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  • Serenity (2019)
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Customer reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
3.8 out of 5
3,181 global ratings
5 star
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4 star
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2 star
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1 star
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Serenity (2019)

Serenity (2019)

byMatthew McConaughey
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Top positive review

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D. Snoke
5.0 out of 5 starsSpoiler alert: this review explains the plot for those who couldn't get it
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 29, 2019
SPOILER ALERT SPOILER ALERT

Okay, now that you have been warned, I will explain to you the plot. It's so sad that so few people seem to be able to follow a complicated plot these days-- the old crime thrillers thrived on the audience being able to follow something that is not spelled out for them, but that skill is lost these days. Even after this movie completely spelled out what is going on.

This is what happens in the plot of the movie, in time order:

A young man, John, is happily married with a kid son. Then he goes off to war in Iraq and is killed. His wife remarries a local construction kingpin, who becomes abusive to both the woman and her son. Her son is brilliant and hides away in his room every day programming his computer. He eventually creates a computer game about fishing (in remembrance of a great memory of fishing with his father) and populates the game with artificial intelligences (AI). The program is so good that these AIs become self-aware and think they are real people living in a real world (like the Matrix, or the Truman Show, or The Sixth Sense, the main character doesn't know what the real deal is until the end).

Eventually this kid becomes so disturbed at the violence of his father that he changes the game and inserts AI versions of his mom and his stepdad into the program, and then has the mom try to bribe the real dad (the AI dad in the program) to kill the AI stepdad. The greatly disturbed the operating system of the game, which is also self aware (represented in the program by a dorky guy with a briefcase). It tries to contact the AI version of the dad and convince him not to kill the stepdad, and instead to return to the original mission of catching a fish, and also tries to put road blocks in his way. The AI dad (the main character) forces out of the operating system AI the truth that they are all AI consciousnesses, not in the real world. Although he struggles to accept this, he decides to go ahead and perform the new mission of the son, to kill the stepdad, since the son is his creator. He eventually convinces the operating system to embrace this cause too, since after all they are all just doing the will of their creator.

So they succeed at killing the AI stepdad, and this inspires the kid to go kill his stepdad in the real world. In the end, the kid is in jail but has access to his computer, and he designs an AI version of himself and inserts it into the game, and the movie closes with him embracing his (dead, but now AI) dad. Perhaps they will live happily, or only until someone switches off the computer.

So many fascinating philosophical issues involved. If you realize you are an AI, and the creator is not a good and just creator but a messed up kid, are you duty bound to do the will of your creator? Or is there a higher law that binds you to do the right thing, even above the kid-creator? One of the AIs in the game, the second mate of the ship, argues that they must be faithful to a higher moral call-- but argues this on the basis that there is a creator. But he doesn't know the creator of their world is a messed up kid, not omnipotent. Could it be that he knows somehow in his heart that there is an even higher creator than the kid, a true Creator of the world that contains the kid? After all, the kid lives in the real world and knows about religion. Another question: does the AI dad have free will? Is he responsible for the kid in the real world committing murder? Or did the kid program him to do his will, without a choice? The movie seems to indicate that the kid was waiting to see what his AI-dad would do before making his own decision.

Some reviewers have complained that the opening of the movie is cartoonish--the AI dad is clearly cartoonishly copying the plot of Moby Dick; the AI mom is a caricature of a film noir vamp. But that is because they are the cartoonish creations of a 12-year-old! That's the point-- the whole "world" is a Matrix-like world, the creation of a smart but emotionally crippled child. The really interesting thing to ponder is what if you realized one day you were in that Matrix world.

This type of "what is real?" movie and "would I know the world was a mirage?" has become a genre, including the Matrix, the Sixth Sense, and the Truman Show. One could also put the old movies Gaslight and Walter Mitty (not the recent version) in this category. Serenity, the Matrix, and the Truman Show all ask the question, what if the creator isn't good? In the Matrix and the Truman Show, the main character fights against the creator (who, after all, is not the total Creator but only a sub-creator of a limited world), while in this movie the main character acquiesces to the will of the (deranged) creator of his world. There is an odd meta-nesting: he recognizes that he isn't real, but realizes that there was a real dad who loved his kid before he died, and he takes pity on the kid, trying to parent him by becoming what that real dad could have been-- even though the kid is his creator.

