Ares (film)
Ares (French: Arès) is a 2016 French dystopian science fiction film directed by Jean-Patrick Benes. Ola Rapace stars as a boxer who is forced into testing a dangerous new performance-enhancing drug for one of the corporations that now controls France. It premiered at the Paris Comic-con on October 21 and was released in France on 11 November 2016.
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Directed by | Jean-Patrick Benes |
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Music by | Alex Cortes |
Cinematography | Jerome Almeras |
Edited by | Vincent Tabaillon |
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Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | €4 million[2] |
Plot
In the 2020s, France's economy collapses, and corporations buy its debt. Although still nominally a democracy, the corporations take control of the government and pass sweeping reforms, deregulating many industries. Among these changes, doping and human experimentation are legalized. As homelessness and unemployment rise, violent new sports are introduced. Athletes become sponsored by pharmaceutical companies, who test their new drugs on them. After a promising start, boxer Reda, who fights under the pseudonym Ares, is injured and loses his corporate sponsor. Besides performing in brutal cage matches as a low-ranked fighter, he takes jobs for corporate agent Altman, with whom he has a relationship. During a riot, Reda performs security, freeing his niece Anouk when she is arrested, though he chastises her.
When his sister Carla is framed for possession of a pistol, Altman tells Reda that Carla will be charged as a terrorist. The only way to save her from a prison sentence is to bribe the officials, which will take €100,000. To raise the money, Reda is forced to submit to human experimentation for HSX, a drug that has killed every other test subject. Although corporate executive Anna assures him his biochemistry will likely allow him to survive the drug, she warns that he will black out five minutes after taking it. Reda leaves Carla's children with his neighbor, a cross-dressing prostitute named Myosotis who believes Reda to be a fascist. Despite their antagonistic relationship, Myosotis agrees to help him for the sake of the children. Unable to bet on himself, Reda convinces Myosotis to bet Reda's meager life savings on the fight.
Needing a dramatic demonstration to spur sales, the CEO arranges for Reda to fight a highly-ranked fighter who has had his nervous system tweaked so that he no longer feels pain. The fight is widely believed to be impossible for Reda to win, and even his coach declines to bet on Reda. HSX performs well, and Reda wins against 12:1 odds. The drug becomes a sensation, and Reda makes enough money to free Carla. Before he can, she dies in prison while attempting to save another inmate. Altman offers to return the money, but Reda asks her to use it to find out who framed his sister. At the same time, Anouk's boyfriend Boris, a hacker who supports the resistance, provides evidence that implicates Reda's coach.
Reda once again leaves the children with Myosotis. During his next fight, Reda goes down in 17 seconds, and his earlier win is written off as a fluke. Sales of HSX plummet, and Reda's coach is financially ruined. When Reda meets with him, Reda reveals that he did not take the drug and intentionally threw the fight. Instead, he saved the drug to administer it to his coach, who quickly dies once he is injected. Anna finds Reda and tells him that she has ordered Altman to kidnap Carla's children. Anna says that although Altman truly does care for him, Altman cares more for money. Reda reluctantly agrees to a demonstration in front of the corporate board. At Reda's house, Altman orders Anouk to call Myosotis. Anouk tells Myosotis that Reda wishes to thank him, a deeply uncharacteristic action. Suspicious, Myosotis recruits Boris for help.
Boris and Myosotis rescue the children and kill Altman. Once they signal Reda that they are safe, Reda takes HSX and throws the CEO out of a window. Anna's bodyguards, two genetically engineered clones of the most powerful arena fighters, initially gain an advantage on Reda. However, Anna forbids them from killing him, as they need him for more drug trials. Handicapped by having to take Reda alive, both die. With the five minute time limit running out, Reda considers killing Anna but instead assists Boris in remotely hacking into the corporation's mainframe. There, Boris uncovers proof that over 30,000 people died in HSX's drug trials. Knowing his nieces will never be safe from the corporation while he is alive, Reda commits suicide despite Anna's protests. Reda's death and the HSX scandal lead to widespread riots and a revolution.
Cast
- Ola Rapace as Reda
- Micha Lescot as Myosotis
- Thierry Hancisse as Reda's coach
- Hélène Fillières as Altman
- Ruth Vega Fernandez as Anna
- Eva Lallier as Anouk
- Elina Soloman as Mae
- Yvon Martin as Tyro
- Pierre Perrier as Boris
- Émilie Gavois-Kahn as Carla
- Louis-Do de Lencquesaing as PDG Donevia
Release
Ares premiered at the Paris Comic-con on 21 October 2016.[3] It was released in France on 11 November 2016.[4]
Reception
On French review aggregator website AlloCiné, Ares has an average rating of 3.1/5 stars based on 14 reviews from professional critics.[4] Jordan Mintzer of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "It's a film that in its best moments revisits the smoggy neo-urban textures of Blade Runner but otherwise feels like a questionable cross between Bloodsport and Babylon A.D."[1]
References
- Mintzer, Jordan (2016-12-01). "Ares: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2017-05-24.
- Carriere, Christophe (2016-11-23). "Arès, "un film produit avec des idées plutôt qu'avec des moyens"". L'Express (in French). Retrieved 2017-05-24.
- Keslassy, Elsa (2016-10-21). "Gaumont's Dystopian Thriller Ares Bows at Paris Comic Con, Pre-Sells Globally (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved 2017-05-24.
- "Arès". AlloCiné. Retrieved 2017-05-24.