Movie Review: Infinity Pool (2023)

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(WARNING: this review contains SPOILERS. Infinity Pool is currently available to rent or purchase digitally, with a Blu-ray release to follow on April 11.)

Something I’m working through with my therapist is my inability to own up to my “talent.” I’ve written movie reviews since I was 12, and have contributed to a handful of websites through the years. But I find myself cringing at the “film critic” tag. Something about it makes me feel like a fraud…and besides, I don’t have the “household name” thing – or standalone income – that would qualify me for such a distinction.

So I found myself relating to the undercurrent of Impostor Syndrome that runs through Brandon Cronenberg’s Infinity Pool. It often feels like the filmmaker – son of the legendary David – is actively trying to work out his own sense of auteur authenticity here.

Indeed, how does one step out from the blood-relation shadow of a creator who modified the landscape of sci-fi horror in such a radically innovative way? For that matter, how do “critics” distinguish themselves from the print-publication legends who put their own unique imprint on filmic analysis?

A meeting of the minds – Brandon Cronenberg (left) and father David

Basically, at what point do you convince yourself that what you have to offer – regardless of the creative discipline – is indeed worthy? Worthy of your own eyes; worthy of your mind’s perception of “success”; worthy to be seen and perceived by others?

I kind of envy the folks who throw around their titles with abandon; without a hint of self-consciousness. Just head over to Twitter, where you can’t go five seconds without seeing someone who has a laundry list of bylines in their bio.

Meanwhile, I’m always surprised whenever someone asks me for a promo quote. (Pleasantly surprised, but surprised all the same.)

“Do I have an original thought in my head? My bald head?” – Me, whenever I sit down to write

In Infinity Pool, the creator surrogate is James (Alexander Skarsgard), a onetime novelist in a sophomore slump. Wife Em’s (Cleopatra Coleman) father owns the publishing house that put out James’ debut. While on vacation in a foreign country, the couple connects with fellow tourists Gabi (Mia Goth) and Alban (Jalil Espert).

By dividing the country into two distinct parts – an incredible resort paradise on one side; a run-down, rusted-out industrial hellhole on the other – Cronenberg posits a treatise on “The Ugly American” that successfully hits the satirical notes that eluded the overhyped, controversy-courting likes of Hostel and The Hunt.

The tourists’ xenophobia is presented as a distinctly English-speaking affliction. When James and Em are apprehended for a hit-and-run accident, they are given two options: either be executed or, for a fee, have themselves cloned, and put the clone to death.

Vacation from hell – Mia Goth and Alexander Skarsgard in Infinity Pool

In more ways than one, Infinity Pool resembles that Calvin & Hobbes story arc where the former creates duplicates of himself to get out of doing a homework assignment (the punchline? His duplicates don’t want to do the assignment, either). Through all the darkness and horrific violence on display, this sense of cheekiness isn’t lost on Cronenberg, who frequently acknowledges the absurdity of the premise.

I like how the run-down section of the country resembles the Eastern-Bloc settings of many an Albert Pyun film (note the paint peeling off the walls in the police station). That said, the chief of police (Thomas Kretschmann) isn’t a monstrous boogeyman, but a soft-spoken and empathetic civil servant. Ditto the irony that the place is technologically advanced enough – or imbued with a very literal kind of “magic” – to be able to offer such a sophisticated alternative to capital punishment.

Then there’s the comical image of a beat-up ATM spitting out an ungodly amount of bills so a terrified James can deflect his punishment on to a clone. (Which begs another absurd question – what happens if the ATM runs out of money?)

Calvin learns the downside of duplication (from Scientific Progress Goes ‘Boink,’ by Bill Watterson)

Cronenberg paints a forthright portrait of American entitlement where the sun shines ever brighter on those who can buy their way out of hard times. Once James is ingratiated into a group of thrill-seeking tourists who’ve undergone the same punishment/procedure, the film becomes a series of escalating extremes (played out as ghoulish pranks): the tourists steal tribal masks, partake of the local natural drugs (resulting in one of the great hallucinatory orgies of the 2020s so far), and generally co-opt the culture – and its inhabitants – for their own depraved ends.

