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Fifth Element, The

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Fifth Element, The reviews
52
8.2 User Score:

Mixed or average reviews

Based on 22 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 31 votes
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Movie Info

Genre(s): Sci-fi

Written by: Luc Besson (also story)
Robert Mark Kamen

Directed by: Luc Besson

Release Date:
Theatrical: May 9, 1997
DVD: December 9, 1997

Running Time: 126 minutes, Color

Origin: USA

Summary

RATING: PG-13 for intense sci-fi violence, some sexuality and brief nudity

Starring Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm, Milla Jovovich, Chris Tucker, Luke Perry, Brion James, and Tom 'Tiny' Lister Jr.

New York cab driver Korben Dallas didn't mean to be a hero. But he just picked up the kind of fare that only comes along every five thousand years - a perfect beauty, a perfect being, a perfect weapon. Now, together, they must save the world. (Columbia TriStar)

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

80

Los Angeles Times Kevin Thomas

The cast is a delight, but it's Willis who is the film's true "fifth element," giving it life, depth and humanity.

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80

Washington Post Rita Kempley

An entertaining tangle of pop aesthetic and comic book myth that occasionally bogs down, but manages to be ingratiating for all its defects.

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78

Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov

Although the film tends to suffer from a severe case of overt preachiness in the third reel (shades of James Cameron's "The Abyss"), it's still a wonderfully visual, exciting ride.

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75

Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

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.

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75

Chicago Tribune Michael Wilmington

It's ludicrous, but it's fun. Besson is a filmmaker so in love with his own daffy excesses that he's able to pull us, laughing, right into his world of loony pop. [9 May 1997]

75

San Francisco Chronicle Peter Stack

What an attempt, and what a work of the imagination. The Fifth Element' will change the look of science fiction and will probably be imitated for years.

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70

Washington Post Desson Thomson

There’s so much high-voltage fun running throughout this comic sci-fantasy -- engineered gleefully by director Luc Besson -- you’re hard-pressed to be unaffected.

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70

LA Weekly Manohla Dargis

Too long by half, burdened with shabby F/X and offering up some seriously weird performances, this pricy foray into science fiction is a muddle of miscues and narrative bloat--along with a lot of frivolous fun.

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67

Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman

The future-shock details are witty, the sets and skyscapes spectacular. Besson may not be a good director, exactly, but he's a wizard at retrofitting cliches.

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63

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen

The movie unreels like a depressive in a manic phase, a frenzy of lightning-fast cuts, cuts, cuts.

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50

USA Today Susan Wloszczyna

But for all the fancy-schmancy effects (budget: $90 million-plus), the vision of a hypercongested metropolis is not much more sophisticated than an episode of "The Jetsons." [9 May 1997]

50

San Francisco Examiner Barbara Shulgasser

This is a prodigious something. It's just difficult to say whether that something is good or evil.

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50

Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt

The action is fast, furious, and as wacky as science fantasy gets.

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50

The New York Times Elvis Mitchell

As a yammering, swishy talk show host, Chris Tucker is flat-out incomprehensible, while Mr. Oldman preens evilly enough to leave tooth marks on the scenery.

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50

ReelViews James Berardinelli

Besson may have misfired with The Fifth Element, but at least he does it with flair and a sense of humor.

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50

TV Guide Maitland McDonagh

It's all densely imagined and more than a little goofy -- perhaps too goofy for the average American viewer.

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50

Film Threat Jimmy Chertkow

The story is such a cut-rate kid's sci-fi fairy tale that at one point Evil actually calls Gary Oldman on the phone (and it isn't played for laughs).

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40

Variety Todd McCarthy

Ultimately a mess of diverse ingredients that sorely could have used a rigorous screening process to eliminate all the chaff.

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40

Dallas Observer Peter Rainer

With Besson, it's all eye candy; despite all of his mythic posturing, his loop-the-loop camera moves and in-your-face fandangos are the true substance of his films. And that's not much substance. He's a dry-hump orgiast.

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30

Chicago Reader Lisa Alspector

Even the revelation of what the fifth element is at the end is disingenuous--in fact, the archness of this whole project is repellent.

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20

Slate David Edelstein

It may or may not be the worst movie ever made, but it is one of the most unhinged.

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10

Salon.com Scott Rosenberg

As you sit through the interminable two-hours-plus that constitute The Fifth Element -- a colossally stupid, overbearingly pompous new movie by Luc Besson -- you can expect to become acquainted with boredom on the most elemental level.

