The Fifth Element

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The Fifth Element
Promotional poster for The Fifth Element
Directed byLuc Besson
Written byLuc Besson
Produced byPatrice Ledoux
StarringBruce Willis
Gary Oldman
Ian Holm
Chris Tucker
and
Milla Jovovich
Music byÉric Serra
Distributed byUSA, Spain, Australia
France DVD

Columbia Pictures
UK Theatrical
Pathé Distribution
France
Gaumont-Buena Vista International
Germany
Tobis Filmkunst
Italy
Filmauro Distribuzione
Japan
Herald Film Company
Portugal
Filmes Lusomundo
Netherlands
Buena Vista International
Release dates
May 9, 1997 (premiere)
Running time
126 min.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$80,000,000
Box office$263,920,180

The Fifth Element is a 1997 science fantasy, action, comedy, techno thriller film, written and directed by Luc Besson, starring Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Milla Jovovich, Ian Holm, and Chris Tucker. The production design for the film was developed by French comics creators Jean Giraud (Moebius) and Jean-Claude Mézières and shows a strong influence of French comic storytelling and aesthetic style[citation needed]. The costume design was created by French fashion designer Jean-Paul Gaultier, who produced 954 costumes for use in the film.

The film's central plot involves the survival of humanity, which becomes the duty of a taxicab driver named Korben Dallas (Willis) when a young woman named Leeloo (Jovovich) falls into his taxicab. She is the Fifth Element, whose appearance was prophesied by the Father Vito Cornelius (Holm). Korben's mission is to gather the other four elements before a black planet that represents pure evil collides with Earth. Mangalores, slow-witted warrior mercenary aliens hired by corporate tyrant Jean-Baptiste Emmanuel Zorg (Oldman), are given the task to thwart Korben's efforts.

Although written and performed in American English and set in a futuristic New York City, the film was a British/French co-production. Most of the principal photography was filmed at Pinewood Studios in England, while some scenes were 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 visual effects scenes are hard-matted.

Synopsis

The movie begins in 1914 in a ruined Egyptian temple, where an archaeologist and a priest uncover ancient writings describing the arrival of a Great Evil every five millennia. The excavation is interrupted when an alien Mondoshawan ship lands and enters the temple, revealing a hidden crypt containing four stones corresponding to the four essential elements of water, fire, earth and air arranged around a statue. The Mondoshawan charge the priest with preserving the temple and its knowledge through the generations and take the stones to protect them from an upcoming war, pledging to return when evil reappears.

File:Fifth element 1.jpg
Leeloo escapes into the New York City of 2263.

Centuries later in the year 2263, a Federal Space Navy battleship is swallowed by a planetary eclipse, giving birth to the Great Evil. On Earth, Priest Vito Cornelius (Ian Holm) assures the Galactic President that the Mondoshawan will deliver the weapon essential to Earth's survival. During their journey however, the Mondoshawans' ship is shot by Mangalores, a war-like alien race that was recently devastated by a conflict with the Federation. From the wreckage of the ship, Federal scientists recover a fragment of the statue with several living cells, from which they clone Leeloo (Milla Jovovich). Observed on a physical and genetic level as the "perfect being" and speaking an alien language, the beautiful Leeloo escapes the laboratory and dives into the passing, flying taxicab driven by Korben Dallas (Bruce Willis), a former major in the Federated Army's Special Forces who brings the woman to Cornelius.

The Mangalores meet Zorg (Gary Oldman), a wealthy industrialist who commissioned the Mondoshawan assault and who offers to exchange weapons for the stones inside the case salvaged from the crashed Mondoshawan ship. At Cornelius's apartment, Leeloo reveals that the stones are actually safeguarded by renowned opera singer Diva Plavalaguna (Maïwenn Le Besco), whom Leeloo must meet. Meanwhile, an enraged Zorg, learning that the Mangalores brought him an empty case, detonates the cache of weapons laced with explosives, before leaving to find the stones. Several Mangalores survive Zorg's assassination attempt and vow revenge on Zorg and to recover the stones for themselves.

The Federation President, learning about the stones and the Diva, rigs a contest for tickets to Fhloston Paradise, a spaceliner where the Diva will be performing, and drafts Dallas back into the Federated Army to retrieve the stones. Cornelius, unaware of the President's plan, sends Leeloo and his acolyte David (Charlie Creed-Miles) to masquerade as Dallas and his newlywed wife and infiltrate the shuttle flight to Fhloston. Dallas intercepts them at the JFK International Airport, and boards the shuttle with Leeloo. Cornelius, learning about Dallas's sudden reappearance, hides aboard the shuttle, where Dallas is accosted by flamboyant radio host Ruby Rhod (Chris Tucker). The shuttle arrives at the Fhloston Paradise, followed by both Zorg and the Mangalores. Rhod and Dallas attend the Diva's performance while Leeloo waits for the Diva in her quarters. During the performance, the Mangalores hijack the space liner, fatally wounding the Diva who reveals to Dallas that the stones are inside her before dying. After extracting them, Dallas repels the Mangalores and regains control of the space liner as Zorg wounds Leeloo, steals the stone briefcase from the Diva's quarters and rigs the liner to explode. As the passengers leave in lifeboats, Dallas, Leeloo, Cornelius, and Rhod scramble to the dock, narrowly missing Zorg who, realizing his case is empty, returns to deactivate his bomb but is unable to deactivate the one planted by the Mangalores that destroys the ship.

