Sunday, November 7, 2010

The Curse of Everlasting Life: Brad Ellis' Daylight Fades



Review contains multiple spoilers.

When thinking about how difficult life is as a human, imagine how hard it is to live as a vampire. Many people don't like to think about the fact they will eventually die, but do they have what it takes to live forever? Would the humanity they once had fade away as the times passes? Could they get used to feeding on blood, but more than that, the blood of humans? For some vampires, it is not a challenge at all. They accept and embrace what they are, and since they are no longer human, rules do not apply to them anymore. But to others, letting go of their humanity could be too painful, so coming to terms with what they are will be a constant, perhaps eternal struggle.

These conflicts are at the core of Brad Ellis' Daylight Fades, a drama that at its center revolves around an eternal life filled with regret and loneliness. What works about it is the way it shows that not being human doesn't change the fact one can continue to make the same mistakes. If a vampire tries to hang on to what they were before they changed, the fact they are trying to be something they're not can only end in disaster. Hence is the case with Seth (Allen Gardner), a vampire who, as the movie opens, has hit rock bottom and is overwhelmed by all the aspects of his life. His existence is desolate and pathetic, so when he is offered an opportunity to have it all go away, he leaves everything behind and foolishly takes it.

The movie picks back up years later, and we see that Seth's decision to become a vampire has left him worse off than he was before. His resistance to living wild and free has led him to watch his daughter, Elizabeth (Rachel Miles), now in her twenties, who's life is not much better than Seth's was once he finally gave up. Elizabeth has never had positive male figures in her life, and the experience has left her bitter and cruel when it comes to partners and fathers. All this changes when she meets Johnny (Matthew Stiller), a loner who is shy, lacks confidence, and "got left with a broken home." The two share a stale meet cute that might be convincing if they were in high school but here, there's no real chemistry. It feels like they are meeting because the plot requires it.

Their biggest connection comes on a dance floor. Neither of them is looking for a relationship, but as shown through a nicely staged montage, they click and before he knows it, Johnny is in love. Elizabeth's guard is unable to come down though, so she cheats in an act of desperation and the emotional toll it takes on Johnny leads to a car accident he cannot recover from. And this is where Seth enters in. Having tortured himself over not being a part of his daughter's life, he sees saving Johnny from death as the only way he can show his love for her. It's an act of desperation to be sure, because why would Seth want to give someone the life he has? How could he possibly be so selfish as to force his daughter to grow old and die while Johnny stays the same and lives an eternity of Hell?

We have to wonder if Seth is changing Johnny as much for himself as he is for Elizabeth. It's obvious that the years alone have made it a struggle for him to relate to or communicate well with humans. He tries to sympathize with their sadness, but is unable to properly show emotion anymore. By turning Johnny and taking care of him, Seth will not only have someone he can talk to, but will finally be a proper father figure. He can teach Johnny how to survive as a vampire without having to take a human life. You can see the change in attitude as Seth first begins to explain to Johnny what he is. It's the first time Seth has felt alive in years.

Seth is so busy focusing on helping Johnny understand what he is, he never thinks about how the situation will affect Elizabeth. He makes Johnny promise not to change her, neglecting to remember that she will ultimately suffer and have to find ways to explain why he never ages. At one point, they ask Seth if sex is still an option and while they are able, they "can't create life." The only thing a vampire is capable of is taking life away. What Seth has failed to realize is that he's coaching Johnny to become him. Now that Johnny is a vampire, what will happen if Elizabeth cannot handle it and leaves? There are a number of moments where Seth sits outside the house of his lost love, a foreshadowing to Johnny's future. In this world, love is a double edged sword, as you will lose whether you are human or vampire.

The movie's visual style compliments the mood of the story. Most of the scenes take place at night, which lets the darkness cloak the characters in sadness. Seth is kept mostly in the shadows, most effectively during the scenes where he watches his lost love's home. Only half of his face is lit, appropriately showcasing the two sides struggling to exist, one vampire and the other human. Late in the movie, Seth has a lovely reunion with Sarah (Kim Justis, excellent), Elizabeth's mother and the woman he left behind. It is here we realize by turning Johnny into him, he is also turning Elizabeth into her mother. It's a selfish act, but even all the years of being a vampire haven't been able to change Seth from the shell of a man he used to be. The most tragic quality to Seth is that he will spend eternity making the same types of mistakes and not realizing it.

Seth is the glue that holds the movie together, and the scenes that feature him leave a lasting impression. Sympathizing with a vampire is not easy to pull off, but Gardner's quietly moving performance is able to do this. Sadly, the same cannot be said for all aspects of his screenplay. As it has been with a lot of his writing, I find that the supporting characters are often more appealing than the main ones. The same applies here. In addition to Seth, the movie's best character is Raven, played by the dynamite Rachel Kimsey. She is the antithesis of Seth in the vampire world, being that she uses humans as sexual toys and then feeds on them. Living forever is the ultimate party, and since there aren't many vampires around, the world has become her personal playground.

Raven sees Johnny as a protege and uses her sexuality as a way to bring him to her side. She looks down on humanity and uses her lifestyle as a way to make Johnny do the same. What I like about her performance is that she is not flat out aggressive with Johnny to adhere to her ways. Instead, she is patient with him and uses small temptations in hopes he will come around. As much as I love Raven, I never found Johnny's journey with her convincing. There's a scene where he talks to Elizabeth and is frustrated about the fact she left him in a time of crisis. Instead of simply voicing his disapproval of what she did (although he should have been understanding about it, since he killed someone right in front of her), he tells her he does not love her anymore. It feels too convenient, as if it has to happen so Johnny will get to experience the Raven side of being a vampire for a while.

I mentioned earlier how lame the meet cute between Johnny and Elizabeth is and sadly, their relationship never develops into something realistic. Worse, with the exception of Seth, none of the other relationships in the movie have any ring of truth to them. Since Elizabeth has never had a father, the screenplay provides an alcoholic stepfather named Tim (Michael Gravois), who exists for no other reason than to be overbearing and unsupportive. We also know that he is in the movie so Seth can attack him later. Same applies to Elizabeth's ex-boyfriend (Adam Burns), a complete asshole whose every appearance is building to the moment Johnny will finally get angry and kill his first human. I like the idea he will have to pay for this sin, but the movie's resolution to it is a cop out. I don't have a problem with the fact Johnny writes a letter detailing what he did, it's that the movie attempts to milk emotional resonance by showing the dead kid's mother watching Johnny leave after he drops the letter at her door. In this case, less would have been more.

Seth's best friend, Patrick (Dennis Phillipi), has become the close family connection and the real father figure to Elizabeth, although in many of the scenes, he feels more like an intruder. Instead of helping any of the conflicts he gets involved in, I kept thinking he looked like that cool uncle who would give you a sip of his beer when you're a kid. Equally out of place is Johnny's best friend, Jake (Drew Smith), a character who is in the movie to provide comic relief, although the only thing comic about him is that his dialogue sounds like a cheap stand up routine. He is supposed to be support for Johnny, but his comments are both egotistical and misogynistic (will Gardner ever be able to outgrow writing this character?).

