Friday, 31 August 2012
Savages
For the first time in the history of Stranded Cinema, I have
an exclusive. Despite it not being released until late September in the UK, I
have already seen Savages. In fact, I
saw it at a free preview screening several months ago. Although the agreement
not to discuss the film at these screenings is hardly enforced, I have held
back. However, as it's been released in the USA, I feel that I can now post my
thoughts safely. It’s the latest project from Oliver Stone, developed from a
novel by Don Winslow. The first thing to say is that this is a terrible film.
Two marijuana growers in California, who share a girlfriend called ‘O’, get
into trouble with a Mexican cartel who want to take over the market. Their
girlfriend is eventually taken hostage and they must struggle to find a way to
release her. The plot, as you can tell, sounds like a Tarantino film from the
90s, and that’s exactly what it feels like it is trying to be. The narrative
starts, however, with little or no set up. Why do we care about these
characters, who are little more than drug dealers with heart? What interest do
we have in them? We’re given a narration by ‘O’, but rather than helping it is
annoying. It continues far too long. ‘Show, don’t tell’ is the classic
imperative of good cinema which Stone has ignored here. The audience isn’t
stupid, unless you want them to be. The narration is drifting and vacant, over
slow motion or blurred shots, portentous in its content, with
pseudo-intellectual insights such as ‘I had orgasms, he had wargasms’. Salma Hayek plays the Mexican cartel leader –
a deeply flawed, unbelievable character, badly acted. Someone can’t be a
heartless psychotic businesswoman, and a loving mother. There is an extent to
which this can’t be stretched. Travolta is good enough as a slimy federal
agent, but the best thing about this film (as in most films he’s in) is Benicio
del Toro. He plays the right-hand man of Hayek’s character, and tours
California with a gang of Mexican gardeners, turning up at people’s houses and
torturing/killing them. He is so good it’s almost funny. Even his character,
however, is stretched to breaking point towards the end. The one powerful
moment of this film is the revelation of the rape, but what is the point? It
means nothing and has no implications to the plotline. Lastly, the
double-ending will annoy almost everyone who sees it, and is again pointless.
The final conclusion of the film is deeply unsatisfactory. Nothing is resolved.
It is escapism as its worst – they leave the country and all of their
responsibilities to live happily ever after. It may be that the film was
improved with further editing after the preview screenings, but there are
fundamental flaws here which I don’t think can be ironed out. Any work of art
that at some point resorts to the dictionary definition of its title for any
sort of meaning, as this film does, has lost all hope.
Thursday, 30 August 2012
The Hunt for Red October
This film has one of the most frequently misspelt titles of
all time – there is no ‘the’ before ‘red’. Despite knowing who was in it and
what it was generally about, I’d never seen it fully, and thus was unaware it
formed part of the Jack Ryan story, the character from Tom Clancy’s novels who
also features in Clear and Present Danger
and Patriot Games. It is the first in
the series (although apparently contains many references to Patriot Games, suggesting it was written
later). You don’t need to know this when watching the film, but it does help.
Ryan’s character is far more interesting than your usual action hero. Here he
discovers that the Russians have launched a new, silent submarine, capable of
avoiding sonar and that it’s heading for America. What he soon learns, however,
is that the officers are intending to defect. Connery does his best to restrain
his strong Scottish accent, but it is not very convincing. There is a strange,
very heavily signposted transition between the languages as the camera zooms in
on a man speaking Russian and zooms out on him speaking English. I don’t think
there is a better way to disturb your audience and disrupt the flow of a film.
Connery’s character itself is somewhat unlikeable, and it is only with some
extremely improbable plot-turns that Ryan (played by Alec Baldwin) gets to meet
him face to face. It is a complex story, although there are some rather obvious
devices to help it on its way: ‘I know how he’s going to get them off the submarine’
Ryan says at one point. He then doesn’t tell us, but keeps it a secret until
the critical moment. It is ultimately a hollow film – teasing us with a deeper
meaning, when there really is none. It is not especially tense, thrilling or
dramatic, but good enough – which, most of the time, is all we want.
