DigiGuide Logo

DigiGuide Forums

Sign in to your account

Don't forget that you can sign in using your normal DigiGuide account

Home » Community » DigiGuide Forums » The Fifth Element showing on Film4



  Subscribe to the forum RSS feed
All Forums » Recommended Viewing » The Fifth Element showing on Film4 Previous  Next
Add an Avatar image using Gravatar.com
DigiGuide Staff
Friday, November 13, 2009 - 12:33
This member is currently offline Email the author of this post Visit the author's home page
  Reply (with quotes) to this postQuote(IP Logged)
Click to read full review

The Fifth Element

The Fifth Element, showing Sunday November 22nd on Film4 at 9:00pm

Sensing the outbreak of the First World War, the Mondoshawan, ancient architects of Earth, return to repossess four mystical stones representing the four elements and a casket containing a mysterious, omniscient fifth. Three centuries later the universe is disrupted by an evil force assisted by the forces of Zorg (Gary Oldman). Mondoshawan priest Cornelius (Ian Holm) predicts it can be destroyed only with a weapon built from the five elements. The battle begins unwittingly, when Leeloo (Milla Jovovich) is discovered and regenerated at a government laboratory.

Escaping her prison, she encounters wiseacre New York cabbie and ex-soldier Korben Dallas (Bruce Willis), who escorts her to Cornelius. The priest realises the truth: Leeloo is the fifth element, and holds the key to peace. She must be reunited with the stones, which have been held in safety on the planet Fhloston. Revisiting his military past, Dallas prepares to protect Leeloo en route but Zorg and his mercenaries are determined to ensure they never arrive...

With an $80 million budget this European production was packaged as a wake-up call to Hollywood. Ironically, they had to hire an A-list leading man and cherry-pick Tinseltown's back catalogue to do it. The tributes are numerous, including a visual nod to Blade Runner (and casting of ex-replicant Brion James). Having hoarded the story for 20 years, Luc Besson inevitably indulges himself, reworking elements of Nikita, and Léon, with the addition of Digital Domain - James Cameron's company - on extravagant special effects, including the largest indoor explosion ever filmed.

Besson's undeniable energy, coupled with the vision of Moebius's comic book artist and design inspiration, produces a diverting pantomime that certainly indicated a change in direction for European cinema.

Did you know? The film is particularly noted for its costumes, created by French fashion designer Jean-Paul Gaultier. In all, 954 costumes were produced for use in the film.

View the full review

Get a reminder when this programme startsGet a reminder when The Fifth Element starts...

View a trailer of this programme