Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (May 3, 2022)
Because he got no role in the fourth Matrix movie, Hugo Weaving enjoyed some time on his hands. This led to a part in a different sci-fi flick, 2022’s Expired.
Set in Hong Kong circa an unspecified future, an assassin named Jack (Ryan Kwanten) meets nightclub singer April (Jillian Nguyen). As he becomes smitten and pursues her, he encounters complications as his physical health starts to seriously decline.
In response to this challenge, Jack finds Doctor Bergman (Weaving), a “life extension” specialist, and he seeks answers. While this risk to his survival endures, Jack deals with revelations from his past and his attempts to muster a relationship with April.
At the start of Expired, we get an immediate Blade Runner vibe. Though this begins for production design/visual reasons, the influence of Ridley Scott’s 1982 classic becomes more obvious as Expired progresses.
A hitman who eventually questions aspects of his own existence and a preordained mortality… sounds kinda familiar, doesn’t it? Well, if you’re gonna steal, you might as well steal from the best.
Unfortunately, Expired never becomes one-tenth as interesting as its inspiration. Little more than a slow, tedious riff on the earlier movie’s themes, this becomes a difficult ride.
And by “difficult”, I mean “exceedingly boring”. While a better-made version of this narrative would develop its characters and themes in an intriguing manner as we await the Big Reveal, Expired finds almost literally nothing compelling to sustain the viewer.
Instead, we get stuck with a moody, atmospheric tale that lacks any real depth. Characters mope and speak in ponderous tones but they never convey anything to become interesting or make us invest in the journey.
This means a sluggish journey that fails to deliver more than barebones information about the participants. About 80 minutes into Expired, we finally get some insights, but these seem both blindingly obvious and also too little, too late.
Expired pours on cheap symbolism, and that means the aforementioned Big Reveal feels predictable and trite. This becomes a particular problem because it seems clear the filmmakers hope the Big Reveal will make us forget the boredom of the prior 80 minutes.
Nope. Little more than a slow, faux intellectual character journey, little about Expired succeeds.