The Fifth Element | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster |
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Directed by | Luc Besson |
Produced by | Patrice Ledoux |
Written by | Screenplay: Robert Mark Kamen Luc Besson Story: Luc Besson |
Starring | Bruce Willis Gary Oldman Milla Jovovich Ian Holm Chris Tucker |
Music by | Éric Serra |
Cinematography | Thierry Arbogast |
Editing by | Sylvie Landra |
Studio | Gaumont Film Company |
Distributed by | Gaumont Film Company (France) Columbia Pictures (US) Pathé (UK) Madman Entertainment (AU/NZ) |
Release date(s) | May 7, 1997 |
Running time | 126 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | English |
Budget | $90,000,000(estimated) |
Gross revenue | $263,920,180(worldwide) |
The Fifth Element is a 1997 science fiction film directed by Luc Besson starring Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Milla Jovovich, Ian Holm, and Chris Tucker. Mostly set during the twenty-third century, the film's central plot involves the survival of humanity which becomes the duty of a taxicab driver (and former special forces major) named Korben Dallas (Willis) when a young woman (Jovovich) falls into his taxicab. Upon learning of her significance, Korben must join efforts with the girl and a priest (Holm) to recover four mystical stones which are key to defending Earth from an impending attack of pure evil and destruction.
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Every five thousand years in conjunction with a planetary alignment, a "Great Evil" appears whose purpose is to destroy all life. In preparation for the next appearance in the 23rd century, the Mondoshawan (pronounced "Mon-do-SHEE-wan") arrive at an ancient Egyptian temple being excavated in 1914. They retrieve the only weapon capable of defeating the Great Evil, a collection of four stones representing the classical elements and the Fifth Element which conjugates the other four into organic life. After taking the weapons as "war is coming" but promising to return, the Mondoshawans present a key to their human confidant, a priest, and tell him to pass it through future generations to prepare for the Evil's arrival.
In 2263, the Great Evil appears and destroys a Federated Army space battleship as it heads to Earth. As the Mondoshawans return to Earth, they are ambushed by another alien race, the shape-shifting Mangalores, hired by wealthy industrialist and Great Evil ally Jean-Baptiste Emanuel Zorg (Gary Oldman). Earth scientists recover a portion of the Fifth Element and use a reconstitution device to recreate it, whereupon it takes the form of an apparently human woman named "Leeloo" (Milla Jovovich), described as "the perfect being." Leeloo, terrified of her unfamiliar surroundings, escapes from the scientists and lands on the flying New York taxicab of Korben Dallas (Bruce Willis), a former major in the Federated Army's Special Forces.
Dallas delivers Leeloo to Priest Vito Cornelius (Ian Holm), the current holder of the Mondoshawans' knowledge, and his apprentice, David (Charlie Creed-Miles). They help her recover, though Dallas is forced out of Cornelius' apartment before learning her purpose. Cornelius learns from Leeloo that the four Elements were not carried by the Mondoshawans, but instead entrusted to Diva Plavalaguna—a singer performing on a luxury space liner at the resort planet Fhloston Paradise—and that Leeloo must recover the stones from her. After learning that the Mangalores' attack on the Mondoshawans was unsuccessful in recovering the stones, Zorg betrays and kills them; the surviving Mangalores seek revenge by obtaining the stones for themselves.
General Munro (Brion James), Dallas's former superior officer, appears at Dallas's apartment to recall him to service. He is to travel to Fhloston Paradise undercover as the winner of a rigged contest. The meeting is interrupted by the arrival of Cornelius and Leeloo; the priest steals the winning tickets and departs with Leeloo. Dallas accepts Munro's assignment and travels to John F. Kennedy Interplanetary Airport, regains the tickets, and boards the passenger spaceplane with Leeloo. Cornelius instructs David to prepare the temple and sneaks onboard the spaceplane.