Good performances could help overcome the issues I have with the two lead characters, but the result is a mixed bag. Rachel Miles tries hard to convey Elizabeth's emotional uncertainties, the problem being that she tries a bit too hard. I found the performance too theatrical, meaning the delivery of every line and every facial expression comes off as overdone. It's as if she is never comfortable in the role. This is most apparent during the scene where she confesses her love to Johnny as he is dying. As she cries, it looks like she is pretending to cry, so instead of appearing sad, she looks like she wants to swallow him whole.

Matthew Stiller fares better as Johnny. Aside from having the right look for the role, he is able to convincingly convey his uncertainty and then acceptance of what he has become. Even when the movie requires him to do things that don't make a lot of sense, Stiller's face gives the perfect amount of nuance to pull the audience along with him. Where he doesn't fare so well is in regards to the romance. Like Rachel Miles, his delivery has a tendency to get a bit theatrical, as if they are competing to see who can talk louder.

Many of the scripts failings are hidden by the cinematography, which strikes the right somber mood. The widescreen framing captures a world that feels worn down and lived in by beings who are uncertain of their purpose and may no longer care. In fact, the imagery is so entrancing it only brings out the screenplay's greatest weakness: that with the exception of Seth, none of the other characters feels lived in. The first time we meet them in the movie, it feels like the first moment they've ever existed and when the movie is over, we can't imagine their lives continuing. Everything begins and ends with the movie itself because the people inhabiting it feel like creations of a plot and nothing more. Due to this, it never feels like anything is at stake (no pun intended).

The movie's climax drives this idea home. After a suicide attempt to hopefully force Seth to change her, Elizabeth decides she, Johnny, and Seth should leave town and start over (what she thinks they'll find by running away is a mystery, as Johnny will still be a vampire). They all agree to it, but once on the road, Johnny realizes he can't go because it's not fair to Elizabeth. He only has one choice, and that is to die. The scene is completely abrupt and there has not been any real progression to bring Johnny to this point. If anything, he should be sacrificing himself out of guilt for murdering a human. Even more puzzling is why Elizabeth is so quick to accept his decision aside from the fact it makes sense in context to the plot (she never got to say goodbye the first time he was going to die, so now she can).

Seth's guilt over what he made Johnny (and how he has ruined Elizabeth's life) lets him know he must die as well. This makes sense, as Seth is the only character in the movie who has not functioned as a simple plot device. The only flaw in Seth's logic is that it seems he would try to stop Johnny and have them leave him behind. In his mind, Johnny and Elizabeth should be able to start over without him. The climax leads to a beautifully composed final scene of Seth and Johnny staring at the sunrise as they accept their fate. It marks the first time they truly see things clearly and are able to accept what they really are. It's a sublime moment in a movie that doesn't completely earn it. There is plenty of admire about Daylight Fades, but it has too many characters and needs a clearer focus. It's an unforgettable ending in search of a memorable path to get there.


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(c) Hell and Beyond, 2010

Monday, July 5, 2010

Meeting Halfway: The Best of 2010 (so far)

No real need for introductions here...I'll let my choices speak for themselves. More to come soon, and here's to hoping this dreadful summer movie season shows signs of improvement.

LEE



5) Hot Tub Time Machine dir. Steve Pink

It isn't nearly as funny as it should have been, but what ultimately struck me about Hot Tub Time Machine is how well it understands how disappointing life can be. By using a cheap gimmick to take three forty-year-olds back to their glory days, the movie explores how going back to the best days of your past will not fix the problems of the present. In fact, it can potentially make them worse. The idea is conveyed through scenes of embarrassing truth, many of which are meant to be funny, but struck a nerve for me in a different way. If I had laughed more (and don't get me wrong, I did laugh), I'd consider Hot Tub Time Machine a classic. As it stands, the movie is a splendid examination of mid-life crisis.



4) Kick-Ass dir. Matthew Vaughn

A superhero movie that has its cake and eats it too, Matthew Vaughn's latest seamlessly blends the real world with the comic book one, while at the same time finding a way to mix teen comedy and romance with outrageous violence. Like all good movies of this genre, it weighs in on the responsibilities of its heroes and tests their moral boundaries. The title challenges us to think about how we view superheroes when we are children, and the movie shows, sometimes painfully, the realization we come to once we discover that it is not as easy or as chivalrous as we might expect.



3) Shutter Island dir. Martin Scorsese

The most misunderstood movie of the year so far, and one that begs for multiple viewings, Scorsese's newest is a love letter to '50s cinema in style and in tone. It deceptively plays like a textbook mystery, but carefully peeling back the layers reveals something much deeper and profound. This isn't just about finding a missing girl; at its core, the movie is a complex and heartbreaking trip into an irreversibly damaged psyche. It would have been easy to find a satisfying resolution, a road Scorsese sidesteps with the movie's final line of dialogue. Any questions are answered at that point, and in looking back over the events of the movie, there are no cheats to be found. Shutter Island has been invading my brain since I saw it, so needless to say I can't wait to see it again.



2) Exit Through the Gift Shop dir. Banksy

As fascinating and thought provoking as any documentary I have seen in recent years, Exit Through the Gift Shop acquaints the viewer with the lives of street artists as seen through the eyes of someone fascinated with the process. For a while, we are convinced this will be the movie's core focus, until it flips the switch at the halfway point and gives us something completely different to chew on. Many have speculated if the movie is a joke, and whether it is or not, it provides a discussion worthy portrait of the nature and intentions behind art, whether it be from the artist's point of view or the spectator's. Does art always have meaning, and does the artist always intend for it to? This just rips the lid off of one the many questions this movie dares us to ponder.



1) Toy Story 3 dir. Lee Unkrich

Yet another example of why Pixar corners the market in animated features, Toy Story 3 is a work of exceptional maturity and emotional honesty. It expands on the ideas of the first two movies by bravely (and unpredictably) taking its main characters, who always knew little Andy would grow up, and forcing them to finally realize they are only immortal for a limited time. The screwball banter and visual gags are still intact, and while they don't always succeed, they pave the way for some much darker territory. This is the first entry in the series that has seen any real consequences, or to put it more accurately, impending doom. By conveying these themes through Pixar's rich visuals (something that has become one of their trademarks), the movie is able to make us care for these toys more than we could have imagined. They aren't just play things anymore, but living entities with feelings (could we suggest they have a soul?). Let's hope this is the last entry in the series. The movie ends on a perfect and graceful note that lets the audience know nothing more needs to be said.