As Dallas and company return to Earth, the Great Evil solidifies into an asteroid and hurls itself at Earth. Leeloo, physically and emotionally wounded from the fighting, questions the validity of protecting life that is not worth protecting. As they land at the temple, which David has prepared for their arrival, Dallas tries to coax the workings of the weapon from Leeloo. As the group slowly discovers the process and activates the stones, Leeloo is hesitant to provide the Divine Light needed to complete the weapon, fearing that humans will inevitably destroy themselves. Dallas convinces Leeloo of humanity's hope with a passionate kiss, allowing Leeloo to release the Divine Light at the Great Evil seconds before it hits Earth, destroying the Great Evil and turning it into Earth's second moon. Amidst the worldwide jubilation, the President visits the facility where Leeloo was cloned to congratulate Leeloo and Dallas, who are sharing an intimate moment in the regeneration chamber.

Production

Influence

Some of the elements of the story of The Fifth Element are reminiscent of the Harry Canyon segment in the 1981 animated film Heavy Metal. Both stories feature a world-weary taxi driver in a dystopian future New York City who accidentally encounters a beautiful woman at the center of a conflict involving an evil entity.

Additionally, The Fifth Element shares narrative elements with the French space opera comic book series Valérian and Laureline, which takes place in a highly-stylized future metropolis and features a masculine protagonist assigned to protect a seemingly vulnerable female character. The female character is named Laureline and is depicted with artificially red hair, while in The Fifth Element, Leeloo has orange hair.

The evil character of Jean-Baptiste Émannuel Zorg is also influenced by another comic book villain, Franquin’s Zorglub.

Several scenes pay homage to Fritz Lang's Metropolis.[citation needed] When the police attempt to arrest Leeloo after she has crash-landed in Dallas' taxicab, they twice use the expression "thank you for your cooperation", a line directly from Paul Verhoeven's Robocop.

Script

Korben Dallas was originally intended to be a laborer in a rocket ship factory.[citation needed] 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 Dallas and has him fired as part of one million layoffs to slow down economic growth at the request of the government.

The original name of the character Ruby Rhod was Loc Rhod. This name also appears in the novelization of the film.

Home release

The original home video release of The Fifth Element took place in North America on December 10, 1997, in VHS 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 October 9, 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 January 11, 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 June 20, 2006, and was widely criticized as having poor picture quality. Some have described it as barely on-par with the DVD release. Sony subsequently made a remastered Blu-ray version available, released on July 17, 2007. [1] 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.

Cast

Major roles

Actor Role
Bruce Willis Korben Dallas
Gary Oldman Jean-Baptiste Emanuel Zorg
Ian Holm Father Vito Cornelius
Milla Jovovich Leeloo (The Fifth Element)
Chris Tucker Ruby Rhod

Minor roles and cameos

Cultural references

File:Fifth element 6.jpg
New York City in the year 2263.

Several references are made to both real life and fiction sources throughout the film. When Korben is shown getting out of bed, the date on his bedroom wall is 18 March 2263; Besson's birthday is 18 March 1959. A number of manga volumes can be seen in Korben's apartment, including Adolf by Osamu Tezuka and Sanctuary by Sho Fumimura and Ryoichi Ikegami.

The diva's name, Plavalaguna, means "blue lagoon" in several Slavic languages. Return to the Blue Lagoon was Milla Jovovich's second starring role as an actress.

Clever devices are used to mock certain aspects of modern culture. Korben Dallas' cigarettes are colored in such a way to imply that most of the cigarette is a filter, with only a small part actually smokable. Korben, in the course of meeting Leeloo, goes from 5 points on his license to 1 point on his license. This is inverted from the point system used in the US and UK, in which points are added, not subtracted for violations, but is in accordance with the point system used in France, where a fresh driving license has 12 points. There is also a type of national ID card in the film called a multipass, which is, evidently, easily forgeable. Additionally, the word "green" is used in the film as slang for "cool". In one scene, two police officers get their lunch from McDonald's and a crushed bottle of Coca-Cola can be seen in Korben's apartment. Lastly, during Ruby Rhod's reveal and "interview" with Korben Dallas, he sings a snippet of Lionel Ritchie's All Night Long (All Night).

