Background

Aporia

2023

5.6 /10 IMDb
104 Duration
Director: Jared Moshe
Cast: Judy Greer ,Edi Gathegi ,پیمان...
Language: English
Country: United States

Since losing her husband, Sophie has struggled to manage grief, a full-time job, and parenting her devastated daughter, but when a former physicist reveals a secret time-bending machine, Sophie will be faced with an impossible choice.

Read full story →

Top Cast

Judy Greer

Judy Greer

Actor

Edi Gathegi

Edi Gathegi

Actor

پیمان معادی

پیمان معادی

Actor

Faithe Herman

Faithe Herman

Actor

Whitney Morgan Cox

Whitney Morgan Cox

Actor

Rachel Paulson

Rachel Paulson

Actor

Lisa Linke

Lisa Linke

Actor

Adam O'Byrne

Adam O'Byrne

Actor

Dionne Audain

Dionne Audain

Actor

Veda Cienfuegos

Veda Cienfuegos

Actor

Mann Alfonso

Mann Alfonso

Actor

Grace Hinson

Grace Hinson

Actor

Support This Page

If you like this content, you can support the site or share this movie with friends.

Donate / Support

Help keep the site running — any contribution is appreciated.

Share This Movie

Send the movie page to friends or share it on social networks.

Support

Link Not Working? Here’s What to Do

If you face any issues with the button, leave a comment mentioning the movie name. We will respond with the link shortly (within 5–10 minutes).

User Reviews & Comments

Leave a Reply

B
Brent Marchant
13 Aug 2023

For those unfamiliar with the term “aporia,” it refers to a state of puzzlement or bewilderment, especially in philosophical and ethical discourse. And, in the case of this latest effort from writer-director Jared Moshé, it’s equally applicable to the essence of this film’s existence. This romantic sci-fi saga of a nurse, Sophie (Judy Greer), who loses her engineer/physicist husband, Mal (Edi Gathegi), to a drunk driver follows the efforts to bring him back to life with the assistance of her late spouse’s best friend, Jabir (Payman Maadi), a fellow scientist with whom he was working on a time machine. Unfortunately, the device doesn’t function as intended, but it is nevertheless capable of sending a deadly subatomic particle through time whose impact is capable of killing someone – in this case, the proposed target being the motorist who killed Mal. The prospect poses a daunting ethical dilemma, but Sophie agrees to it, and she soon finds herself back in the company of her husband. But changing the past carries consequences, many of them unforeseen and difficult to deal with. The film presents an intriguing premise, to be sure, but one not unlike what was previously examined in “The Butterfly Effect” (2004). What’s more, this offering is plagued by a number of issues, such as needlessly slow pacing, insightful but overlong ethical debates and a stunningly unsophisticated temporal device that looks like one of Rube Goldberg’s comical contraptions. The biggest problem by far, though, is one of narrative credibility – not from a scientific standpoint but from a moral one: It’s hard to believe that these three supposedly intelligent individuals can be so casual and cavalier when it comes to their ethics and morals. I find it unfathomable how a supposedly compassionate caregiver like a nurse could so willingly go along with a harebrained plan to willfully kill someone for self-serving purposes; it’s a hallow, contrived and patently unbelievable story arc. And, when efforts to make up for this transgression surface, the plot truly starts to go off the rails. Indeed, the logic behind this tale truly needs to be rethought and reworked, because, as it stands now, it genuinely leaves philosophically minded viewers in a deep state of aporia, especially when it comes to figuring out why they bought a ticket to watch it in the first place.