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What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this movie is 8.2 (out of 10) based on 31 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Jonathan G. gave it a0:
While watching The Fifth Element, Europe’s latest attempt to make Hollywood style films, one cannot help but infer that Bruce Willis knows that this film is a giant cornball, much like the ball of evil that Father Vito Cornelius deems, “Absolute Eeevil.” His acting combines a kind-of smug knowledge with a down-to-earth attitude in a way that makes his scenes watch able. That’s about as enjoyable in Luc Besson’s sci-fi epic gets. The film starts off in 1910, where a few archaeologists are reading a hieroglyph that detail the ultimate weapon against evil: a fifth element. Suddenly, a group of mechanical beings known as the Monascheiwans (try saying that five times fast) come to Egypt and take the fifth element, along with some four stones that somehow represent the other elements, in order to ensure their continued existence. Besson doesn’t bother to explain how this weapon works or even what makes the stones so special. He simply whisks us two hundred and fifty years in the future, where life as we know it is threatened by the arrival of Evil, in the form of a black ball flying through space. Only the fifth element can stop the Evil from extinguishing life, as it tries to do every five thousand years. It turns out, that The fifth element is a woman, played by Milla Jovovich as a clueless woman who speaks only a mysterious language and spends most of the film being carried by Bruce Willis’ character, Korbin Dallas. This hardly explains exactly what the fifth element is, and why it assumes this form, but Besson isn’t interested in explanations; perhaps because Besson knows it makes no sense. The fifth element is helped by ex-soldier, and current-cab-driver Korben Dallas. Dallas is going about his business when he picks up the fifth element in his cab and thus begins the overdone premise of the man who’s forced into a situation that he’s not supposed to be in, and who becomes a hero in such. Thus is the real influence of Die Hard. For The Fifth Element bars striking resemblance to Die Hard, with the exception that it takes place in the future, in space, and Bruce Willis fights off the bad guys without removing his shoes-oh and it doesn’t take place during Christmas. Korbin Dallas is helped by a pop star, and notable queen, Ruby Rhod, played by Chris Tucker. It’s hard to say whether Chris Tucker’s high-pitched squeal and neurotic character is a result of his strange interpretation or a truly terrible performance. On the opposite end, Evil is being assisted by Mr. Zorg, played as a southern creep with a bad hair cut by Gary Oldman, who seeks to profit from the chaos that Evil will bring. He hires mercenaries, who look like humans with hogsheads, to do all the fighting. If you’re having trouble following this, then movie will be no easier to understand. As if this wasn’t enough to convince you that The Fifth Element isn’t worth a bucket of warm piss, just pay attention to the acting. President Lindberg, played by one of the worst actors to ever appear in a major Hollywood production, Tommy Lister, recites his ridiculous lines with a staleness only found in week-old bread. I could go on and on detailing all the bad acting, but I do not wish to cause as much pain as the casting director does. The Fifth Element would work well as a comedy-that is-if it didn’t have moments of great pain. In attempting to find the stones in order to activate the weapon against evil, Korbin Dallas ends up on an inter-galactic resort listening to a solo opera, sung by a blue woman with hoses attached to her head. Suddenly, the opera turns from classical music to disco. It is at this point that the film has reached its painful peak. The Fifth Element may not be the worst film ever made, but is sure in the running. If you’ve made the mistake of renting The Fifth Element, now would be a good time to find your remote’s mute button, or better yet, the off button.

Brent P. gave it a10:
If you are true Sci-Fi fan, you will appreciate 'The Fifth Element.' It's an extremely bold attempt at making something totally unique and fun. I think it succeeds in many ways. This is on my top 10 list of favorite movies of all time.

Joel P gave it a10:
It's a ton of fun, and not for everyone. But if you're a Bruce Willis, Chris Tucker or Gary Oldman fan, this is a can't miss. I have watched this over and over and this is a great example of a reason to see a movie for yourself and forget the critics!

Marcus L. gave it a10:
Yes, this movie was very strange, but it was a very good element with great acting and special effects. Has some great humor at parts. Bruce Willis is great.

Erik S gave it a3:
Unfortunately, I'm among the haters on this one. I just wan't able to enjoy the movie as a fun/campy future pic. For me there was just no 'there' there.

Phil D. gave it a2:
After watching this movie, I had to sit back and literally say out loud... WTF was that? What genre can you even describe this movie as? Sci-Fi? Nope. Comedy? Maybe. Super-colorful-fun time? Yes! We have a winner. Bottom line, don't watch unless you are watching it to laugh at it.

Cody C. gave it a10:
This is the best movie that I have seen. It has all the elements that I enjoy in a movie. While the acting is not the greatest, it seems to have a certain charm about it.

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