While boarding the flight Dallas meets interstellar media personality Ruby Rhod (Chris Tucker), his escort for the trip under the terms of the contest. Upon arrival at Fhloston Paradise, Dallas is taken by Ruby to prepare for the show while Leeloo waits near the Diva's quarters to retrieve the stones after her performance. The Diva's show is interrupted by the Mangalores and she is fatally shot in the stomach. Dallas learns from her dying words that the Diva has hidden the stones inside her body. After she dies Dallas extracts them, then defeats the Mangalores and saves the rest of the passengers and crew.
Leeloo defeats the Mangalores that attempted to ransack the Diva's quarters, but Zorg, having flown himself to Fhloston, shoots at Leeloo in the Diva's quarters, wounding her and forcing her to retreat. His actions allows him to take the case he believes contains the stones while starting a time bomb. The liner's security systems detect the bomb and begins an emergency evacuation of its passengers. Zorg finds the case to be empty and reboards the abandoned liner, enabling Dallas, Leeloo, Cornelius, and Ruby to escape on Zorg's ship. Zorg stops his bomb but one of the defeated Mangalores activates a bomb they brought along, killing Zorg and destroying the liner.
The four return to the temple on Earth as the Great Evil nears the planet. There, Dallas finds Leeloo disillusioned and unwilling to perform her role, having observed that in spite of all efforts made on their behalf, humans seem compelled to destroy themselves. As the protagonists arrange the stones in the temple to form their weapon, they are baffled by their ignorance of its operation, but David accidentally discovers that each stone is triggered by the presence of the classical element to which it corresponds: Water for the water stone, fire for fire, earth for earth, wind for wind. Dallas confesses his love for Leeloo, embraces her, and kisses her. Realizing that love is worth saving, Leeloo finds the inspiration to release the weapon's "Divine Light", causing the Great Evil to become dormant as a new moon in Earth's orbit.
Later, the President and General Munro go to the reconstitution lab to congratulate Dallas on his successful mission, but he and Leeloo are unavailable. The film closes with Dallas and Leloo having sex in the resurrection chamber.
As the film went into development in the early 1990s, Besson went on to create Léon starring Jean Reno, while comic book artist Jean-Claude Mézières, who had been hired as a conceptual designer for The Fifth Element, returned to illustrating The Circles of Power, the fifteenth volume in the Valérian and Laureline series. This particular volume featured a character named S'Traks who drives a flying taxicab through the congested air traffic of the vast metropolis on the planet Rubanis. Besson read the book and was inspired to change the character of Dallas to a taxicab driver who flies through a futuristic New York City. The protagonist of the film, Korben Dallas, and the antagonist, Zorg, never meet or communicate, although Zorg owns the taxi company that employs and subsequently fires Dallas as part of a one-million person layoff designed to slow economic growth at the request of the government.
Largely set in a futuristic New York City, the film was a French production, with most of the principal photography filmed at Pinewood Studios in England. Some scenes were also shot on location in Mauritania. The concert scenes were filmed at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, except for the special effect shots that show the Planet Fhloston through the ship's portholes. The Fifth Element was shot in Super 35 mm film format. Many scenes contain visual effects, and nearly all of the visual effects scenes are hard-matted. The production design for the film was developed by French comics creators Jean Giraud (Moebius) and Jean-Claude Mézières. The costume design was created by French fashion designer Jean-Paul Gaultier, who produced 954 costumes for use in the film.
The original name of the character Ruby Rhod was Loc Rhod. This name also appears in the novelization of the film.
