Lucy (2014) is a wild, unapologetic Luc Besson fever dream that’s equal parts exhilarating trash and frustrating missed opportunity. It’s currently streaming on Netflix, and if you’re in the mood for over-the-top sci-fi action with Scarlett Johansson kicking ass while the movie tries (and fails) to sound profound, it might scratch a specific itch. But raw and honest? It’s dumb as hell, and it knows it—yet somehow still manages to be entertaining in bursts.
An American party girl in Taipei (Johansson) gets roped into being a drug mule for a ruthless Korean crime boss (Choi Min-sik). When the synthetic drug packet in her stomach ruptures, it somehow unlocks “100% of her brain capacity.” Cue superhuman intelligence, telekinesis, time perception manipulation, and eventually god-mode transcendence.
Right off the bat, the entire foundation is built on the debunked myth that humans only use 10% of their brains. Neuroscientists have rolled their eyes at this for decades—it’s not how brains work. The movie doesn’t care. It slaps on pseudo-philosophical narration from Morgan Freeman (playing a professor lecturing on brain capacity) and random nature footage (cells dividing, animals fighting, black holes) to pretend it’s deep. It’s not. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a stoner saying “whoa, dude… what if we used our whole brain?” and then running with it for 90 minutes.
6/10 — It’s a guilty pleasure at best, a “so bad it’s fun” ride if you’re not expecting anything thoughtful. As pure popcorn action with a hot lead going full superpowered revenge mode, it delivers enough thrills and visual flair to be watchable. But as sci-fi or anything pretending to explore the human mind? It’s embarrassingly shallow and full of itself while being objectively ridiculous.
If you go in knowing it’s Luc Besson doing his signature stylish nonsense (like a dumber, more violent Fifth Element without the charm), you’ll probably have a decent time. Turn your brain off (ironically), enjoy Johansson owning the screen, and laugh at the absurdity. If you want actual smart sci-fi or tight storytelling, skip it—there are way better options even on Netflix.
Bottom line: Fun for one watch, especially if it pops up in your recommendations. Don’t expect rewatches or deep discussions afterward. It’s exactly the movie its trailer promised: loud, flashy, and, well, brainless.
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