Tesla review – sparky biopic of the inventor

Ethan Hawke and Eve Hewson star in Michael Almereyda’s suitably inventive drama

Following Experimenter, his nimble 2015 biopic of the notorious social psychologist Stanley Milgram, writer/director Michael Almereyda takes a similarly breezy and idiosyncratic approach to another misunderstood eccentric. The story of the Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla (1856-1943) is wryly narrated by the philanthropist Anne (daughter of JP) Morgan (Eve Hewson), who is equipped with a laptop and encourages us to Google the principal characters in the story. It includes an ice-cream duel with Thomas Edison, scenes in which Tesla (Ethan Hawke) teeters on roller skates, and a sequence in which he performs a strangled karaoke version of Tears for Fears’ Everybody Wants to Rule the World.

In fact, there’s little evidence that Morgan was a part of Tesla’s life, but this is just one of several layers of artifice that garnish this creative portrait. The artifice isn’t in bad faith, however – fictional scenes are flagged up (“This meeting never happened,” says Morgan); the use of backdrop paintings and sparse sets evoke the archly stylised storytelling of Lars von Trier’s Dogville. It won’t spark for everyone but I found it intriguing and unexpected.

On digital download from 21 September

Watch a trailer for Tesla

Contributor

Wendy Ide

The GuardianTramp

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