Screen adaptation of D. Eric Mycrans' novel The Reincarnationist Papers. In the center of the plot is a group of men and women who have the opportunity to be reborn. In the face of an enemy, they are forced to trust a schizophrenic man who must believe that his vivid dreams are memories from past lives.
Infinite 4K ReviewThe only thing that made me want to watch this movie was Mark Wahlberg. I thought that he would not act in garbage. But I was wrong. Have I seen better films about immortals? Definitely yes. Much better.
The movie is permeated with the unrealism of what is happening and some kind of terribly primitive comics. Grotesque characters that evoke neither sympathy nor sympathy. They wrote a script, and they pulled a picture over a bare skeleton. The whole film of the protagonist (as well as us, the audience) is brought up to date, so to speak. There are "good, bright infinites", such as X-People, who remember all their past lives and, as a result, know and can do a lot. And there are "bad, dark infinites" who are at war with the light ones and want to destroy humanity. What for? To break the cycle of reincarnations of the Wheel of Samsara by capturing the souls of people, in the truest sense of the word, and placing them in a digital Hell on hard drives. Does the plot remind you of anything? In the film, it is said in plain text that if you kill all the people on the planet, there will be no one to reincarnate and the cycle of reincarnations will collapse. Cool perspective, isn't it? To do this, you just need to kill seven billion people on the planet. And not only humans, but all biological forms of life. You can do this with the help of ... eggs. Eggs, Carl! (Is it not Koshcheyevo?). I don't know why, instead of Thanos's infinity rings, the filmmakers chose an egg as the image of the apocalypse machine. Although, Pushkin clearly knew something. And the Masons know what the egg has to do with it. As a result, an interesting plot once again received a mediocre incarnation. So Mark Wahlberg is brought in and he's like, "Uh-huh, okay, I see," "Okay, let's go save the world."
According to the script, the protagonist has just lived an ordinary life, but now he is already stacking the special forces in piles and reflecting bullets with his sword (what?! seriously or what?). The film is even weaker than the last "Transformers". Filmed without a soul, stupidly according to the script. Sorry for Mark Wahlberg, you could see from his expression that he understood what kind of crap he was filming.