Searching for reasons surrounding her husband's disappearance, Lena (Natalie Portman) decides to join a team of scientists embarking on a research mission into a newly discovered anomaly called "the shimmer" — an unexplained malignant cancerous growth that is spreading throughout the coastal bayous of a sleepy American coastline, rendering all the flora and fauna within its bubble an unpredictable and potentially hostile mutation.
As the team ventures deeper into the shimmer, the film reveals its secrets through a series of flashbacks that recount her husband, Kane's (Oscar Isaac) fate.
It is a brooding, haunting, and at times quite scary sci-fi brain-burner about many things, not least a painful allegory of the ruthless ambivalence of cancer. Its fractured structure also mirrors the film's prismatic themes about identity and the brutally unsentimental march of genetic diversity.
Throughout, Garland gives a few knowing nods to many other films of its ilk, in particular, Jonathan Glazer's Under the Skin, and like that masterpiece, Annihilation is a beautifully rendered head-scratcher that will have you pensively juggling theories long after leaving the cinema, I mean, logging out of your Netflix account ... *sigh* please, for the love of all that's good, just don't watch it on your phone.
Annihilation
Running time: 115 mins