In season one of The Sopranos, Tony Soprano suggests that if he were not in the mob maybe he’d be “selling patio furniture off Route 22.” Well, in the dystopian future of Lapsis, maybe Tony would be like Ray (Dean Imperial), a portly New Yorker from Queens who’s lured into working for CBLR, a tech firm whose contractors lay cables for the latest ‘Quantum’ computer technology. Now, connecting obelisks with cables laid haphazardly along the countryside floor is not at all credible, but Lapsis is a smart little sci-fi satire of the gig-economy that is bolstered by a great performance from Imperial.
Anyone who’s seen The Sopranos will clock Ray and Tony’s resemblance in an instant. Ray has the slicked back hair and masculine corpulence that Anna (Madeline Wise), another CBLR worker, describes as a ‘Seventies mobster vibe’. She’s not wrong, but the vibe is strictly a matter of appearance because Ray is a good man – the proverbial salt of the earth. And he’s a convincing one, too, as Imperial eschews stereotype by playing Ray’s working class charisma with a balanced authenticity.
What Lapsis does best is depicting Ray’s peers and associates in this near future of technocratic corporatism. There’s a nasty, selfish vibe that threads through all of them; everything is transactional to these people, nothing is free. Especially the parking, for which Ray is penalised on two occasions because the government has moved to a new calendar promoted by ‘Quantum’, the omnipotent tech giant. There’s a hint of Franz Kafka in the way Ray, a personified throwback, navigates this world of jargon and euphemism, which apply a despicable veneer to their motives of greed and exploitation. You may not believe in the technology, but you will believe in Ray, a genuine person in a world of phoneys.