I think part of the problem in general is the "60 minutes into movie Hollywood compression factor", I'm sure you can think of alot of movies that suffer from this, but I'll list Stargate, Dune and Total Recall as Sci-Fi examples. The movies start out great have all this detail and then all of a sudden they realize that they're almost out of time and try to compress 2 hours of explanation into 45 mins of gloss.
They tired very hard not to let it happen in The Island, but if I have any real criticism it's a quick ending and Lincoln's learning curve, which at times bordered on the unbelievable. Another problem was actually postive--in a way--the movie held my attention because of familiar traits from other movies--it's usually the other way around. The Island wasn't based on a Phillip K. Dick story, but it might as well have been. Elements of Total Recall, Minority Report, Imposter and (the book) The World Jones Made were definately there. The unreality (very cool though) element was complimented by themes from Vanilla Sky and the 13th Floor. The chase was similar to The Matrix Reloaded, Minority Report and Logan's Run.
In a weird way it really is a remake of Logan's Run and that's what kept it interesting for me. Like the "mind-crime prophets" in Minority Report, the end of the city limits in The 13th Floor and the food source in Soylent Green there is a fairly mindblowing twist. One problem I had was that Steve Buscemi's character seemed to have all the good lines and after he was gone (something felt like is was really missing) McGregor's character was exposed as two dimensonal until his face-off at the end.
There were some cool twists in the city and the advanced technology effecst were great: like the nano-bugs and the electro-glide train--but the city looked like a rip off of The Fifth Element. Well I just did what I said I wouldn't do, it just seemed that not enough detail given from the beginning of the city chase to the ending watered it down a bit--but, I guess, that's Hollywood.
Kill me now, I liked it, but I'd only give it a B- for overall effort ( B+ if you add the Scarlett Johassen eye candy factor