Tuesday, 28 August 2012
River of Grass
This film is the debut of writer-director Kelly Reichardt
,who has since gone on to direct Meek’s
Cutoff. All of her films so far have created excitement in the film-world,
but she has yet to intrude into mainstream consciousness (if that is even her
intention). River of Grass is a
small-scale, independent film about a bored housewife who gets involved with a
younger man in a small town in Florida. Everything is told from the perspective
of the woman, and we hear throughout her narration on events in a relaxed,
monotone drawl. It feels at times like a homemade movie. The camera is shaky,
the picture grainy, and dialogue mumbled (and could be one of the inspirations for
mumblecore). Despite this, after watching I was surprised the film was as old
as 1994. It feels fresh and modern (in comparison to other films from the same
year, like Speed for example). The
characters are casual, even after they think they’ve killed someone with a gun
they find. We’re uncertain throughout how we’re supposed to judge their
actions, and who we are supposed to support, or reprehend (she leaves her
children at home alone to go out to a bar; he threatens his grandmother with a
gun). The ending is sudden, but not exactly shocking. It’s only surprising
perhaps that there is no sexuality involved in the story. They are two bored
characters, beyond being desperate and lonely, lacking any purpose or meaning
to their lives. There is a raw sound to the movie. It is intoxicating,
sometimes painful to watch, and impresses indelibly on the memory. A strange,
beguiling film that will alter you imperceptibly, but permanently.
Thursday, 23 August 2012
Sorority Row
A film like this has to be judged by its own standards, or those
of its genre. Any attempt to compare it to cinema more widely, or art and literature
as a whole, would result in calamity. There’s no mistaking who this film was
made for and why. Five final year students at a sorority house in an anonymous
University in the US accidentally kill their friend. They decide to hide the
body, but nine months later, when they are graduating, something starts picking
them off, one by one. This may sound very, very familiar, and it is. I Know What You Did Last Summer did this
twelve years earlier. However, as I found out after watching the film, Sorority Row is a ‘reimagining’ of an
80s original: The House on Sorority Row.
So the claims of which came first are perhaps moot. Nonetheless, Sorority Row cannot be said to be
original or innovative in anything that it does. To a certain extent teen horrors
aren’t expected to do this, but the best, and most famous, always stretch the
boundaries of what’s possible within their limits. As with Lesbian Vampire Killers, it may seem relatively easy to make a film
like this. There are, as Randy from Scream
might say, certain rules that one must
abide by in order to successfully make a horror movie. Sorority Row fails on several counts. Who, for instance, is
the main character? We’re never really sure. This needs to be defined fairly
early, unless you want to constantly tease the audience with who will or won’t survive
– but this is a risky step itself. Is the killer frightening enough? Are they supernatural
or human? Do they have a certain unique style, or way of killing? It seems some
of this has been considered (the tyre iron), but not all of it. When we
discover who the killer actually is, the reason for the killer to have acted
the way they did becomes meaningless. This ‘reveal’, in fact, is one of the
hardest things to pull off in these films. Here it is done poorly (someone
spots something in someone’s conveniently open bag), although there is at least
some surprise as to who it is. The murders themselves are so obviously flagged
that they’re not at all frightening, gruesome, or even funny (as they sometimes
are in the Scream franchise). It
seems we’ve become so used to films like this, that we need them to be more and
more extreme, leading to the torture porn in Hostel and Saw, which
even I refuse to watch. The end of the film has multiple, anti-climactic
conclusions and we leave it feeling we have experienced very little style, and
virtually no substance. Even by the standards of the genre, this film is poor.
Wednesday, 22 August 2012
Total Recall
Total Recall has been remade and will be released next week.
It is perhaps an obvious choice for a remake – contemporary CGI, modern taste
for realism and irony, and better actors (Colin Farrell, Jessica Biel and Kate
Beckinsale), have the potential to make it a huge, rollercoaster of a
blockbuster. I wonder, however, how much of the sinister play with reality and memory
the new version will retain. The strap-line on its posters says ‘What is
Real?’, suggesting that this will be a major theme in the film. In the
original, we remain uncertain until quite late in the movie as to whether
anything we see is actually happening or not. There is a scene in which the
people trying to capture Quaid/Hauser (played by Schwarzenegger) attempt to
persuade him that he is dreaming, that he is not really a spy on Mars, but an
ordinary construction worker on Earth. He sees through this lie and manages to
escape, but the dilemma is crucial to the film and how it manipulates its
audience. We are the real construction workers on Earth, fantasising that we might be spies on Mars. We are placing
ourselves in the shoes of Quaid/Hauser, and this scene in which he is told he
is dreaming is ultimately directed at us. It speaks directly to us, and the lie
is actually the truth. The film as a whole rather than encouraging us to
believe we can be more than construction workers, in fact reinforces our
position as such. It gives us this fantasy, allows us to play with it for two
hours, so that we might accept reality more happily. I’m also fascinated by the
many questions that Quaid/Hauser’s identity raises for us. For Quaid, Hauser is
a different person, someone he cannot be, and this is in fact how all of us
treat our past and future selves. They are distinct from us, yet we recognise
whilst repressing the inevitable links. There’s an metafictive play with the
names, too: Quaid is Irish-American and Hauser is German-Dutch. The film was directed
by Verhoeven (a Ducthman) with American money. Significant? I don’t know. I
await with both excitement and concern this new version. It will have lost the quirks of Verhoeven’s
direction – the fast changes of situation, the panning camera, zooming in from
a distance on its target – but what will it have gained?
