'A Big Bold Beautiful Journey' review -- an abomination from start to finish
The Barbie star has zero chemistry with Colin Farrell in this turgid piffle about past lives that also features Phoebe Waller-Bridge
https://www.thetimes.com/culture/film/article/a-big-bold-beautiful-journey-review-an-abomination-starring-margot-robbie-qcndjggs2
https://archive.ph/3Qbyp

Somebody make it stop. Somebody shut them up. Just make it all end
Oh, sorry, its over? I was too busy banging my head repeatedly against the seat rest to notice. Wow. This is a trial. Would you like to go on a big, bold, beautiful journey? asks the magical sat nav voiced by Jodie Turner-Smith early on in this abomination. Well, she doesnt answer, if you do, Im afraid youve come to the wrong movie.
This is star-laden soul torture that somehow wastes the combined efforts of Margot Robbie, Colin Farrell, Kevin Kline and Phoebe Waller-Bridge. You could almost plonk that charismatic foursome in a room together and shoot them sipping coffee, clipping their toenails or just breathing and it would still have some cinematic value. But here Hollywood has found a way to neutralise the talent with a script, courtesy of
The Menu writer Seth Reiss, thats so leaden and direction, from the
After Yang film-maker Kogonada, so saccharine that you may never want to see another Robbie or Farrell turn again.
The story concerns,
heeeruugggh (sorry, dry retching with PTSD), magical doors that allow navel-gazing dullards and potential paramours David (Farrell) and Sarah (Robbie) to step into unremarkable episodes from their tedious past lives and learn the wildly uninteresting reasons why, in adult life, they cant stop saying turgid piffle such as, The most beautiful places make you feel the most alone. And, I want to believe that its possible to share a life. And, I wake up in the morning and Im about as empty as Ive ever been. Oh, shut up, you moany berks. Go for a walk. Do some volunteering. Just get off the screen.
It doesnt help that Farrell and Robbie have zero chemistry. In their big scene, when David stares at Sarah and says, I see you Sarah. I see you, its like watching a serial killer threatening his next victim. Run, Sarah, run. I wish I had.
★☆☆☆☆