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(c) Hell and Beyond, 2010

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Breaking the Mold: The Best Movies of 2009




As I looked back over the movies I saw in 2009, I realized that the best of the lot resembled the list I made in 2007. New and seasoned filmmakers shot for the moon, creating bold and risky visions of everything from the damages of heartbreak, to the trials of adolescence, to the decline of the world as we know it. There wasn't a consistent theme to the best of the year, which made putting them in a list all the more difficult. I've spoken with quite a few people who said they didn't see enough great movies in 2009 to make a top ten. I was struggling to figure out which movies would be left out of the top twenty. It was a strong year for movies, in other words, as plenty of filmmakers had something to say and did so in ways that were ambitious, original, and occasionally profound. So, here is my sum up, as best as I could put them in order. As usual, it is always subject to change, and when that is a dilemma, I'd say that's the sign of a good movie year.

LEE

Dishonorable Mentions (in alphabetical order): 12 Rounds, Avatar, Funny People, The Proposal, Terminator: Salvation, World's Greatest Dad, and Year One

Honorable Mentions (in alphabetical order): Anvil! The Story of Anvil, The Box, Crank: High Voltage, Drag Me to Hell, Gomorrah, The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus, The Limits of Control, Moon, A Perfect Getaway, Star Trek, Taken, Tetro, and You, the Living

The Next Ten

20) Coraline (dir. Henry Selick)
19) Sherlock Holmes (dir. Guy Ritchie)
18) A Serious Man (dir. Joel and Ethan Coen)
17) Martyrs (dir. Pascal Laugier)
16) The Hurt Locker (dir. Kathryn Bigelow)
15) Bright Star (dir. Jane Campion)
14) In the Loop (dir. Armando Iannucci)
13) 500 Days of Summer (dir. Marc Webb)
12) The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (dir. Werner Herzog)
11) Stingray Sam (dir. Cory McAbee)

The Top Ten



10) Observe and Report (dir. Jody Hill)

I found myself stunned after the first ten minutes of Observe and Report to the point my mouth hung open for the entire run time. Part of it was due to the fearless performance by Seth Rogen (who I was ready to give up on before this), the other was my amazement a studio would green light a comedy this uncomfortable. In an age where comedies consider risk being how often they can gross you out, here's one that uses the same tactic as a way to test the audience, not shock them. I've seen the movie twice and I want to see it again, just so I can remind myself it actually exists.



9) Antichrist (dir. Lars von Trier)

One of the most talked about movies of the year for more reasons than one, Lars von Trier's latest is a strangely compelling and emotionally rich horror movie about dealing with guilt and the multiple meanings of the word, "nature." The movie effortlessly juggles themes involving sexuality, relationships, and gender differences, building to a conclusion that shows how emotional pain leads to the need for physical pain, particularly when dealing with regret and blame. I thought a lot about Milton while I watched Antichrist; it's not an easy movie, but I'll be damned if it's not a fascinating one. Put it on a double bill with The Exorcist.



8) The House of the Devil (dir. Ti West)

Ti West has amazingly, at the age of 29, already mastered the tricky art of building anticipation. His third feature is his best so far, a throwback horror picture that isn't about in jokes or pop culture references, but a dead serious and beautifully stylish movie about the dangers of babysitting for strangers. The gorgeous Jocelin Donahue carries the movie with grace and subtlety, and the legendary Tom Noonan gets to turn the creepiness factor up to eleven for the first time since Manhunter. If the payoff isn't as exhilarating as the tense and remarkably quiet buildup, it hardly matters because it is handled with a technical proficiency and maturity rarely seen in the genre anymore. West remembers what made horror movies special in the first place: sometimes your imagination is scarier than what's actually put in front of you.



7) Fantastic Mr. Fox (dir. Wes Anderson)

Every Wes Anderson movie with the exception of Bottle Rocket has made it onto my top ten list, but none of them have entertained in the way Fantastic Mr. Fox does. Anderson proves animation suites him well with this visually dazzling, consistently hilarious tale of a fox's desire to break out of his boring routine and do what's in his nature. Along the way, the director's signature father/son conflicts come into play, and as usual, they are handled with equal compassion and quirkiness. What surprises most is the way Anderson is also able to weave in, with warm humor and a touch of the profound, ideas about the consequences of war and finding one's sense of purpose. It's a perfect decade closer for the auteur filmmaker, as it opens a brand new door of possibilities for him. Let's hope the movie's box office failure won't hold him back from exploring this medium again.



6) Up (dir. Pete Docter and Bob Peterson)

While I do agree with the majority that the wordless prologue is perhaps the best thing Pixar has ever done, I will still argue that the movie that follows is pretty great as well. The opening scene sets the stage for a visually audacious journey of soul searching for Carl (Ed Asner), a widowed man who decides to literally take his house to the paradise he and his wife never visited. Along the way, he befriends a little boy in need of a father figure and finds out the truth about his childhood hero. The movie effectively captures the need to rediscover one's inner strength no matter the age, and how the images of those we look up to can be shattered when we learn who they really are. It's a thoroughly rich movie, complete with sequences of cliffhanging excitement, unexpected laughs, and emotional honesty. After the underwhelming trailer, Up turned out to be a real treat.



5) Adventureland (dir. Greg Mottola)

I love coming of age stories, even though most of them depend on tasteless gags or a lack of understanding the way teenagers really behave. Even though Greg Mottola's Superbad had its fair share of vulgarities, it still had a firm grasp on who its characters were, emotions and all. Mottola's follow up threatened to be the same movie but instead, it takes a completely different approach. The movie covers the awkward summer after college is over when you can't find a "real" job and girls are tired of boys and ready for men. Mottola builds the central romance with an admirable amount of restraint, using the setting and the music to establish the mood and create memories. An '80s soundtrack can often be a distraction but here, we see how each song will serve as a reminder to a magical moment experienced during a summer with a miserable job and a difficult romance. This is one of those rarities that you don't want to end, because the world the characters inhabit is comfortable and true.



4) Pontypool (dir. Bruce McDonald)

Most horror movies are all about visual style and gore, which is what makes Pontypool one of the biggest pleasures in quite some time. Taking place in one location and focusing on the confusion and then fear (and then confusion) of a disc jockey (a terrific Stephen McHattie) and a few other radio station employees, the movie is a savage critique on the world's slow decent into illiteracy and the potential danger of talk radio. Aside from that, I will say no more, for the unfolding of the events is how this picture hooks you. No one makes movies like this anymore, movies that have a brain and are still able to be a hell of a lot of fun and scarier than we might have expected. Who knew that a dialogue based movie, set in a basement, could have the ability to totally freak you out?



3) Two Lovers (dir. James Gray)

Although James Gray's movies keep getting better, nothing could have prepared me for the dramatic punch of his latest. A story of a lost soul (a never better Joaquin Phoenix) who ends up torn between two women, one as starved of love as he is and the other, needy and helpless, Two Lovers is as honest and unflinching a portrait of necessity and the longing for human connection as any I have seen. The movie features Gray's signature touch for making the viewer feel right at home within its community, an element that gives us a better understanding of why the characters are at this point in their fractured lives. The conclusion to the picture is nothing short of perfection as it brings into focus an ultimatum that isn't based on what the key character really wants, but what will adequately fill the void in his heart.



