The Fifth Element is one of those films that the genre community loves not because it is a good film, but because it's actually pretty awful, and intentionally so. At least, that's how I interpret it. It has always seemed like a film that deliberately sought out science fiction's pension for high-flying, mythological fantasy (in space). In some sense, it's the opposite of Starships Troopers, released in the same year. Both films are satires: Starship Troopers a more socio-political satire of the military industrial complex, and The Fifth Element a satire of genre -- or what I call the "legacy of camp."
The plot is eccentric enough -- and ever so genre -- but the film's technological imagination is where the nonsensical really shines. Take, for example, the main city: hover cars are everywhere, despite societal evidence that this would be a complete disaster; Chinese restaurants deliver in person, flying around in makeshift sailing ships; Korben Dallas (Bruce Willis) has enough high-powered rifles to make even an NRA activist scared (and apparently he's not the only one); and homes are equipped with self-cleaning showers and other gadgets that would make Bill Gates wet himself. Elsewhere, we're to believe that scientists can reconstruct any biological being from a handful of cells; luxury cruise ships roam the stars undefended, while mercenaries destroy everything they're paid to eliminate; and aliens of unimaginable cleverness (who made Leeloo) are so inept at protecting their own ships that their destruction becomes a convenient plot device. It's the kind of movie that, if it took itself seriously, would fall apart the moment someone started to think about it all.
But The Fifth Element doesn't take itself too seriously. It's camp through and through. The acting is overboard, right down to a somewhat dumbfounded Tommy Lister playing President of, well, everything and Gary Oldman pulling out all the stops as the ridiculous Zorg, weird hairdo, accent, and all. It's as if the creators sat down one day and said, "How can we make this movie so ridiculous it's actually entertaining?" And it's that willingness to embrace the campy side of SF that makes The Fifth Element one of those rare humorous gems, memorable not for being a gamestopper like 2001: A Space Odyssey or Blade Runner, but for being that absurd movie we can all watch and love together. It never needed to be a good movie. It only ever needed to be that right mixture of camp and humor (a skill Joss Whedon has learned to master quite well).
This is where I have to wonder: What other films do the same thing? Do they work as well as The Fifth Element? Why or why not?
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Retro Nostalgia is the product of my compulsive re-watching of classic and/or quality science fiction and fantasy films (and their related components). In each feature, I'll cover some element of a particular film that interests me, sometimes from an academic perspective and other times as a simple fan. Previous columns can be easily found via the "Movie Rants" label.
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