So fascinating. Too bad that so many people couldn't follow it. It will be discussed in philosophy classes for years to come.
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559 people found this helpful

Top critical review

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Robert Beal
3.0 out of 5 starsDifferent Sci-Fi
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 18, 2023
I thought it was a thriller / romance movie. It could have been a lot shorted as a Twilight Zone installment.
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From the United States

D. Snoke
5.0 out of 5 stars Spoiler alert: this review explains the plot for those who couldn't get it
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 29, 2019
Verified Purchase
SPOILER ALERT SPOILER ALERT

Okay, now that you have been warned, I will explain to you the plot. It's so sad that so few people seem to be able to follow a complicated plot these days-- the old crime thrillers thrived on the audience being able to follow something that is not spelled out for them, but that skill is lost these days. Even after this movie completely spelled out what is going on.

This is what happens in the plot of the movie, in time order:

A young man, John, is happily married with a kid son. Then he goes off to war in Iraq and is killed. His wife remarries a local construction kingpin, who becomes abusive to both the woman and her son. Her son is brilliant and hides away in his room every day programming his computer. He eventually creates a computer game about fishing (in remembrance of a great memory of fishing with his father) and populates the game with artificial intelligences (AI). The program is so good that these AIs become self-aware and think they are real people living in a real world (like the Matrix, or the Truman Show, or The Sixth Sense, the main character doesn't know what the real deal is until the end).

Eventually this kid becomes so disturbed at the violence of his father that he changes the game and inserts AI versions of his mom and his stepdad into the program, and then has the mom try to bribe the real dad (the AI dad in the program) to kill the AI stepdad. The greatly disturbed the operating system of the game, which is also self aware (represented in the program by a dorky guy with a briefcase). It tries to contact the AI version of the dad and convince him not to kill the stepdad, and instead to return to the original mission of catching a fish, and also tries to put road blocks in his way. The AI dad (the main character) forces out of the operating system AI the truth that they are all AI consciousnesses, not in the real world. Although he struggles to accept this, he decides to go ahead and perform the new mission of the son, to kill the stepdad, since the son is his creator. He eventually convinces the operating system to embrace this cause too, since after all they are all just doing the will of their creator.

So they succeed at killing the AI stepdad, and this inspires the kid to go kill his stepdad in the real world. In the end, the kid is in jail but has access to his computer, and he designs an AI version of himself and inserts it into the game, and the movie closes with him embracing his (dead, but now AI) dad. Perhaps they will live happily, or only until someone switches off the computer.

So many fascinating philosophical issues involved. If you realize you are an AI, and the creator is not a good and just creator but a messed up kid, are you duty bound to do the will of your creator? Or is there a higher law that binds you to do the right thing, even above the kid-creator? One of the AIs in the game, the second mate of the ship, argues that they must be faithful to a higher moral call-- but argues this on the basis that there is a creator. But he doesn't know the creator of their world is a messed up kid, not omnipotent. Could it be that he knows somehow in his heart that there is an even higher creator than the kid, a true Creator of the world that contains the kid? After all, the kid lives in the real world and knows about religion. Another question: does the AI dad have free will? Is he responsible for the kid in the real world committing murder? Or did the kid program him to do his will, without a choice? The movie seems to indicate that the kid was waiting to see what his AI-dad would do before making his own decision.

Some reviewers have complained that the opening of the movie is cartoonish--the AI dad is clearly cartoonishly copying the plot of Moby Dick; the AI mom is a caricature of a film noir vamp. But that is because they are the cartoonish creations of a 12-year-old! That's the point-- the whole "world" is a Matrix-like world, the creation of a smart but emotionally crippled child. The really interesting thing to ponder is what if you realized one day you were in that Matrix world.