2) Where the Wild Things Are (dir. Spike Jonze)

Spike Jonze's collaborations with the great Charlie Kaufman adequately prepared him for Where the Wild Things Are, a intensely personal project that takes the ideas of the short and poetic source material and blows them up into one of bravest movies about the struggles of childhood ever made. Once Max (Max Records) gets to the island and meets his new friends, we begin to experience why he is so hostile and frustrated on the inside. Max still doesn't know why he is a part of the world, whether it be the real one or the creation of his psyche, a conflict the movie plays out sans sugar coating or quick answers. Being human is not easy, and as Max learns, trying to confide in creatures of the imagination is not much easier when all you know are scarred human emotions. It's thick stuff, but when it's all said and done, there's no question that a light does shine dimly at the end of the tunnel. It's up to us to decide how much brighter it will get.



1) Inglourious Basterds (dir. Quentin Tarantino)

How appropriate it is that the best movie of the final year of the decade is about the movies! I was a product of the Tarantino generation, and feel that I am better moviegoer for it. While others complained about his lack of originality, I was learning about how to love the movies; not just through his, but because of his. Tarantino borrows the framework, but what fills it is completely his. The man has evolved into a genius due to how he carefully explores the themes at hand, mostly through the behaviors and decisions of his characters. Inglourious Basterds, like his pictures before it, revolves around people who get in over their heads. But what Tarantino makes clear as always is that the mistakes belong to the characters, not him; everything that happens is so because they made it that way. This idea runs wild in Basterds like never before, as Tarantino lovingly toys with his audience by always keeping us in the moment, a tactic that he winds so tight we can never anticipate what he'll throw at us next. It's a movie lover's dream, a picture so enthralled with how movies effect us (and deviously trick us) that it hardly matters if the pieces fit coherently. That's not the point. The movies have the power to play by their own rules, and Tarantino understands this, hell he embraces it, as much as any filmmaker alive. We're lucky to have him.


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(c) Hell and Beyond, 2010

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

A Time of Reflection: The Decade in Film

Wow. I sit here preparing to look back on the last decade of film, and the thought that keeps creeping in is that the first ten years of the 2000's are actually about to come to a close. How can that be? I feel like I just got started. The decade began with getting a job as a movie theater projectionist, which turned out to be as close to a zen moment as any I can remember. Things only went uphill from there. I finally finished college, wrote three drafts of a screenplay, bought and sold my first home, became an uncle, and constantly wondered what my life would be like when 2010 hit. The fact that I still don't know is not too surprising. It's harder to figure out than I could have ever imagined.

2000 was the first year my work as a movie reviewer was read by others outside of family and friends. I got to experience what it was like to get feedback from people who didn't know me and weren't able to identify with what I had said because of who I was. It was eye opening to say the least, but it was also more exciting than anything I have felt as a writer. The love and hate that was given based on something I had written truly touched me. Knowing that people out there had a real reaction to my point of view was the first time, in my mind, that I deserved to call myself a writer.

Writing about movies has changed me. It's made me look at myself differently, it's made me think differently, and, as cheesy as it sounds, it's made me grow. Film criticism is what has defined me over the last ten years. Even if I haven't written as much as I would have liked, the fact that I am always able to talk about them and continue to think about them has made me happier and more complete than I ever knew it could. And I have no doubts that it's because movies are such a wonderful and personal way for people to connect. It opens up our emotions and gives us reasons to laugh or argue or cry. That thrills me.

I've been going through the movies I've seen over the last ten years, working for months to try and pick the ones that were the best of the bunch, with the end result usually being frustration or confusion. How could I possibly put them in order? Then one day it came to me. I thought about how each choice affected me at that point in my life, and about which ones had broken into the chambers of my heart and soul. The list went through many revisions. So, here it is. My choices for the best movies of the decade. The decade when I began to think critically, meaning it was okay to hate a movie even if everyone else loved it and love a movie even if everyone else hated it. At the core, it didn't matter because I knew how I was going to express my feelings about it.

I love movies. I love writing about movies. I know deep inside that this will never change. This is who I am, and so with that in mind, I am proud to share my very first list looking back at the best of the decade. Thanks to all who have ever taken the time to read what I write. This is as much for you as it is for me, and here's to the next ten years when hopefully, we'll do this again.

-LEE

Ten Honorable Mentions (in alphabetical order)

Catch Me If You Can, A History of Violence, Kill Bill, King Kong, The New World, Oldboy, Once, There Will Be Blood, Wendigo, Wonder Boys

The Top Ten



10) The Incredibles (2004) dir. Brad Bird

One of the few movies I've seen twice in the same day at the theater, Brad Bird's second feature is the rarest of rarities: an animated feature with more humanity, thrilling action, and thematic resonance than most live action efforts.



9) Lost in Translation (2003) dir. Sofia Coppola

A haunting, funny and beautiful character piece that perfectly captures the need for human connection in an unfamiliar setting. The performances by Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson are so real they transcend the screen, which makes us exhilarated that we are lost with them.



8) Inglourious Basterds (2009) dir. Quentin Tarantino

More so than any of his other features, Tarantino's latest proves without a doubt that he is not a derivative filmmaker but a true auteur. His understanding and passion of film has led to his greatest achievement, a movie that's not only about loving the movies, but also about how it gives the filmmaker the power to express themselves by whatever means they feel are necessary (even if it means changing history).



7) The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) dir. Wes Anderson

I loved all four movies Wes Anderson made this decade, but this was the only one that reminded me of a British novel. Anderson is one of the few writers we have who is able to carefully balance quirk, heartbreak, and the disappointment a child feels toward their father (and does it with multiple characters).



6) Bom yeoreum gaeul gyeoul geurigo bom (Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter...and Spring) (2003) dir. Ki-duk Kim

As profound a meditation on spirituality and faith as I have seen, Ki-duk Kim's masterpiece paints its messages through the stages of a man's life, from his childhood mistakes through his temptations as an adult. What sets the movie apart from others with the same themes is the way that redemption is achieved through painstaking acts of patience.



5) The American Astronaut (2001) dir. Cory McAbee

I first discovered Cory McAbee the filmmaker, then found the musician, and lastly was introduced to his drawings. In other words, he's the true definition of an artist, and his debut feature embraces all three of his talents in ways I have not seen before. The movie is a hybrid of musical, western, and science fiction, with each genre playing an important part, thus receiving equal respect. Even more than being a stunning piece of filmmaking, it's more fun than you could possibly imagine.



4) Adaptation. (2002) dir. Spike Jonze

What could have been self indulgent is instead a better examination of how art affects the artist than any biopic you will ever find. Nicolas Cage proves he's above most roles he takes with brilliant dual performances as two brothers, both struggling to make it as screenwriters and regular human beings. But the truly special aspect of the movie is the clever, ingenious screenplay by Charlie Kaufman, a writer who wears his heart on his sleeve like no one I have encountered. By making himself a character in the movie, his pain becomes ours.



