Mickey 17
Director ~ Bong Joon Ho
Writers ~ Bong Joon Ho, Edward Ashton
2025, US-South Korea
Stars ~ Robert Pattinson, Steven Yeun, Michael Monroe
Mickey 7
Edward Ashton, 2022
Of course, ‘Parasite’ was such a masterclass of balancing tone and genre that expectations were going to be high for Bong Joon Ho’s follow-up, ‘MICKEY 17’. Mickey 7 from the novel is increased to 17 but demoted to simply a dope for the film: he has less agency, less of the backchat and quiet smarts. The awareness and insight kept close to his chest is lost in the film, which operates on broader strokes. Bong calls the character of Mickey 7 “pathetic and ultimately hilarious”,* but surely that’s unfair and a misreading. At the centre of the kind of simple but direct metaphor that science-fiction excels at, in both prose and celluloid cloned Mickey is an unwitting victim and symbol of uncaring capitalism, new technology, the distillation of an expendable workforce. In the film, he also victim of slapstick – hence 17 rather than 7 – and more a straight-up idiot than the quietly sly and opinionated prose character. So, despite the excellence of Robert Pattinson, if you are a fan of the book, you may feel Mickey shortchanged.
Ashton’s novel is one of those smart pulps with a mild, struggling protagonists up against A Big Uncaring Future. It has more world-building, covers more well-thought-out background to and history of the planet colonisations, which is well thought-out and interesting. It too has a light tone which some may find underserves the big ideas, but it’s fun and engaging with several bright ideas and insights.
Bong’s film is a romp a little too amused with itself although the central idea fascinates and the effects look expensive. The difference is in a whackier tone and caricatures, with the colony owner Marshal is simply a Donald Trump parody with a manipulative and villainous trophy wife. Mark Ruffalo dives headfirst into the Trump impersonation that clearly puts the unsubtlety at the foremost that this is almost an SNL skit. The commentary is so clearly on the Trump-Musk era that it surely crimps the idea’s scope and evergreen observations on society, although others might see this as a sign of its urgency. Perhaps what is different is that the usual super-plotting nefariousness of bad guys has been replaced by the warmongering ignorance of the power-hungry elite.
Come the ending, the fascinating cloning concept and analogy seems to have slipped away, to count as secondary, lost in a mash-up of excellently imagined scifi setting, comedy, political satire and genre diversion. The alien encounter overwhelms the fascination of Mickey’s situation, and although that’s the trajectory of the source novel, there feels less of a balance here (although admittedly that could be simply a result of the book being first-person). Pattinson captures the exhaustion and trauma of dangerous work but swamped under the denouement of special-effects extravaganza, the focused humanity he represents feels lost. Bong is a master genre-blender, but there is something of the near-miss with this concoction. It may be fun enough, amusing and beautifully filmed, but there’s none of the perfection of ‘Parasite’ and less of the pleasing metaphor and serious defiance of ‘Snowpiercer’. A heady amusement that doesn’t quite monopolise its big ideas.
· * - ‘Mickey 7’ (2022), Edward Ashton, Q&A with Bong Joon-Ho (Solaris, 2025)