This type of "what is real?" movie and "would I know the world was a mirage?" has become a genre, including the Matrix, the Sixth Sense, and the Truman Show. One could also put the old movies Gaslight and Walter Mitty (not the recent version) in this category. Serenity, the Matrix, and the Truman Show all ask the question, what if the creator isn't good? In the Matrix and the Truman Show, the main character fights against the creator (who, after all, is not the total Creator but only a sub-creator of a limited world), while in this movie the main character acquiesces to the will of the (deranged) creator of his world. There is an odd meta-nesting: he recognizes that he isn't real, but realizes that there was a real dad who loved his kid before he died, and he takes pity on the kid, trying to parent him by becoming what that real dad could have been-- even though the kid is his creator.

So fascinating. Too bad that so many people couldn't follow it. It will be discussed in philosophy classes for years to come.
559 people found this helpful
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Mac McGill
5.0 out of 5 stars SPOILERS ENCLOSED
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 18, 2020
Verified Purchase
Is the universe a simulation? And if it was, yet succeeded in simulating something as deeply textured as love, would it matter? If within a simulation a genuine consciousness emerged capable of feeling authentic love, the substrate of its existence would become as irrelevant to its reality as perhaps quarks or strings or whatever subatomic particles are to our reality, and our experience of love.

Serenity takes us out to sea with a lulled, and even drunken awareness, not unlike the two fat tourists we originally encounter on the boat. It is after all, another movie looking to take full advantage of the marketability of Matthew McConaughey's physique, among others. We expect little more than a basic rehashing of the Old Man and the Sea trope, the uncatchable fish, the dysfunction ashore contrasting competent seamanship at the helm, the broad ensemble of characters who insist on loving and supporting him despite his hopelessness in general and the cruelty he casually displays towards them. We get much, much more.

The movie takes on what may be the most significant new branch of the philosophical discipline: object oriented ontology. Most of the great philosophical systems concern themselves with the qualities of the subjective, since (it is argued) that is all we can truly know. Capital T Truth may even be a dangerous illusion, not unlike Justice, the giant Tuna he is obsessed with. Still, it is impossible to escape the feeling that I am a real thing, an object, and all the other objects around me are also real even though the only way I can know them is through my own subjective experience, which even the most casual of observers can find flaws with. The journey here is not Dell's though, but rather his son's. Dell we have learned was actually a soldier killed in Iraq and his child is unreconciled to the new and violent life he has fallen into in his absence. As both of them often say, "There is a you and me somewhere." It even demands speculation on the part of the viewer whether Patrick's father had a soul, a real object somewhere in the universe, that has somehow found a way to be close to his son by essentially colonizing the simulated world of Plymouth Rock, where the weather is always perfect for fishing, unless of course you shouldn't be.

I am going to write more about this on my own, and perhaps even make a video about this, but I spouted all this very quickly after watching the film, which I found highly enjoyable and thought provoking.
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Elizabeth McGuire
5.0 out of 5 stars Tripppy
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 13, 2023
Verified Purchase
AMAZING movie. Definitely had a plot twist. It made me have to watch it again!!
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RockingMomma
5.0 out of 5 stars Be Prepared For Something Unexpected, Yet Exceptional, And Perspective Changing.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 3, 2019
Verified Purchase
This film is what the Art of filmmaking is all about. It reminds me of the show LOST in that you didn't exactly know where the "reality" level existed, and once you did, it was sure to draw mixed reviews...those who didn't get it or couldn't appreciate it at that moment (because they were expecting something else), and those who did get it and were left thinking about it for days and days. Neither one of those reactions is wrong, I truly believe you relate to films like this only if the timing is right in your own life.

We are initially drawn into a world that is seemingly normal, and a perfect set up for an actor like Matthew McConaughey...he plays his part as if the fabric of this place was woven just for him. Anne Hathaway's role was thrown every single stereotype possible and she nailed it, which gave us the reason to believe that things were not as they seem. The initial world we find ourselves in when starting this movie is one place, but where we end up is something wholly different. I'd like to focus on the latter and that means a spoiler alert.