3) The Fountain (2006) dir. Darren Aronofsky

The greatest testament to the pain and sacrifices of love I have seen, made all the more powerful knowing what writer/director Aronofsky went through to get it made. The ones who criticized the picture for being goofy obviously weren't paying attention, as every scene is packed with symbols and metaphors pertaining to a romance that, as far as we can tell, has survived through three lifetimes. The key is wanting to give yourself up to it, a task made as tough and worthwhile as love itself.



2) Mulholland Dr. (2001) dir. David Lynch

David Lynch's movies are the stuff of our dreams and nightmares, and while there are certain ones that have heavily disturbed me (like Eraserhead), this is the first one that has hit me on multiple levels. It's a movie about the dangers of success and how that leads to the loss of identity, told as expected through Lynch's head spinning kaleidoscope. The movie understands the price of fame and the risks people will take to have it, and while some scenes certainly enchant, there are also plenty that terrify. Lynch has something to say, but he also wants to remind us we're watching a movie by giving us laughs, scares, romance, mystery, and action. When it came out in 2001, I already knew I would not see a better example of pure cinema throughout the decade.



1) Synecdoche, New York (2008) dir. Charlie Kaufman

Charlie Kaufman is the greatest screenwriter of my generation, a statement I can say with the most confidence after seeing his directorial debut. The first time I saw it, I was speechless and sad while the second time, I felt the movie had a strange understanding of who I really am, of my hopes and fears. But what really spoke to me was the movie's testament to the process of aging, and the desire to do something meaningful before it all comes to an end. Kaufman explores the themes by showcasing how difficult it is to live, ranging from having a real connection with another person, to grasping how to let go of them if you ever do. What the movie teaches us more than anything is that life is short and life is hard, so you better leave your mark before it's too late. Charlie Kaufman has already done that with his first feature. I have no doubts he'll make other great movies, but I don't think any will strike the chord that this one does. It's the movie this decade that made me examine how precious life is, and why it is important to embrace every moment of it.


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Friday, October 9, 2009

Giving Life to His Inner Child: David Cronenberg's The Brood



The first work to announce David Cronenberg as a filmmaker destined for greatness, The Brood is at once unsettling and terrifying in ways that few movies are. It's full of rich ideas and ultra disturbing images, setting the stage for what we would come to expect from Cronenberg from here on out. There isn't a single light or happy moment in the picture; this is obviously the work of a man who holds some bitterness towards his younger years and has finally found a way to channel it. That The Brood is such a personal work is what essentially makes it so effective. This is a horror movie in which the filmmaker clearly wants you to feel every painful detail of what's trapped in his psyche.

The picture opens on a strange and uncomfortable note, as psychiatrist Dr. Hal Raglan (Oliver Reed) probes one of his patients in front of an audience. The two characters are surrounded in darkness, hence engulfing them in isolation. Raglan chastises the patient, calling him weak and comparing him to a girl since he is acting emotional and frail. This is the first of many moments where Cronenberg will examine the way the gender of the parent affects how they treat the gender of the child. The picture shifts then from this fake father/son (or daughter) moment to an actual father/daughter relationship between Frank (Art Hindle) and Candice (Cindy Hinds). They are at the institution because Frank's wife (and Cindy's mother) Nola (Samantha Eggar) is there being treated by Dr. Raglan.

Nola has mommy and daddy issues that still haven't gone away, and she won't be OK until she lets them out (literally). We get a sense from the scenes with Dr. Raglan that being a parent is a thankless role, as your children will blame you for everything that goes wrong in their lives. Nola seems to have a strong maternal instinct - according to her, mommies don't hurt their own children (Candice has bruises on her back that Frank believes Nola is responsible for) and if she was to, it would be because her parents did it to her. It's appropriate, of course, that Candice looks exactly like Nola, since we can already anticipate that she is going to grow into her mother. She's an unusually serious child, one who seems incapable of relaxing and having fun.

The movie's first truly striking visual occurs early in the picture when milk is spilled on the floor. It's a powerful visual due to the fact that we're witnessing a symbol of nurturing destroyed, an early indicator that there will not be any chance of redemption for the mother or child. Cronenberg has doomed them, and there is no turning back. The image is followed by the brutal murder of Nola's mother by a child in a hooded jacket (echoes of Don't Look Now?), an act that brings the woman's ex-husband back into town. The dangerous consequences of marriage are brought back into play once he arrives, devastated by the death of his ex-wife mostly due to his failures as a husband and a father (to make matters worse, he's become a drunk).

Nola's dad is the second to die at the hands of the hooded child. Fascinating, of course, that her parents both are murdered by rabid children. That things happen this way comes as no surprise, since they had to be punished for turning their daughter into a crazy person. Frank has a run in with the little monster, kills it, and sees its face, which is distorted and adult like. What Cronenberg is showing here is Nola's frustrations finally breaking free - she's found a way to put the traumas of her childhood to rest by giving birth to an inner child (a series of them, actually), their purpose being to take away any potential threats to her or her daughter.

Cronenberg sets up themes in The Brood that will become a staple in his career, the biggest being the dysfunctional nature of relationships between men and women (and parents and children). In his world, experiencing childhood is the equivalent to experiencing trauma, and it will inevitably lead to an adulthood of insanity. There's no god in Cronenberg's movies, because the ones who deserve to be saved cannot be and will not be. Bleak for sure, but Cronenberg is able to convey this belief so well it comes off as profound instead of simply depressing.

The movie is full of classic scenes that we will come to expect in most every Cronenberg picture, the signature one here of Nola opening her robe to reveal an inner child that is attached and growing out of her (the grotesque factor is raised once she opens the womb and begins to lick the baby). It's a startling moment in a movie full of hair raising moments, many of the best involving those freaky hooded kids (a scene where they go after Candice's teacher is a standout). Also powerful is a scene where photos of Candice's bruises are casually spread out across her stuffed animals. In the end, though, the scariest (and most tragic, as Cronenberg's movies often are) image in The Brood is the final one, a close up of Candice's silently traumatized face. This is the moment where everything in the picture has come full circle - any chance, if there ever was one, of this child having a normal life is lost forever.

The Brood is a complex and intriguing work, but it is not one of Cronenberg's masterpieces (of which there have been a handful). If the picture suffers from anything, it's too much exposition. Instead of giving the audience a real opportunity to hypothesize where the killer children came from, it gets spelled out to us through dialogue right before the conclusion. I don't know if this was a studio decision or his, but whatever the case, it takes the trust away from the audience and puts it back in the filmmaker's hands. It's a relatively small complaint ultimately, mainly because Cronenberg got away from it soon after. Revisiting The Brood at this point in his career is exciting and a bit distressing, the former because it reminds of how Cronenberg has the ability to get under one's skin, the latter because the auteur has detoured into movies more conventional and easy. Let's hope he still has movies like this up his sleeve. The future of filmmaking depends on it.


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(c) Hell and Beyond, 2009

Sunday, August 16, 2009

The King of Pulp



"I don't believe in elitism. I don't think the audience is this dumb person lower than me. I am the audience."

