Tau

When it comes to marketing, all Netflix films are clearly not created alike.
Tau, the streaming service’s latest sci-fi thriller, hits Netflix today with relatively little promotion—curious, given that it can make the claim of starring 2017’s winner of the Academy Award for Best Actor, Gary Oldman. One wonders what—beyond the paycheck—drew Oldman to the prospect of voicing a rogue artificial intelligence in a film from a first-time screenwriter and first-time director, but the bottom line is that his presence certainly uplifts Tau for the better. Still, even with the credentials of Oldman, the film often feels like a merely serviceable potboiler rather than the thought-provoking techno-thriller that was likely intended.
Tau is the directorial debut of Federico D’Alessandro, an animatic/storyboard artist who has worked on a rather incredible string of high-profile, CGI-laden blockbusters, including the likes of The Avengers, Thor, Terminator Genisys, Doctor Strange and The Mummy. One might expect that to imply a certain visual panache in Tau, but if anything, the film’s art direction and cinematography are on the staid side, buttressed by some not-so-great, waxy-looking CGI that belie a smaller budget. What likely should have been the film’s biggest strength is instead an area of weakness.
The performances, on the other hand, are a bit better. Tau is the story of Julia (Maika Monroe of It Follows), a young, family-less grifter who is abducted by supergenius robotics scientist Alexander (Ed Skrein) and forced to participate in a brain study with the intent of building a more advanced form of AI. While Alex obsesses over his work and faces the mounting stressors of impending deadlines, Julia’s primary guardian is Tau (Gary Oldman), the sheltered, older model AI in control of his high-tech house/Julia’s personal prison. With some very brief exceptions, this triangle forms the only characters of consequence in Tau, as Julia attempts to escape from the home by forming an emotional bond with the hungry-for-knowledge AI. Why is Alex abducting attractive white women, rather than marginalized people/immigrants that no government agency would bother trying to locate? That’s the kind of question Tau would prefer you to not ask.
As Julia, Maika Monroe attempts to stretch her range a bit, with occasional success. Having primarily appeared in low-profile indie projects since her 2014 breakout in David Robert Mitchell’s It Follows, she’s let down somewhat by Noga Landau’s script, which envisions Julia as a character of substantial but unrealistic craftiness, constantly displaying talents for pickpocketing, sleight of hand and MacGyver-esque fabrication and escape tactics. It’s a more difficult assignment than the naturalistic teenage dialog that Mitchell wrote for It Follows, because Julia seems much more the construct of a screenwriter than an actual person. The decisions to dress her in a series of steadily escalating sexy outfits, including a red dress that seems fashioned after Number Six’s famous one from the reboot of Battlestar Galactica, only adds to the sense of artificial fan service. One wonders if the filmmakers realize the irony, given that Number Six’s name was a direct reference to Patrick McGoohan’s character from The Prisoner … itself a scenario not unlike what Julia is experiencing. Still, Monroe is certainly more effective than the emotionless, sneering Skrein, who has none of the douchey verve here that made him memorable in Deadpool.