It starts off innocently enough, with some cheesy one-liners, painfully awkward expositional beats, and noticeable 80’s stamps, before rapidly evolving into something much more significant.
Paul (Christopher Collet) is your typical slacker genius, with a bit of a bad streak. One day, he crosses paths with John Lithgow, a nuclear physicist who arrives in his peaceful suburban hometown to set up a plutonium refinery hidden behind the less threatening façade of Medatomics, a company specializing in nuclear medicine. Sure enough, Lithgow starts to get soft on Paul’s mom, so he invites Paul out to the lab to check out the cool lasers and get some bonding time in. What Lithgow fails to realize is that Paul doesn’t just have his head in the big books, he’s a borderline criminal mastermind with a flair for the dramatic. And little does Paul know, the plutonium he’s about to hijack is 99.997% pure. This mutual misunderstanding forms the basis behind the rest of the plot to follow.
Aided by a teenaged Cynthia Nixon of “Sex and the City” fame, Paul builds from scratch his own private nuclear bomb, perhaps for the political activism aspect, but most likely for the challenge.
He’s the unassuming punk of the science fair, a sarcastic, easygoing prankster surrounded by quirky science nerds who won’t get laid until they’re 37. This isn’t his scene, and he’s not here to compete with these kids. His aspirations are grander. At which point, Lithgow makes the connection his plutonium is missing. And that’s when this innocent scholarly pursuit goes horribly, horribly wrong.
Let’s just say Paul’s brand of political activism is performance art. And the name of his piece is “mutually assured destruction.”
The Manhattan Project has more soul than most 80’s “science whiz” movies in its class. A lively, charming bomb construction montage, and the product placement of Duracell on the bomb itself, have “classic” written all over them. Snappy, wisecracking dialogue decorates the script. “Jenny…I never thought I’d say this to anybody, but…I gotta go get the atomic bomb out of the car.”
Most of the time, it’s a lighthearted, idealistic retelling of the Radioactive Boy Scout—less a cautionary tale and more of a “kids verses the adults” caper. Scenes of Paul implementing devious chemistry, pranking the class know-it-all with home-brewed explosives, and outwitting security guards, government personnel, and the military puts this movie in the same league as Wargames.
Half the fun is watching how easily Paul manipulates his environment, firing up computer consoles in a government lab like he’s going for the high score at Pac-Man. He makes operating a robotic arm look as easy as riding a bike. Maneuvers an RC car with the deftness of Jason Statham in Transporter 3. I laughed particularly at the simplicity with which he acquired C-4; the nonchalance with which he handled weapons-grade plutonium. Unbelievable? Of course. But it’s a hella good time.
What makes it work is Lithgow’s character: he’s far from the preachy buffoon of an authority figure typically relegated to this kind of role. We don’t even have any conflict arising from him stepping into the shoes of Paul’s absent father. Instead of piling on reasons for him and Paul to be at odds with each other, the writers have crafted a more interesting, respectful relationship. You’re endeared to both of them simultaneously, and only want for them to form their inevitable alliance, which is continuously prevented by circumstance.
There’s no pointed commentary here. It’s anti-nuclear proliferation to be sure, but that’s about where the political sophistication ends. There is no villain in a black hat…that is, until we reach the end of the second act, where The Manhattan Project suddenly turns into my second-favorite scientists-vs.-military movie behind The Abyss.
Lithgow is a competent, morally-sound realist surrounded by half-cocked gorillas. It’s his character whose dramatic arc we’re witnessing. He admires Paul for his resourcefulness but doesn’t understand his motivations. By the end of the film, he’s squaring off with the military himself.
At one point near the film’s frantic climax, he turns aside, hundred-yard-stare, a sheen of sweat on his brow, and you feel his guilt about the power his lab-coated ilk have willfully turned over to the men with big guns and little brains—an exchange that has been going on, in this field of science, since the titular event of 1942.
Oddly enough, the last ten minutes pack the most comedic punch. Or maybe that’s just my devious sense of humor.
Overall, The Manhattan Project is great fun. An unpretentious script, memorable scenes, and Lithgow’s best role to date (if I may be so bold) make this an undeniable cult classic. If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s the perfect fix to your 80’s nostalgia habit.
No comments:
Post a Comment