Karaoke. Derivative. Imitation. These are just some of the words often used to describe the work of Quentin Tarantino, and if you simply take what's on screen at face value, that's likely what you'll get. But once you begin to peel back the layers and search for the true center of a Tarantino picture, you'll see that the window dressing (which is always gorgeous and occasionally sublime) is the smallest piece of the puzzle. There's a purpose to all of it. No question that Tarantino is obsessed with film and those that inspired him. Instead of simply taking images and ideas of the past and throwing them up on screen, Tarantino gives these genres and conventions he cherishes a new and exciting sense of purpose. With each picture, he is able to find a way to re-invent existing forms of cinema and most amazingly, he often does it better than it was done originally.

Tarantino's story is the kind that any person who wants to make movies would love to have. He worked in a video store, watched movies constantly, and talked movies constantly. Saying he watched movies, though, is a very loose way of putting it. Tarantino absorbed movies; he soaked in every element of their being and tried to figure out how he could express himself through what others had done (at a recent screenwriting workshop, the key advice was to take the ideas from other movies and find a way to make them your own). He learned how to be a filmmaker by doing nothing more than watching films. While that approach certainly might not work for everyone, it worked for him. And since he had certain genres he loved, his career began with one of the most exhausted phrases around: write what you know.



Getting in good with the right people helped get his debut feature, Reservoir Dogs, made. The movie revolves around a group of strangers who are brought together to pull off a diamond heist and as expected, it goes horribly wrong. What stands out most about the picture is the amount of confidence exhibited. Most directors choosing this as their first project would focus on the amount of gritty violence they could get onscreen. Hell, they'd probably open the picture with the climactic showdown. Instead of doing what the audience expects from this type of feature, Tarantino opens with a scene of dialogue. And it's not just a conversation between two people, but a round table of people. To take things a step further, instead of giving us tough guys spouting off a bunch of macho bullshit, Tarantino has these men, people I probably wouldn't want to meet in a dark alley, discussing everything from the meaning of Madonna's Like a Virgin to the reason why you should tip at a restaurant.

It's a spectacular way to take your audience off guard. We get sucked in by these hardened criminals having an everyday conversation and then, after we've gotten comfortable, Tarantino throws in the big whammy by taking us from the safe and relaxed environment of a restaurant, to the crammed and claustrophobic setting of a car (complete with a bleeding and screaming man in the back seat). In between the two scenes, during the opening credit sequence, Tarantino gives the audience the first of what would become one of his trademarks: the soundtrack. The song during the credits of the picture is a clear way to establish the mood of the piece. Before it fades to black for the credit reel, there has to a moment where the music accompanies a series of shots of the guys on their way to work: cool, sleek, confident. Had that been the first thing we saw in the movie, it would have felt like a gimmick. Since Tarantino let us spend some time with his characters so we could get a feel for who they were, this payoff is earned.

Reservoir Dogs set up a theme that would run through all of his projects, that of the likable criminal. All of the characters, aside from maybe undercover cop Mr. Orange (Tim Roth), are bad guys. They're honorable, sure, but they make their living robbing, stealing and hurting others. To Tarantino, that doesn't matter. He still wants us to like them. Even more than that, he wants us to be a part of their world. The camera is clearly an active observer in the picture, in turn making it a character all its own. Beginning with the scene in the car, which is full of quick pans, it's obvious that we are meant to be like a nervous third party. Tarantino's style is inviting due to long takes and limited movement. His camera is often leery of getting too close to what's being shared between the characters. It's almost as if he's trying to keep us out of harm's way. During the movie's most violent moment, the camera actually pans away until it's over.

The movie introduced us to Tarantino's love for dialogue. I already mentioned opening the picture with a full dialogue scene, which is a difficult thing to do unless you know you can pull in your audience. Tarantino does, and he continues to stretch the idea that the dialogue will drive the movie as it progresses. The main setting in the picture is an ugly, abandoned warehouse. At first, we might wonder why he would choose such an unsavory looking place to have the key action occur, but the dialogue moves so fast (it is the action) we are able to forget where we are. And by telling the story in a non-linear fashion (another Tarantino trademark), it keeps our involvement peaked since there are so many pieces to the puzzle still not on the table.

There's never any question that we are listening to dialogue that has been scripted. A statement like that is usually grounds for criticism, but not in the case of Tarantino, since his characters say things worth listening to. To go a step further, what the characters say is as important as how they say it. As good as the dialogue may be, if it is not delivered in the right context, it will come off like a bunch of colorful phrases. When it comes to casting, Tarantino has a knack for finding the right people to bring his words to life, and often it's an actor we would never expect. In the case of Reservoir Dogs, the award goes to Tim Roth, who was relatively unknown at the time.

If Reservoir Dogs suffers from a weakness, it's that the characters' constant yelling gets exhausting in spots. Since everyone in the movie is confused and in suspense about who survived the robbery, there's a lot of tension between those who got out. Tarantino tries to rattle the nerves by having the characters in each other faces, and it gets a lot of mileage early on but loses some of its punch during the last third. Through it all, we do wonder who will emerge as the hero, since Tarantino has made us fond of these characters. Interestingly, especially when you look at his future works, no one earns redemption here. Every good deed, no matter how large, ends in punishment. I'm not saying this was a bad decision because, true to its director's form, it stays in tune with the genre from which it was stemmed.



I was a senior in high school when Pulp Fiction came out. Due to its victory at Cannes (and from watching Siskel & Ebert, of course), I had heard lots about the movie, but I still don't think I was even close to prepared for the experience I got. The best way I can sum up the movie is by comparing it to Jack Rabbit Slim's: jam packed with nostalgia. When Tarantino sat down to write Pulp Fiction, he must have used a checklist of every element he loves about the movies. I can't recall another movie I have seen that crosses over into so many genres and does it with the amount of balance that Pulp Fiction does. When I saw it for the first time, it damn near blindsided me. I walked out of it wondering what the hell I had just seen, and god knows I was more than prepared to go back again right away (I went back to the theatre nine more times).

The movie set an immeasurably high bar for other up and coming filmmakers. So many of them tried to duplicate what Tarantino had done, with disastrous results. Tarantino's imitators really ended up becoming exactly what his critics had falsely labeled him of being. Young directors everywhere tried to jump on the bandwagon to see if they make their criminals talk and act as cool as Tarantino's, but none of them ever came close. It's not a stretch for me to say that Pulp Fiction is the most influential movie of my generation.

The movie's opening sequence takes what Reservoir Dogs did and ups the stakes. The first movie began with a conversation between lots of people covering a number of different topics. This time, it's two people, sitting at a booth, discussing one thing. Tarantino throws us into the middle of the conversation, so we will be eager to find out what these people are talking about and hopefully catch up. His shots are mostly perspective, so we feel as if we are being spoken to (perspective will become an important tool for him from this point forward). And he ends the scene with an unexpected burst of hostility that immediately lets us know that in this movie, anything is possible.

