If you've always longed to overdose on the blue-ice-filter school of nightscape cinematography, then you've come to the right place. Nearly every moment in this frenzied mess of a techno-wasteland chase thriller looks as if it was shot inside a cave of neon. The entire movie has the meaninglessly burnished, sunglasses-at-midnight glow of an early-'90s car commercial—a visual scheme guaranteed to leave the audience squinting between yawns. If you squint hard enough, you may just catch a glimpse of Gary Sinise transforming his facial expression from earnest to stoic and then back again. He plays an elite military scientist in the paranoid, war-torn earth of 2079 who suddenly finds himself accused of being an alien replicant with a suicide bomb implanted in his heart. (Talk about geek metaphors.) Is he or isn't he? And why should you care? Impostor was adapted from a 1953 short story by Philip K. Dick, but it feels less like a cousin to ''Blade Runner'' than like a bottom-feeder sequel in the ''Escape From New York'' series.


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