A line of dialog that lends the film its name is very telling: Alban’s first visit to the country was for a construction project that resulted in the death of 2 local workers. Mere collateral damage in the minds of the bourgeoisie.

That Infinity Pool begins with a foreigner’s naivete and evolves into landscape of jaded excess hammers home the unsubtle point that the tourists are indeed the real savages. Perhaps most horrifying is the ending, which promises this cycle of systemic abuse will continue to go unchecked and result in more nihilistic bloodshed.

This speaks to the New American Normal of atrocity being out in the open for all to see. Whether you’re a white-collar criminal who’s fleeced naïve citizens, or a screw-loose shooter who opens fire in a public place, it’s almost guaranteed that any court trial will be a media circus resulting in few – if any – longstanding consequences. It’s all spectacle, exploited for ratings.

Such is the case with the bloodthirsty, laissez-faire tourists of Infinity Pool. It begs the question as to why Em is horrified at the sight of James’ clone being murdered, when she falls squarely within the same “wealth = privilege” equation as the other tourists. Perhaps this speaks to a genuine love and empathy on her behalf? Whereas James is neurotic and full of self-doubt, Em, despite her inherent monetary value, is confident in her knowledge of self.

And, I must admit: I appreciate the casting of alpha-male Skarsgard – so buff and brutal in The Northman – as an externally cool-looking fellow who’s ultimately just a validation-seeking coward deep down.

Cultural appropriation – the masked tourists of Infinity Pool

At the center of this is James, who is initially depicted as a soft-spoken artist, emasculated somewhat by the unspoken truth that his novel never would’ve been published without his marriage to Em. When he goes through the cloning process and bears witness to his “self” being disemboweled by his victim’s young son, he’s horrified…but can’t take his eyes off the spectacle.

It’s within this act of bearing witness to a dehumanized sort of horror that aligns Infinity Pool with Papa Cronenberg’s Videodrome. Not unlike Max Renn, James goes from initial shock to casual indulgence to full-blown, thrill-seeking addiction. Removed from the restrictions of American law, the world becomes a playground of hedonism and brutality. Similarly, James – who becomes more egotistical and defiant as the film progresses – is so taken by the acceptance of the tourist group that he doesn’t realize he’s just playing “bitch” to their nasty, illegal whims. Unlike Renn, he never seizes control of the situation, remaining a herd-follower throughout.

Shoot…there’s even a moment where the tourists, decked out in the tribal masks, serenade James from the entrance of the hotel, as if reenacting the “Gooble Gobble” sequence from Tod Browning’s Freaks.

There’s no “long live the new flesh” here – just a man’s sense of self getting sucked into a black hole of conformity and violence.

4 out of 5 stars


3 responses

  1. blackcabprod

    Quite interesting your self-exposure as suffering from “Impostor Syndrome”. The impostor revealing themself. Certainly a bit of therapy in that––if I divulge myself I will be be on the curative path. I definitely feel I fall into the “Impostor Syndrome” category, or, rather, I have fallen ever deeper into it as I have grown older and continued to create and output with no financial or mass-appeal success. I certainly feel that I therefore must not have any genuine talent or worth at all (and am slowly being exposed as the fraud I have always been). I have deluded myself from the beginning, it seems, as I crawl in and out of bed each day. If I truly was any good I would have already been a success and have a fat bank account and large fanbase to show for it. Of course, I don’t. Nonetheless I remain a perpetual “imposter” who, as some say, is “faking it till he makes it”. I have also long diagnosed myself with a disease of my own creation: SADS (Self Accomplishment Deficit Syndrome)––no matter how much I do accomplish it is never enough or good enough, and does make me ‘sad(s)’. Which must also be why I have never achieved financial success or mass-appeal. Yes, my failure must be due to my chronic and incurable SADS affliction. In the immortal lyrics of Morrissey, “You just haven’t earned it yet, baby.” So I continue to posture and imposture and SADS myself into certain madness. And it does often feel like infinity will find me drowning in this perpetual pool of imposturing SADS obscurity. Oh yes, the movie…I have yet to check out “Infinity Pool”, but certainly intend to at some point. In all truth, I am still a Brandon Cronenberg virgin. Oh, and you do have genuine talent, Mr. Numb, and most certainly worthy of a ‘promo quote’ (or several). Great review!

