• Consequence
  • Music
  • Film
  • TV
  • Heavy
Menu Consequence
Menu Shop Search Newsletter
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Live
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
Advertisement
  • Reviews
  • Film Reviews

Film Review: Downsizing

Alexander Payne's micro/macro meditation on humanity struggles under its self-imposed weight

C

Directed by

  • Alexander Payne

Starring

  • Matt Damon
  • Christoph Waltz
  • Hong Chau
  • Kristen Wiig

Release Year

  • 2017
Advertisement
Sarah Kurchak
December 19, 2017 | 10:00am ET

    The following review was originally published as part of our coverage of the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.

    Most of us, at least once in our lifetimes, will get high, sleep deprived, and/or feverish and come up with an outlandish “what if?” theory that we will be convinced is absolute genius. Then most of us sober up, have a nap, and/or otherwise recover, realizing that our wonderful vision was only really good for some half-baked conversation before we move on with our lives.

    Instead, director and screenwriter Alexander Payne got his idea funded and assembled a star-saturated cast to realize it. And now we have Downsizing, a film that somewhat ironically takes a flimsy premise (“What if we had the power to shrink human beings to a fraction of their size to lessen our impact on the environment? Or something?”) and attempts to blow it up into an epic meditation on personal and global concerns.

    Advertisement
    Related Video

    Payne, a wildly talented but frustratingly inconsistent filmmaker, offers another effort that leans toward the latter with this story about the ways in which individuals and societies adapt to a scientific breakthrough that allows humans to shrink themselves and live in miniature, largely self-sufficient and sustainable communities with a carbon footprint even tinier than their residents. The concept itself is at least mildly inspired, and perhaps could have been better explored by an artist with at least some background in science fiction or fantasy, but the execution in Downsizing quickly removes the hope of any intriguing developments. The world building is weak to the point of verging on nonexistent. Plenty of conversations about the prospects of this potentially game-changing development are bandied about in earnest chats with friends and belligerent arguments in bars, but the film never really digs too much deeper.

    After watching the news about the development on TV, for example, small town American everyman Paul Safranek (Matt Damon, who between this and Suburbicon is becoming 2017’s favored avatar for white filmmakers who just figured out that racism and inequality exist) rushes home to tell his mother. If they can spend all of that time and energy on this kind of stuff, she wonders with exhaustion, why can’t they cure her fibromyalgia? From there, the narrative quickly jumps years ahead, abandoning this character and her question as distant memories. This is how ideas are introduced to Downsizing: haphazardly tossed into the mix, explicitly stated and possibly debated for a line or two, but never explored through action or subtext, and then dropped for the next one. Throw in a large number of images that place tiny people next to normal-sized objects, and you get the point.

    The proceedings don’t dig much deeper when Paul and his wife Audrey (Kristen Wiig), who are aimless and struggling in their average-sized lives, decide to undergo the procedure and move to a small community. As things go awry, Paul is sent on a personal journey leading viewers to begin to suspect that maybe downsizing oneself doesn’t downsize one’s problems. Then he stumbles into another journey of more global proportions, and viewers are also led to the conclusion that things like racism, inequality, and the existential quandary of what to do if/when humanity faces extinction aren’t that easy to shrink, either. It should be a lot – maybe even too much – to cram into one film, but the execution is so threadbare that its 135 minute runtime feels unnecessary, bordering on indulgent.

    Advertisement

    The performances are uniformly solid, at least. Damon delivers his affable average American persona well. Hong Chau is funny and heartbreaking as Ngoc Lan Tran, an activist who later crosses paths with Paul, and is funny and heartbreaking and deserves so much more than to serve as a glorified catalyst for Paul’s awakening. Christoph Waltz gleefully gorges himself on the scenery as downsized playboy Dusan, and watching him gorge himself on the scenery is almost as fun as the clear pleasure he took in playing the role. Udo Kier does an admirable job of keeping up as his sidekick. The ongoing parade of A-list stars who drop in for cameos is almost uniformly amusing, particularly when Laura Dern shows up for a gloriously cheesy minute.

    Unless you have never truly stopped to consider yourself and your place in the world, though, there’s nothing about Downsizing that stands out as particularly groundbreaking, thought-provoking, or even capable of making you go “hmmmm.” It’s an extremely basic meditation on humanity, dressed up with sight gags (so many sight gags) and a collection of artists with quite the pedigree on both sides of the camera. No amount of ambition and talent can elevate this trifle of a lightly-explored premise into a film that is truly entertaining or meaningful. Payne’s heart might have been in the right place with this one, but the execution feels flippant at best.

    Measuring Downsizing’s vision against its impact is sort of like one of the film’s sight gags. It wants to be a towering, larger-than-life household object, like a cracker or a rose. But it’s best represented by the tiny human that’s struggling to carry it.