Tuesday, 21 August 2012
Shalako
Despite the successes of some Westerns in recent years,
cinema audiences still seem ambivalent about the genre. In the late 80s and
early 90s there was quite a resurgence with Young
Guns, Dances with Wolves, Unforgiven,
Open Range, and Tombstone. More recently we’ve had There Will Be Blood, True Grit, Appaloosa,
3:10 to Yuma and Cowboys &
Aliens. The genre has expanded to include revisionist, noir, sci-fi, fantasy,
horror, futuristic, contemporary and comic book westerns. Despite this, you
will still occasionally meet people who’ll say ‘I don’t like Westerns’. For a genre
to be discounted entirely seems rather dramatic, and may stem from a European
distance to these movies (despite the efforts of Sergio Leone). It is perhaps
down to films like Shalako, made in
1968, that the reputation of Westerns still sometimes suffers. Starring Sean
Connery and Brigitte Bardot, it purports to be a more sympathetic Western – the
Indians are not unreasonable savages, they just want their land. However, they
are still men in wigs, their faces painted brown, screaming as they attack,
simple-minded in their intentions. The film reminded me a lot of Zulu, made four years earlier, but with
much more success. The title, Shalako,
probably put a lot of people off. The entirely miscast Connery as the main
character doesn’t help, nor does Bardot in a strange, uncharacteristic role
(one of the few American films she’s in). It feels very much like, and probably
was, a cast put together before a script. The film is in fact far smaller in
scale than it purports to be. There are sweeping landscapes, but the plot
follows only a few characters for little more than two days. They are attacked
and surrounded by Indians and try to escape. Eventually they are caught again
by the Indians and a final showdown is expected. What we receive at the end,
however, is highly disappointing. There is no substantial conclusion or
resolution. The real enemy, of course, as in all these movies, is the
in-fighting between the white men. Shalako
is as tremendously flawed as a film can be. We never have sympathy for any of
the characters, despite Connery’s natural charisma, or Bardot’s beauty. It is
in all a weird movie, probably better forgotten.
Monday, 20 August 2012
Lesbian Vampire Killers
I’m ashamed to say I saw this film, although in my defence it
was on the television while I was waiting for someone. That person didn’t
arrive and I ended up seeing the whole movie. The title is self-explanatory.
There’s no subterfuge around what the creators were trying to do (when a
vampire is killed, white gunk spurts out of them – I probably don’t need to
spell out what it’s supposed to be). In fact, my one complaint would be not
that they went too far, but that they didn’t go far enough. It could’ve been
far scarier/sexier, if they’d been willing to be daring. Unfortunately what we
have is a rather tame B-movie that only half-delivers on its promises. The set
up is fairly abysmal – why does the vampire queen have to wait until the last
in the family line? Why is the main character the last in the line? Likewise,
towards the end, why do the vampires leave the two lovers alone for a few
minutes – just so the script writers can fit a bit of dialogue in? These may
seem like trivial details, but I believe it is exactly on details like these
that B-movies need to be perfect. They need a compelling, believable set up and
strong character motives – that, in fact, is almost all they need. See the
films of John Carpenter for how to do this properly. The film also needs a good
ending – here it is poor to the point of boredom and distraction. There are
multiple climaxes with no point or impetus – people running backwards and
forwards in the woods mindlessly. It’s obvious that this film owes a lot to Shaun of the Dead, but its creators can’t
deliver half of the wit, irony, music, pacing and fast camera movement that Edgar
Wright can. There is, however, one great line. It’s a line that you secretly
wish every character in a horror film would say: ‘I know there’s some really
strange stuff going on, but can’t we just pretend like it’s not happening?’.
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