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    1. Jonny Numb

      In all honesty, the first couple paragraphs of this review is reflective of the neurotic stuff I typically edit out of all my other reviews (since it may come off as self-indulgent – or just plain boring – to a casual reader who wants to cut to the chase). But in the case of Infinity Pool and its theme of Impostor Syndrome, it felt like a justified opportunity to bring something to light that I – like you – have been struggling with for who-knows how long. I think it’s difficult for creators to evaluate their work without at least a hint of self-doubt that what they’re doing is indeed “worthy” of human eyes, and in extreme cases, that self-doubt can be self-sabotage. In some ways, I feel like artistic expression, when it’s at its most convincing and genuine, is an act of self-torment and inflated expectation that “whatever I do will never be as good as [name of successful person within same creative discipline].” That said, I think the dedicated creator’s mind is often the least forgiving and most harshly critical, and needs that outside validation to take a step or two back from the precipice. I remember watching a late-period interview with George Romero following a festival screening of Night of the Living Dead; he said something to the effect of, “I’m glad people like this, because all I can see are the mistakes.” NotLD is my favorite horror movie, and one of my favorite movies of all time, but even Romero couldn’t get past the technical flaws in his creation, decades after the fact. I find this very human and strangely reassuring when it comes to reading (and re-reading…and re-reading…) something I’ve written before sending it off to post. And I think the fact that your work (whether in film, literature, or music) resonates so strongly with me makes you one of the most authentic creators I’ve ever known. While those words may not fill your bank account, I’d still consider that a win for your art.

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  2. blackcabprod

    “And I think the fact that your work (whether in film, literature, or music) resonates so strongly with me makes you one of the most authentic creators I’ve ever known. While those words may not fill your bank account, I’d still consider that a win for your art.” Well, that is an endorsement that means quite a lot to me and also expresses one of the main reasons I create anything––it’s how I communicate with ‘the others’ (or try to). Because I have never been one to hang out at the bar (or anywhere) networking and drumming up countless superficial friendships, which is what so many people do to connect with the outer world (reality?) and all because they are desperately in need to feel one with humanity (feel alive in this world [reality?]) and, therefore, validate their own existence. I have always found this effort vacuous at best––a needy automaton response––the inner robot running some endless-hunger-for-love program. Why would I want to validate my own existence (my true self) with vacuity, superficiality, and quantity? Of course, many successful people do just that, because it leads to cling-on or coattail connections and eventually hard cash––the perpetual buddy-buddy, ‘you wash my back I’ll wash yours’ con that many backyard (and love thy neighbor) barbecues are also made of. For many people the con works well; certainly it is more tangible and immediately gratifying. Yet it remains vacuous and superficial and always teetering. This has long been painfully obvious to me (an affront to my individuality?), and hence––or so it seems––I have chosen a path of exploration, creativity, and imagination (unreality and self-sabotage?), to make a more sincere connection with other humans––or merely another singular entity. My writing, movies, and music, have always been a hotline from my true self (my soul? My life-force? My L-field via T-field?), all in hopes of making an equally powerful hotline connection to another individual. Of course, as the years have become decades, it has become clear this path is an outrageously slow one. And making any hotline connection is few and far between. But when I do, it always feels far more real and expansive and creates a bond with something more universally profound in the etheric perpetuity than merely “Drinks all around! I’m paying!” and “Let’s do lunch.” But maybe all I’ve just laid bare is only me conning myself: the chronic impostor and in-denial narcissist. Hmmmmm…the ever-digressive wondering of my mind unfolds again. lol

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