The "Divine Language" spoken in the film is a fictional language with only 400 words, invented by director Luc Besson and Milla Jovovich. Jovovich stated that she and Besson wrote letters to each other in the Divine Language as practice.[2]
The Fifth Element received generally positive reviews with a 72%, based on 50 reviews at Rotten Tomatoes, certifying it as "Fresh",[3] and a 52/100, based on 22 reviews on Metacritic.[4] Some critics praised the film for its unconventional visual art style and camerawork while others criticized it for its inconsistent storyline and limited character development. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 3 stars out of 4 saying "I would not have missed seeing this film, and I recommend it for its richness of imagery. But at 127 minutes, which seems a reasonable length, it plays long."[5] David Edelstein of Slate gave it a negative review, saying, "It may or may not be the worst movie ever made, but it is one of the most unhinged."[6]
The film was selected as the opening film for the 1997 Cannes Film Festival[7] and became a major box office success, grossing over US$263 million, more than three times its budget of US$80 million. 76% of the receipts for The Fifth Element were from markets outside of the United States.[8]
The Fifth Element was nominated for an Academy Award in 1998 in the Best Effects, Sound Effects Editing category, losing to Titanic, but it won the BAFTA Award for Best Special Visual Effects. It was nominated for seven César awards and won three for Best Director, Best Cinematography, and Best Production Design.
Visual Effects Society voted the visual effects of The Fifth Element to be the 50th most influential of all time.[9]
The original home video release of The Fifth Element took place in North America on 10 December 1997, on VHS, LaserDisc and DVD. The original DVD was in its original 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen format, had English and Spanish audio and subtitling, and carried no special features.
The film was re-released in Sony's Superbit collection on 9 October 2001. The enhanced release, also pressed in its original 2.35:1 format, used a higher data rate for a better picture, and featured subtitling in six languages (English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Chinese and Thai) but only English audio and no special features.
A two-disc Ultimate Edition was released on 11 January 2005. Disc one contained the Superbit DVD with five languages of subtitles (all the Superbit subtitles except Thai) and added audio tracks in German and Swedish. The second disc provided special features, including deleted scenes and a production featurette, for the first time.
The first Blu-ray Disc release of the film occurred on 20 June 2006, and was widely criticized as having poor picture quality.[10] Sony subsequently made a remastered Blu-ray version available, released on 17 July 2007.[11] The feature set of the original Blu-ray release matches Disc 1 of the Ultimate Collection, while the Remastered version contains only English and French audio. Neither release carried special features.
The Fifth Element: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | |
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Soundtrack by various artists | |
Released | 6 May 1997 |
Genre | Film score |
Label | Virgin |
Professional reviews | |
Much of the film's score, composed by Éric Serra, shows an influence of North African music, particularly Raï. The music used for the taxicab chase scene, titled "Alech Taadi" by Algerian performer Khaled, is excluded from the film soundtrack, but it is available on Khaled's album N'ssi N'ssi.
In Plavalaguna's performance, the music and the vocalization abruptly shift from a classical to a trance style. This striking change is cross-cut with scenes of Leeloo's fight with the Mangalores in Plavalaguna's chamber, and the fight choreography is set to the music. In this sequence, the music is both diegetic and extra-diegetic, as the music is audible to the characters in the theater, but used as a dramatic score for the fight scene.
The Diva Dance opera performance featured music from Gaetano Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor : "Il dolce suono", the mad scene of Act III, Scene II, and was sung by Albanian soprano Inva Mula-Tchako, while the role of Plavalaguna was played by French actress Maïwenn Le Besco. Part One (titled Lucia di Lammermoor) and Part Two (titled The Diva Dance) of this piece are included as separate tracks on The Fifth Element soundtrack, but are sequenced to create the effect of the entire performance seen in the film. The end of Part One blends into the beginning of Part Two, creating a smooth transition between the two tracks.
Two versions of The Fifth Element score have been produced. In addition to the version released commercially, there is a two-disc set titled "The Fifth Element: The Complete Score", that was available exclusively as a promotional piece. The first disc in the set contains 46 tracks and the second contains 31 tracks. The tracks are sequenced in parallel to the film's narrative; although the set includes extended and alternate versions, as well as music used only in previews, and recordings not used in the final film. Tracks 5 through 31 on the second disc are the same tracks selected for commercial release.
All tracks composed by Éric Serra unless indicated otherwise.
A video game adaptation based on the film was also created by Activision for the PlayStation game console and PC. It was generally met with average to negative reviews.[12][13] A second racing game titled New York Race was also released in 2001.[14]
There was also a novel adaptation by Terry Bisson and published by HarperPrism.[15][16][17]
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