Source Code: Jake Gyllenhaal's Timeless Hero Overcomes Weird Plot. | Film | Dallas | Dallas Observer | The Leading Independent News Source in Dallas, Texas
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Source Code: Jake Gyllenhaal's Timeless Hero Overcomes Weird Plot.

Moon director Duncan Jones' sophomore feature, Source Code—a pseudo-cerebral, modestly budgeted sci-fi thriller with ambitions more Philip K. Dick-like in scope than the recent Dick adaptation The Adjustment Bureau—is a propulsive ride worth your popcorn dollar, not for its preposterous genre tinkering but for its refreshingly humanist take on a...
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Moon director Duncan Jones' sophomore feature, Source Code—a pseudo-cerebral, modestly budgeted sci-fi thriller with ambitions more Philip K. Dick-like in scope than the recent Dick adaptation The Adjustment Bureau—is a propulsive ride worth your popcorn dollar, not for its preposterous genre tinkering but for its refreshingly humanist take on a high-concept gimmick.

Like Moon's Sam Rockwell before him, a totally game Jake Gyllenhaal is the movie's glue as Captain Colter Stevens, a decorated pilot and Hitchcockian everyman who wakes up on a commuter train to Chicago, unaware who his garrulous seatmate is. (That would be underutilized actress Michelle Monaghan, again nailing the thankless role of Pretty Girl.) A quick peek in the restroom mirror confirms Colter is in another man's body, and a few confusing moments after that, he and everyone on board are engulfed in a terrorist explosion. Materializing back in the Twilight Zone—a dank concrete techno-cell where he's debriefed via video chat by military handler Goodwin (Vera Farmiga)—Colter learns of his role in the titular government experiment, for which his mind will relive an avatar's last eight minutes to gather clues and hopefully prevent a deadlier attack by catching the dirty bomber.

Source Code's two-minute trailer sets most of that up, but doesn't hint at screenwriter Ben Ripley's hits-to-misses ratio. Like every time-travel yarn (though, technically, the time-loop logic here has more in common with Groundhog Day than 12 Monkeys), there are far-fetched plot wrinkles and quickly reeled-off quantum claptrap to distract us from the impossibilities, so let's try suspending our disbelief in favor of a salvaged consciousness kept alive and "time reassignment." Just as our brains fill in the periphery of our vision with a seamless blur of what we think exists, Colter's choose-his-own-adventure courses of action should be limited to the last sensory experiences of the dead man he inhabits. Never-before-had conversations between characters make for enticing drama, but how the hell can our man peer into heating ducts or even get off the train to notice MacGuffins that weren't discovered in the real-time wreckage? Not that any B-movie lover should care to play high school physics teacher, and even co-star Jeffrey Wright (wonderfully hammy here as a shifty bureaucrat who lords over Goodwin) offers the most telling line: "The source code is a gift. Don't squander it by thinking."

Most likely you won't, since the film's secret weapon isn't its tension-mounting puzzle solving, sleek sense of visual claustrophobia or philosophical questioning—but rather its sneaky compassion. Halfway through the film, Colter accepts his fate yet still refuses to allow these strangers on a train to meet their doom, no matter how many times he channels his inner Bill Murray. As he runs through the honest emotions of a non-action hero stuck in a tour-of-duty spin cycle, deservedly angry at times when he isn't merely baffled or frustrated, Colter's sense of loyalty to these innocents kicks into overdrive. Knowingly futile as his quest is to save people who have already met their fiery demise and who also forget him with each flip of the hourglass, Gyllenhaal sells that personal sense of wish fulfillment with real heart.

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