This is a world built by a boy who lost his father and desperately seeks connection and protection. In his real life, his suffering mother is in an abusive relationship and he feels the guilt and responsibility to protect her. We see his virtual father (who died in a war in real life when he was young) have sexual relationships, issues with alcohol, issues with money...all very grown-up situations that most parents choose to believe their thirteen-year-old kids are not concerned with...yet this boy has created an entire world with these aspects being the normal day-to-day.

Turns out folks, our kids see and feel everything. They just may see and feel and react to it differently than we would expect. I usually think of myself as a good mom, but I am human, and I know that there are things I do today where I have no idea what impact my actions or words may have on their future actions or beliefs. I think "good" parents are good because they are concerned with that in the first place.

What I loved about this film:
It's different, unexpected
The symbolism is epic
It makes you think
The filming is gorgeous and raw and real
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LC
5.0 out of 5 stars Not your average "get rid of the evil husband" movie
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 22, 2020
Verified Purchase
This is a great production, with a great cast. Many times I forgot it was McConnaughey or Hathaway who were playing these roles. They transformed so well into their characters that it was no longer about the actor. A few great production companies involved, great direction and great cinema make this movie unforgettable.

I knew it was gonna be good from the first shot. The richness of the color, the decisiveness of each frame, and the cadence of the story. There is a heaviness in the air, a looming weight all around that seems to promise something, but also hide something, a slight mystery. The movie introduces us with a slow look at careless and beautiful island life, where not much happens for a guy who has run away from the world to find peace in fishing. There are some things out of place, such as the lawyer like figure, that add to the mystery. And, when the much anticipated event seems to happen, things take a different turn. If you are expecting a thrilling movie about an easy kill, this is as far from it as Dill (McConnaughey) is from catching the fish he is always after, interestingly named Justice.

This is a movie about loss, grief, abuse, and justice. A metaphor about how the war has affected people’s lives. It can make you uncomfortable, especially in the way it is presented under the guise of a simple story. It also raises a question of what reality is. Although that one is already been done so many times, it gains merits of its own in this context. A note about the end, which is kind of heartbreaking: for someone who is suffering, redeeming the reality in a way that they see fit is both tragical and hope. And that was so well done both visually and narratively.
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JimmyCanDo
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most under-rated Hollywood films ever ...
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 1, 2019
Verified Purchase
I'm so glad I watched Serenity twice!! It's truly one of the most under-rated Hollywood movies ever. I really like Matthew McConaughey and my favorite film with him is Lincoln Lawyer. That is, or was, until I saw this film, Serenity. All things considered, this is one of his finest. And I'm not that big of a fan of Anne Hathaway, but in Serenity, she really comes thru. She's learned from those long gone actresses as "tough women" of the old 1940's & 1950's film noir - the femme fatales. But she adds her own take to it. She has to play tough, then sexy and then vulnerable & finally desperate. She's does a great job. And the Director, Steven Knight, knows how to make movies!! He’s one of the best today. Mr Knight gets it - movies have always been a visual art form first and foremost. So he makes his movie’s subject under that umbrella - come rain or shine. (Check out his original movie Locke with Tom Brady - a tour de force. Somehow, I'm not surprised Mr Knight both wrote & directed Serenity & Locke.) Endings in movies, don't get any better, don't get more creative than what Mr Knight composed here with this movie...Serenity's ending is almost a film all by itself. And I truly understand why some viewers won't like this film Serenity - it jumps between past, present and dreams. So you have to bring your imagination to this movie. And what better thing, what better tool, to bring to a movie, then your imagination? I can't think of any. In the end -- just like this movie Serenity -- its a story about the love between a father and a young son and the brief, momentary cushion, that that love gives us, between ourselves and mortality.
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C F
5.0 out of 5 stars Key Largo/Casablanca meets Abre Los Ojos
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 4, 2019
Verified Purchase
I am convinced of two things, one that Serenity is a very good, unique, competent film, and the other that general audiences are so saturated with their junkfood diet of meaningless, shallow Avengers and reboot films that they are no longer able to interpret the art of filmography.

