Quanta (2019)

Quanta Storyline

A physicist’s life-long work comes to fruition when he is reluctantly partnered with a gifted young assistant. Ego divides them when they receive an unknown signal from space.

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Quanta Movie Reviews

Flowers for Algernon (1958) + Contact (1985) = Quanta (2019)

This one’s a mashup of “Flowers for Algernon” (Daniel Keyes, 1958) and “Contact” (Carl Sagan, 1985). Although it’s derivative, the combo is really something fresh and new. Nathan Dalton manages to create a compelling story by taking elements of those two old science fiction classics and weaving them into a film that keeps you glued to the screen. There’s real character development, plenty of clues to help the audience follow the plot, and lots of techno speak that’s actually consistent with known science. (Although the idea of “radiation” from “dark” matter is somewhat of an oxymoron.) There are a few other instances of creative license, but for the most part it’s believable.

The part where it departs from reality is in the motivations and behaviors of the characters. They seem to make unnatural decisions at times and don’t always act like real people. But it’s not uncommon in film to bend character behavior to advance the plot, so you just suspend disbelief and enjoy the movie.

The sound track was great. It set the mood and really helped provide clues about the plot and the emotions of the characters. The cinematography was likewise supportive of the moods and plot and didn’t overpower the action happening on the screen. The acting performances, from relatively unknown actors, was superb. All these elements in the final product (with an insanely tiny budget) point to an extremely competent director whom I’m sure we have not heard the last of.

Overall, a great film if you are looking for a character-driven drama/scifi with lots of thought-provoking dialogue and you don’t care about tons of special effects and starship shootouts.

Triggers: brief headline text ~80wpm, one subtle and minor ethnic reference

Somewhat interesting

But the budget was so low they basically couldn’t do anything but talk. For a science fiction movie this makes for an unsatisfying result. Also, the young “genius” assistant was played by an actor who seems as smart as a chair—not convincing. The older scientist was nicely portrayed.

Einstein was wrong.

George (Mark Redpath) is a scientist working for a communications company. He has been working, without success, on dark matter transmission of data. He is let go, but his idea is the intellectual property of the company. George gets a grant from a university to conduct his research. They believe George owns the intellectual rights. They assign Tom (Antony Talia) to work with him. Tom is a genius and loves to talk too much. While calibrating the receiving unit, Tom accidentally points the dish to the sky. . . and they get a signal.

For the first hour, the film is mostly a drama about relationships as we build the characters. We never find out exactly where the signals come from, but they make the characters more interesting. This is low budget science fiction. It was semi-enjoyable and slow at times.

Guide: F-word. No sex or nudity.