Tarantino extends on this idea with his choice of songs during the credits. It starts with Misirlou by Dick Dale and then leads into Jungle Boogie by Kool and the Gang. The first is intense but catchy, while the second shifts gears completely and is fun and laid back. After the credits are over, we don't know what to expect. The sky's the limit. The second conversation, which is between two hitmen on their way to do a job, is an even trickier scene to pull off because it's two people talking in a car. As soon as we hear what they're talking about (Quarter Pounder with cheese in Paris, mayonnaise on french fries), the setting becomes less problematic and interest shifts to how Tarantino is introducing the characters. The shot begins from outside the passenger window so we are able to see both characters. This shot holds until we have gotten involved in the conversation and at that point, Tarantino cuts to a series of intimate close ups. There's no need for a comfort zone anymore. We're a part of these lives now.

Tarantino revisits some of his camera styles from Reservoir Dogs, such as the camera lingering at one end of a hallway while the characters talk at the other end. It's a brilliant device because once again, it makes the camera a character in the scene and helps the viewer forget that they are sitting in a theater, "watching" a movie. This is taken a step further in the same scene once the two hitmen are standing in front of a door, still talking before they knock. The camera is positioned behind them, but it is positioned low enough that we can't see over their shoulders. We're like the awkward third wheel, stuck in the back with no choice but to listen and wonder what could possibly be on the other side of the door.

It's a brilliant slow build up to some kind of action, and once the hitmen enter the apartment, Tarantino shows his natural capability for making a scene funny and scary at the same time. The people they've come to visit know they're in deep shit but one of the hitmen, Jules (Samuel L. Jackson), takes the time to have a casual conversation with them, as if having meaningless chit chat will make it easier to get the information he needs. The dialogue, as fun as it is, also functions as a device to help build the suspense. We are enjoying the hell out of what is being said, at the same time wondering when Jules, whose eyes look like they could start a forest fire, is going to explode.

There are a handful of scenes in Pulp Fiction that do this, the best being when Vincent (John Travolta) takes his boss's wife, Mia (Uma Thurman), out to dinner. Their uncomfortable and shy attraction (all built through glances) leads us to believe the suspense is going to revolve around whether anything sexual is going to happen between them, but Tarantino never takes the easy route. Instead, he has her overdose snorting heroin, leading Vincent to take her to his dealer's house to see if he knows how to revive her. The whole scene could have played as melodrama but instead, Tarantino milks uneasy laughs out of the argument between Vincent and his dealer in hopes we will let our guard down, leaving us totally unprepared for what will have to be done to save Mia. The cutting of the last part of the scene, where Vincent has to plunge a hypodermic needle into Mia's chest, is nothing short of ingenious.

The situation with Vincent shows a running thread in Pulp Fiction: bad people doing things and getting in over their heads. Of course, Tarantino seems more interested in the fact he's putting these characters in situations where they need our sympathy. It's a testament to his craft as a writer and a director that we actually care what happens (and we don't want a bad outcome). He throws his characters into creatively bizarre predicaments, such as Vincent dealing with Mia's OD. The best of the bunch is a hilariously nightmarish sequence where Butch (Bruce Willis) unexpectedly runs into gangster Marsellus Wallace (Ving Rhames) after screwing him out of a lot of money. The chase that follows gets them both kidnapped and thrown into an underground S & M dungeon.

I believe Tarantino chooses actors for the way they talk as much as the way they look. He is a master at finding people whose voices draw us in long before we see their faces. Look at the scene where we first meet Butch as he's getting propositioned by Marsellus. The first part of the scene is one take of Butch's face as Marsellus talks to him. Eventually, we are able to forget that Butch is even there and are wondering who is talking to him (all we know is that he sounds like someone who is not to be messed with). To heighten our anticipation, Tarantino then cuts to a close up of the back of Marsellus's bald head, which stands out due to a band aid positioned near his neck. Even after getting put through the ringer, Tarantino does not let us see Marsellus's face until much later in the movie.

You can tell by watching the performances that casting is a joy for Tarantino. He's been lucky enough to work with whoever he's wanted, mainly because joining one of his projects is like being invited onto a personal playground. This approach has led to career best work and career revivals, beginning of course with John Travolta in Pulp Fiction. Did anyone think such a thing would be possible? The key scene for Travolta, of course, comes in the center of the movie when Mia signs him up for a twist contest. This goes back to where we started, about how Tarantino is not an imitator. Instead of having Travolta dance as we remember, he lets the actor cut loose, and the scene (which could have been a cheap novelty act) plays as further build up of sexual tension for the two dance partners.

When talking about Reservoir Dogs, I mentioned that there is no redemption for the characters. You could say then, that Tarantino grew up with Pulp Fiction, because even though these people do things that should make them void of being saved, Tarantino gives most of them a chance to see the light. The ones that choose not to meet an unfortunate end (look at Vincent's denial of God's intervention after being shot at and not hit). The willingness to believe his characters deserve this type of salvation shows enormous maturity for Tarantino as a filmmaker. He could have easily taken the same route as his debut and made all of his characters go down in a poetic blaze of glory. Instead, since we've invested as much in them as he has, they are each given a choice.



After the enormous success of Pulp Fiction, it only seems appropriate Tarantino would settle down and try to do something different for his follow up. Of course, since there was a world of hype surrounding what he would do next, it was almost destined to be a disappointment for most of his fans on principal. That statement is why it makes perfect sense that the haters of Pulp Fiction (and most anything else Tarantino has done) really like Jackie Brown; it's easily the most un-Tarantino of Tarantino's movies. Sure, it's still got the rapid fire dialogue and the non-linear story telling, but it also has a concrete plot, a decent and honest character, and a love story.

The movie began a major turning point for Tarantino that has stood front and center in every movie he's made since this one: it has a strong female character. That's not to say there aren't still tough men, but they prove to be no match for the woman standing in front of them. In Tarantino's world, if you fuck with a woman, you will pay dearly. Jackie (Pam Grier) doesn't look like she could be intimidating when we first meet her during the movie's opening credits, which are set to the smooth sound of Bobby Womack's Across 110th Street. The vibe is more laid back than what we're used to, so the last thing we expect is that we're about to be taken into a story of crime and double crossings. And Jackie's relaxed look makes us wonder if the character is going to be a push over. Since this is Tarantino, though, that is wishful thinking.

Jackie is, like Tarantino's bad male characters, someone who has gotten in over her head. The difference is she's not a bad person; she's just mixed up with some shady people. What both sides of the law don't yet know is that even if she agrees to play ball with their schemes, things will not turn out like they expected. Jackie's much smarter than she pretends to be, and it's to Tarantino's credit that, while Jackie does have a sassy attitude, she's not interested in kicking ass and taking names. If anything, she just wants to get out of the whole complicated situation without getting arrested or killed. This, of course, will prove to be her redemption when she comes out the other side.

The male characters in the movie underestimate her. The cops think their tough guy act will scare her into cooperating, and the man she's illegally bringing in money for, Ordell (Samuel L. Jackson, more or less playing Jules again), believes he has the upper hand. The first half of the movie consists of signature Tarantino: the large gallery of characters and the lightning sharp dialogue. Most involving is the dynamic that grows between Jackie and her bail bondsman, Max Cherry (Robert Forster). He's the only person she can trust because as far as she can tell, he's the only one not out to screw her over. He's just a lonely guy trying to make an honest living, which is precisely why she can confide in him. He's the first male character in a Tarantino movie who isn't a criminal of some sort.