The Divine Language

The Divine language spoken in the film is an artificial language with only 400 words, invented by director Luc Besson and Milla Jovovich. In an interview with Jovovich included in the bonus feature "The Adventure and Discovery of a Film: The Story of the Fifth Element" on the DVD release of The Fifth Element (Ultimate Edition), Jovovich stated that she and Besson wrote letters to each other in the Divine Language as practice.

The first part of Leeloo's name, "Leeloominaï" means "precious stones", and the latter "Ekbat De Sebat" is an honorific that is never defined. No meaning is given for "Lekatariba" or "Lamina-Tchaï". "Leeloominaï" is the only word in her name that appears in Luc Besson's published dictionary. Other spellings of her name include "Leeloo mi naï", and "Leeloo Minai Lekatariba Lamin-atchai Ekbat Desebat", with "Lekarariba" being wrongly mistaken as the pronunciation of her "third" name. No formal declaration of the truth behind the spelling of Leeloo's name has ever come forth from Besson, but a post-production promotional poster of Leeloo leaping from a building is subtitled "Leeloominaï Lekatariba Lamina-Tchaï Ekbat De Sebat". The nickname "Leeloo" also bears close similarity to the French "L'Élue" - "The Chosen."

The term "Senno Ekto Gamat" used by Leeloo after Dallas kisses her means "never without my permission".

Soundtrack

Untitled

Much of the film's score, composed by Éric Serra, shows an influence of Middle Eastern 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.

File:Fifth element 2.jpg
Plavalaguna performs on stage.

In Plavalaguna's performance, the music and the vocalization abruptly shift from a classical to a pop 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. This relationship between sound and image creates an unusual cinematic effect.

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 voiced by Inva Mula-Tchako, while the role of Plavalaguna was played by French actress Maïwenn Le Besco. Plavalaguna's vocalizations seem beyond physical possibility and, according to Patrice Ledoux (Producer) in the special feature "An Audience with Diva Plavalaguna", it was altered in a sound studio to open the octave range from two to four-and-a-half.

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. How many copies of the complete score are in circulation is not known.

Track listing

All tracks composed by Éric Serra unless indicated otherwise.

  1. "Little Light of Love" – 4:50
    • Performed by RXRA
  2. "Mondoshawan" – 4:01
  3. "Timecrash" – 1:49
  4. "Korben Dallas" – 1:43
  5. "Koolen" – 0:55
  6. "Akta" – 1:51
  7. "Leeloo" – 4:56
  8. "Five Millenia Later" – 3:13
  9. "Plavalaguna" – 1:47
  10. "Ruby Rap" (Serra/Luc Besson/Robert Kamen) – 1:55
  11. "Heat" (Serra/Sebastien Cortella) – 2:54
  12. "Badaboom" – 1:12
  13. "Mangalores" – 1:06
  14. "Lucia di Lammermoor" (Gaetano Donizetti/Salvatore Cammarano) – 3:10
  15. "The Diva Dance" – 1:31
    • Performed by Inva Mulla Tchako
  16. "Leeloominai" – 1:41
  17. "A Bomb in the Hotel" – 2:14
  18. "Mina Hinoo" – 0:54
  19. "No Cash No Trash" – 1:04
  20. "Radiowaves" – 2:32
  21. "Human Nature" – 2:03
  22. "Pictures of War" – 1:19
  23. "Lakta Ligunai" – 4:14
  24. "Protect Life" (Serra/Cortella) – 2:33
  25. "Little Light of Love" (end titles version) – 3:29
    • Performed by RXRA
  26. "Aknot! Wot?" (bonus track) (Serra/Besson/Kamen) – 3:35

Reception

The Fifth Element was generally well received by critics[3]. Perhaps more notably, the film holds a healthy 7.3/10 rating at the Internet Movie Database, based on over 92,000 votes from members. The film was selected as the opening film for the 1997 Cannes Film Festival and became a major box office success, grossing over $263 million USD, more than three times its budget of $80 million USD. Notably, 76% of the receipts for The Fifth Element were from markets outside of the United States.[4]

The Fifth Element was nominated for an Academy Award in 1998 in the Best Effects, Sound Effects Editing category, and 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 Fifth Element the 50th most influential visual effects of all time.

Spin-offs

A game adaption based on the movie was also created by Activision for the PlayStation game console and PC. It was generally met with bad reviews and considered a failure.[5][6]

References

  1. ^ Hunt, Bill (2007-05-21). "My Two Cents 5/21/07". The Digital Bits. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "Has a journalist ever won an international cap?". The Guardian. 2007-10-24. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ http://uk.rottentomatoes.com/m/fifth_element/
  4. ^ The Fifth Element at Box Office Mojo
  5. ^ The Fifth Element for PlayStation game review at Gamespot
  6. ^ The Fifth Element game review at IGN

External links