

But it also takes its future conflict seriously and invites us to do the same, imbuing action scenes with clear stakes and meaning. Whereas that film still mined the concept for romantic comedy, Edge applies it to futuristic science fiction action and reveals it to be a surprisingly strong fit.Īdapted from Hiroshi Sakurazaka's 2004 light graphic novel All You Need Is Kill, Edge makes strong use of its premise, seizing the rich editing opportunities afforded and turning them into some efficient laughs. Just last year, Richard Curtis' About Time did so extensively. Each death brings them a little closer to the goal for the next go around.Įdge of Tomorrow is not the first film to borrow from Groundhog Day.


Rita provides the necessary physical training, enabling Cage to approach the battle like a video game he has played before but yet to master. Rita and a mechanic (Noah Taylor) who has also experienced reset powers first-hand brief Cage on what he has to do to help mankind defeat their oppressors in the one-sided beach attack Cage keeps reliving.
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He discovers as much when the most decorated soldier around, Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), known as the Angel of Verdun for her heroics there (and, more colloquially, Full Metal Bitch) recognizes his gift as one she herself used to possess. Cage's ability to "reset a day" is uncommon but not unprecedented. Repeatedly, Cage dies and wakes up in those handcuffs by a sergeant calling him a maggot. It doesn't seem to be February 2nd, but Major/Private Cage is in the same predicament as Bill Murray's grumpy meteorologist in the brilliant 1993 comedy set around that holiday. Moments later, he awakens back in those handcuffs, getting the same gruff treatment and chilly introductions from the Kentuckian and his fellow J-Squad soldiers. Soon, Cage is face to face with the large, fast, and powerful enemy.
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He can't even figure out how to turn the safety off. Entirely unfamiliar with the weaponized exoskeleton he dons, Cage could not be much worse-equipped for his airplane drop into intense battle. Cage finds himself in handcuffs, addressed and treated like a lowly private by those in charge, specifically a mustachioed Bill Paxton as a Kentuckian Master Sergeant. Pointing out he's not prepared for combat, Cage objects when he is assigned to the front lines of a European strike by a no-nonsense British general (Brendan Gleeson). Army PR guy who tries to put a positive spin on the military's ongoing wars with Mimics, deadly alien creatures. This year, Cruise was back and ready to test his mettle against superheroes, fairy tale villains, giant lizards, dragons and giant robots.Įdge stars Cruise as Major William Cage, a U.S. Lately, though, the actor who used to regularly cross the $100 million mark domestically has seen diminishing returns and the off-season opening of his previous project, Oblivion, seemed like a concession. For a long time, Cruise was one of the kings of the season, propelling movies like The Firm, Mission: Impossible, Minority Report and War of the Worlds to high heights at the box office.
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With Edge of Tomorrow, Tom Cruise threw his hat back into the summer movie ring.