The choices the director Steven Knight made to merge the two parts were integral to why this film succeeds. On its face a story of a kid playing games on his computer to escape reality is derivative and boring (ahem, Ready Player One), but changing the main character around and sitting that broader story around a Noir character drama that is telling the story of that child was a creative and genius move. Knight made this film as non-pretentious as possible, even given the ending reveal. Everything clicks into place and feels necessary because the focus is always on the characters. The Noir drama also helps to blur some fictional liberties the script needs to take to make the character drama work.

On top of that Benjamin Wallfisch's score is great, the cinematography is great, including very limited use of CGI in favor of real open waters. The acting is great. That Aviron destroyed this film and did nothing to standup for it is pathetic. The critical slamming and dog piling on this film is completely unwarranted and makes me embarrassed for those partaking. The claim that this is some great 'bad' film has to be one of the dumbest analytical take aways I have ever heard in film, next to the claim that Frozen is a good movie. If you care about a real film where the cast and crew actually tried something interesting, this movie is a must watch. If you want to eat nachos and watch computer generated space monsters blow things up while quipping nostalgic lines to your favorite pop/rock music, nothing can save you.
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Jasmine Lynch
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 20, 2022
Verified Purchase
Very good
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mgbdoth
5.0 out of 5 stars Not What I Expected - A Good Movie
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 13, 2019
Verified Purchase
First, let me say the "SPOILER ALERT" review is a bit off base and misses the point (not to mention interprets some details differently than I do!). I suggest you skip it and observe the plot for yourself.

That said, I agree with the reviewers who liked this movie for the fact that it is different and unexpected. This film made me think on so many levels! I resigned to choosing it from the Amazon Prime options because of the actors. I expected a typical psychologically twisted film with vengeful tormented characters. It was not at all what the preview led me to expect. It was multi-layered and interesting - and even refreshing in that so many characters tried to stop the dad from doing what he finally decided to do by putting roadblocks in his way. There actually were many people in the film trying to stop him, telling him it was not right, that he is a good man, etc. Movies so rarely give that message. I, too, noted and appreciated so many nuances and clues such as AmazonAddict mentioned in his review . . . The boy creator is heartbreaking. He clings to a loving memory of his dad ten years earlier and uses his genius to create an entire world to escape the painful one he lives in. It is also a story of loss and grief and the struggle between right and wrong when one is suffering. Other reviewers have evaluated the movie from the perspective of action, thriller, fantasy, sci-fi, and the all too typical unthinking shallow fare of movies today. (That is not to say all action, thriller, fantasy, sci-fi films are unthinking and shallow - but honestly, many - if not most - are.) This movie is not on that par but is well above.
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The Art Witch
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW would make an AMAZING Black Mirror Episode
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 2, 2020
Verified Purchase
This film was truly incredible. We were looking for something interesting to watch and both my mom and I are big Matthew McConeaughey fans. We watched the trailer and thought hmm this looks like a good noir thriller - it’s got some other actors we enjoy as well like Anne and Jason Clarke so let’s check it out. We settled down expecting a tense mystery in the double indemnity mode about perhaps a deal with a femme fatale (Hathaway) trying to get a down on his luck fisherman to kill her boorish but very wealthy husband by taking him out on his boat at a charming little island resort. Plus there is a big dangerous fish out in the water that has been alluding capture. Simple right? No way!! This movie takes a turn you will NEVER see coming that blew our minds! You will be asking not only WHO can you trust but who is REAL! just watch it. This is a film for thoughtful people and I dare say if you like Black Mirror or the Twilight Zone you will enjoy this. I’m not sure how this slipped under the radar last fall but I’m so glad it’s available on Prime now. Highly recommended
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