    Advertisement

    Trailer:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Reddit

More on this topic

  • Alexander Payne
  • Christoph Waltz
  • Hong Chau
  • Kristen Wiig
  • Laura Dern
  • Matt Damon
  • TIFF 2017 Coverage
  • Udo Kier

Sign up for updates

Subscribe to our email digest and get the latest breaking news in music, film, and television, tour updates, access to exclusive giveaways, and more straight to your inbox.

Advertisement

Popular Stories

Robert and Toyah Centerfold

Heavy Consequence

Robert Fripp and Toyah Nearly Bare All with Cover of J. Geils Band's "Centerfold": Watch

Drake Misses Lollapalooza Brasil Performance After Being Spotted at Strip Club

Music

Drake Misses Lollapalooza Brasil Performance After Being Spotted at Strip Club

Advertisement

Legendary Artists, Iconic Photo Prints - Shop Now!

Legendary Artists, Iconic Photo Prints - Shop Now!

Jonathan Majors

Film

Jonathan Majors Arrested for Alleged Assault [Updated]

Succession Season 4 Episode 1 Recap Review

TV

In the Succession Season 4 Premiere, The War Truly Begins

Latest Stories

What the Hell Happened to Blood Sweat & Tears

What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears? Review: For the Band’s Fans and No One Else

March 24, 2023

A-
Dungeons Dragons Honor Among Thieves Review

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves Rolls a Natural 20 for Fun: Review

March 20, 2023

C-
Shazam! 2 Fury of the Gods (Warner Bros.)

Shazam! Fury of the Gods Forces Flaccid Fun Through A Sea of CGI Nothing: Review

March 16, 2023

C+
john-wick-chapter-4-keanu-reeves

In John Wick Chapter 4, Brilliant Fights Are Less Than the Sum of Their Punches: Review

March 13, 2023

C-
65-adam-driver

Adam Driver Pouts at Dinos In the Shoddy, Somber Sci-Fi Thriller 65: Review

March 9, 2023

B+
Scream 6 (Paramount Pictures)

Scream VI Is the Fun, Thrilling Slash in the Arm the Franchise Needed: Review

March 8, 2023

D-
Children of the Corn (RLJ Entertainment)

Children of the Corn Review: A Rotted Husk of a Horror Remake

March 3, 2023

C-
Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre (Lionsgate)

Operation Fortune: Ruse De Guerre Is a Limp Spy Caper As Nondescript as Its Title: Review

March 1, 2023

Advertisement

News

  • Music
  • New Music
  • Album Streams
  • Upcoming Releases
  • Tours
  • Film
  • TV
  • Pop Culture

Reviews

  • Music Reviews
  • Film Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Concert Reviews
  • Festival Reviews

Features

  • Editorials
  • Interviews
  • Cover Stories
  • Lists
  • Guides
  • CoSign
  • Song of the Week

Live

  • Tickets
  • Festival News
  • Tour Dates
  • Photo Galleries
  • Music Instruments & Gear

Heavy

  • News
  • Interviews
  • Concerts

More

  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Wellness
  • Giveaways

Other sites

  • Heavy Consequence
  • Consequence Media
  • Modern Drummer
  • About
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertising
  • Work For Us
  • Terms
  • Contact
  • Copyright
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information

Download our app

  • Get it on the App Store
  • Get it on Google Play
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitch
  • Tiktok
Consequence
Current story

Film Review: Downsizing

Menu Shop Search Newsletter
Consequence
News
  • News
  • Music
  • New Music
  • Album Streams
  • Upcoming Releases
  • Tours
  • Film
  • TV
  • Pop Culture
Reviews
  • Music Reviews
  • Film Reviews
  • TV Reviews
  • Concert Reviews
  • Festival Reviews
Features
  • All Features
  • Editorials
  • Interviews
  • Cover Stories
  • Lists
  • Guides
  • CoSign
  • Song of the Week
Live
  • Tickets
  • Festival News
  • Tour Dates
  • Photo Galleries
  • Music Instruments & Gear
Podcasts
  • The Opus
  • Kyle Meredith With...
  • Stanning BTS
  • The Story Behind the Song
  • The What
  • Going There with Dr. Mike
  • The Rome and Duddy Show
Videos
  • Interviews
  • Two for the Road
  • First Time I Heard
  • When I Made
  • Battle of the Bandmates
  • Peer 2 Peer
  • Essays
  • Fan Theories
Heavy
  • News
  • Interviews
  • Concerts
  • Premieres
  • Culture
  • Beyond the Boys Club
  • Mining Metal
Shop
  • Shop
  • Giveaways

Follow Consequence

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitch
  • Tiktok
Close
Close