The Fifth Element Review

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The Fifth Element


Release Date: 15th May 1997 - Australia


Production Companies
Columbia Pictures
Gaumont 

Distribution 
Madman Entertainment


Genre: Sci-Fi

Rating: PG

Runtime: 126 minutes


Budget: $90,000,000

Box Office Gross: $263,920,180 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
23rd century, Luc Besson's 
visually arresting The Fifth 
Element takes us to a world 
vastly different from that which 
we know today. For ex-Marine 
Korben Dallas, life has become 
tediously repetitive: he drives a 
flying cab for a living and eats 
take-away from the same 
Chinese restaurant, which 
delivers directly to his window, 
every day. But little does 
Korben know, a great extra-
terrestrial Evil has teamed up 
with Zorg and threatens to 
destroy the Earth, an event 
which can only be prevented by 
combining the four Earthly 
elements with an alien "Fifth" 
element. Soon, Korben finds 
himself a pivotal figure in saving 
the Earth when a beautiful alien, 
Leeloo falls through the roof of 
his cab and turns out to be the 
elusive fifth element. In the 
ultimate battle of good versus 
evil, only Korben and Leeloo 
control the key to humanity's 
survival. And the clock is 
style="-webkit-text-size-adjust: auto; background-color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0);">ticking...


Cast
Bruce Willis - Korben Dallas
Milla Jovovich - Leeloo
Gary Oldman - Zorg
Chris Tucker - Ruby Rhod
Ian Holm - Cornelius
Luke Perry - Billy
Maïwenn - Diva Plavalaguna
Brion James - General Munro
Tommy ‘Tiny’ Lister - President Lindberg 
Lee Evans - Fog
Charlie Creed-Miles - David
Tricky - Right Arm
John Neville - General Staedert
John Bluthal - Professor Pacoli
Matthieu Kassovitz - Mugger
Christopher Fairbank - Mactilburgh
Maïween - Diva
Kim Chan - Thai
Clifton Lloyd Bryan - Mangalore Aknot/Various
Vladimir McCrary - Human Aknot
Crew
Story/Screenplay/Director - Luc Besson
Screenplay - Robert Mark Kamen
Producer - Patrice Ledoux
Co-Producer - Iain Smith
Production Designer - Dan Weil
Designers - Jean ‘Moebius’ Giraud and Jean-Claude Mézières (Uncredited)
Creature Design Supervisor - Nick Dudman
Costume Designer - Jean-Paul Gaultier
Director of Photography - Thierry Arbogast 
Stunt Coordinator - Marc Boyle
Special Effects Supervisors - Nick Allder and Neil Corbould
Special Visual Effects Supervisor - Mark Stetson
Digital Effects Supervisor: Digital Domain - Karen E. Goulekas
Editor - Sylvie Landra
Music - Éric Serra


Awards

1998 Academy Awards
Best Sound Effects Editing - Mark A. Mangini (Nominated) 


Review
Originally conceived decades ago by French filmmaker Luc Besson when he was about 16 years of age, but now THE FIFTH ELEMENT is a colourful and entertaining sci-fi movie that was made after the success of his groundbreaking 1994 masterpiece LEON: THE PROFESSIONAL. Some moviegoers claimed that it was a dumb and cheesy film, others thought it was truly impressive. I actually thought so myself and there’s nothing wrong with this movie that came out in the same year as the STAR WARS special editions and James Cameron’s TITANIC (click here), all except for one defect. In my opinion, this may have prevented THE FIFTH ELEMENT from being accomplished as the best movie of 1997. Immersive visuals, city landscapes and masterful concepts, all of which are designed beautifully with a touch of regal splendour as Luc Besson interpreted the future for the sci-fi loving audiences. It may have inspired George Lucas to create more of this city scenery for one of the less fortunate STAR WARS prequels, ATTACK OF THE CLONES.

The cast is no bigger than the extraordinary visuals that were in the left side of a plate. Bruce Willis was a multi-talented actor who ended up in this farce, even though he wasn’t my favourite action star in my opinion. His performance was convincing as the ex-military turned cab driver Korben Dallas who finds himself in a predicament to save the universe. Milla Jovovich was pleasant to watch as the actress fits the bill of the love interest of Korben’s and is also the key to everything. Gary Oldman enjoys getting the villainous roles and doing so without being managed to be actually typecast. Here, he portrays the immorally corrupt businessman Zorg who speaks with a Southern accent as it differs to Oldman’s English tone of voice and is over-the-top than being serious. All the actors are good but one particular performance of an actor I did not like in the movie is Chris Tucker, whose musician character Ruby Rhod is acting like a prima donna and is extremely annoying. 

Humorous, imaginative and explosive, these are the three simple words I describe THE FIFTH ELEMENT as another good space opera with a few marks of potential. It’s been good to re-watch this movie again but I know it’s a bit cheesy, most moviegoers would agree this is a semi-decent feature.

Star rating: (7/10) Good Movie



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