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In a future where DNA is caste destiny, Hawke, a scrappy “de-gene-erate,” uses tricks like fake urine samples to impersonate an aristocrat and become—it sounds cheesy out of context—an astronaut. When his mission director is killed and the cops find Hawke’s bodily detritus at the scene, both his launch and romance with the office ice queen (Thurman, vulnerable) hang in jeopardy. The corporal paranoia transforms suspense into pleasurable dread, and, for all of writer-director Andrew Niccol’s arch genre gimmicks, the themes are right out of Renoir—brotherhood, honor, the will. When Gattaca hit theaters—eight months after Dolly’s cloning—many critics misread it as a bioethics parable, which is rather like approaching Casablanca as a critique of French Morocco’s visa policy.
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You Might Also Like
- Movie Review Gattaca (1997) | Ty Burr
- Video Review Gattaca
- Movie Review Gattaca (1997) | Ty Burr
- DVD News Is ''Gattaca'' worth the upgrade? | Steve Daly
- PHOTO GALLERY 21 horrible sci-fi futures (Dec 14, 2007) | Joshua Rich
- Digital News BODY BY 'GATTACA'


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