“The Current War: Director’s Cut” was originally made
in 2017 for release that year by The Weinstein Company but when allegations
against the company’s President surfaced, the release date was tabled and, in
the course of the bankruptcy, the film was modified and sold to another distributor. The phrase “Director’s
Cut” was added to the title of the later version to distinguish it from the
original which was shown in 2017 at the Toronto Film Festival.
This is the story of how electrical power came into being
in the country in the latter part of the 19th Century and tells the
competitive and almost cutthroat efforts of Thomas Edison (played by Benedict
Cumberbach) and George Westinghouse (played by Michael Shannon) to fight for
their respective Direct Current vs. Alternating Current means of supplying
light and power to an anxious populace. The film also brings into play the role
of Niklas Tesla, the visionary inventor who promoted his AC theory, as well as
J.P. Morgan who served as the financial backer to the winning process. The
acting of Michael Shannon is the only redeeming quality in the film for it, as
written by Michael Mitnick and directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon, is, quite
frankly, a complicated and boring film. With such a powerful story and
historical importance, one would expect that those factors alone would carry the film but the script is so confusing
and uneven that it makes it hard to follow and understand and, in many
instances, leaves the viewer“in the dark”. I give the film 2 stars with one of them
going directly to Mr.Shannon for his fine performance.
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