The cast in the movie is the most impressive Tarantino has had behind Pulp Fiction. Aside from Grier, Jackson, and Forster, the lineup also includes Robert DeNiro, Michael Keaton, and Bridget Fonda. Each actor gets at least one memorable moment, but aside from Grier's subtle performance, the warmest surprise is Robert Forster's portrayal as Max (he's this movie's Travolta in the comeback category). His relationship with Jackie builds as she plans her scheme against the slippery Ordell, earning in the end a tragic kiss that is the most poignant moment we are likely to see in a Tarantino picture. Unexpected? Hell yes, and that's what makes it all the more rewarding. Also to Tarantino's credit is the way he uses a song by the Delfonics to show the importance of Jackie to Max.

Technically, Tarantino stays on track. The movie is filled with deliciously long takes where once again the camera acts as an observer. The dialogue during the early scenes makes us forget that the shots are lingering because the topics at hand are as interesting as they are aimless. Tarantino gets a kick out of just letting his creations interact with each other, so at that point in the picture, I was fine with the fact they weren't really necessary to the plot. However, once the second half starts, the movie becomes more concerned with the intricate details of Jackie's plan, leading the whole affair to run on a bit too long. It's for this reason that I think Tarantino works best when he's not trying to focus on the unfolding of a story. The rhythm of his dialogue loses some of its flare once it is all about getting to the finish.

I love the fact Tarantino made Jackie Brown early in his career. Not because I dislike it, by any means, but because I think it gave him a chance to experiment with elements we wouldn't have expected. I'd be thrilled to see him make another movie like it in hopes that next time, the love story will be a bigger piece of the pie than the crime story. That is, unless the two sides are married as well as they were in True Romance. Ever wonder what it would have been like if Tarantino had directed it?



As kick ass as it would be to see the Kill Bill movies put together, it makes as much sense to keep them apart. While the movies are similar thematically, the approach to each is so radically different that I feel the combination could ruin the effect they achieve individually. It's sad that so many accused Kill Bill Vol. 1 of being nothing more than empty style, because I think they've missed the point. Yes, the style is the substance in a lot of ways, but what's buried into the style is exuberant and thorny. The first time I saw it, I simply let myself get wowed by the imagery. The second and third time I had a blast finding the sly treasures Tarantino has buried within.

A great filmmaker is always one step ahead, which is one of the reasons why Kill Bill Vol. 1 is a perfect set up for the movie that follows it. As usual, Tarantino has plenty of tricks up his sleeves. The movie opens with an effective and discomforting close up of a woman's sweaty face as she is being spoken to by a man who obviously has sinister plans for her. The voice is stern and menacing, getting back to what I said in regards to Pulp Fiction about keeping a face off screen and establishing a character based on how they talk. The dialogue is brutal, making it appropriate that it ends with a literal splatter of blood.

And then Tarantino throws us right into the action, told out of order of course. Despite this, the post credits scene sets the stage for the most important theme of the Kill Bill movies: motherhood. As The Bride (Uma Thurman) arrives to take out the first member (a woman who has gone from warrior to housewife) of the squad that tried to kill her, she walks on to a suburban lawn covered with toys. Once they begin fighting in the house, there's a shot of each woman at the edges of the frame and a school bus in between them. And there we have the only tie that could bind them. Of course, a child enters the house, so the maternal side takes over for the enemy but for The Bride, the fact this woman is a mother is of little consequence. She was pregnant when they left her for dead and as a result, she believes her child is dead. Even though she should feel bad about leaving this child without a mother, The Bride's compassion is replaced by honesty. This is what she has to do.

Tarantino has taken his idea of the strong, confident woman to a completely new level and turned men into monsters with little chance of redemption. This applies mostly to Bill (David Carradine), her former lover, who she is prepared to kill without remorse for taking the life she wanted to have (without him) away. But it first comes into focus when The Bride wakes from a coma and kills the creepy hospital orderly who raped her (and let others rape her) while she was asleep. It is here that the movie introduces the concept of women upstaging men with its blatant use of phallic symbols doing serious damage. It starts small by showing a mosquito sucking on The Bride's arm, and then grows to a needle, and then later becomes a sword. For Tarantino, having the weapon (or instrument, as it is referred to in the picture, since one must be skilled to use it) is not as important as the damage it does. Every blow from The Bride's sword is an act of penetration (or castration), and note how the blood sprays, almost as if the wound is ejaculating. Tarantino has found a way to take the idea of blood being baptismal and flipped it over.

There's a great deal of slicing and dicing in Vol.1. Tarantino's other movies have had their share of violence, but it was always handled in a way that actual contact between weapon and victim was kept off screen (or out of frame). This time he goes for broke, staging an elaborate fight between The Bride and a fighting team called The Crazy 88's. It's the first time his camera has been brave enough to want to see the damage being done. In other words, The Bride's cause is one worth witnessing in every gory detail. Interesting then, that the camera does not feel as much like a character as it did in the other pictures. In addition, Kill Bill Vol. 1 is the first visually appealing Tarantino movie. It's filled with lovely and bright popping colors, and he works with every shot composition he can conjure up. His framing is thoroughly creative throughout, often letting supposedly meaningless things in the shot take center stage over the central action (look at the climactic fight scene in the snow and see where he places a fountain).

In the midst of all the experimentation with the camera, Tarantino even throws in an animated sequence to tell a back story (which is appropriate given it is through the eyes of a child, so it needs to appear larger than life). The entire thing plays like a Greek tragedy, with Tarantino using blood in a more poetic way than I've seen in quite some time. It's a tribute to his attention to detail, the idea that every single piece of a movie is important. Nothing is on screen just to fill up space.

Tarantino's classic themes stay intact, that of bad people with dignity. Even when Bill discovers The Bride is still alive and could easily have her killed, he decides to let her live so she can have the opportunity to track him down. He knows well and good that she deserves her revenge, and his death will be her redemption. Plus, as we find out in the movie's splendid final scene cliffhanger, her daughter is still alive. It's a fantastic bookend to the movie's beginning and an opening into the core of what Vol. 2 will be about, even though its tone is quite different.



Tarantino pulled a classic bait and switch on the audience with the Kill Bill movies. Normally, we'd expect the first part to be dialogue heavy and the second part, the blood soaked climax. Doing this, though, would have taken away the potency of the pictures and stripped away The Bride's humanity. By reversing the way the movies play, Tarantino wisely gives us a chance to develop sympathy for The Bride and truly feel that she deserves her revenge by the end. It'd be easy to say we already know she deserves it due to the way Vol. 1 opens, and a lesser filmmaker would say seeing what happened to her is enough. But Tarantino cares more about her than that. He wants us to understand who she is.

Vol. 1 represents the first time Tarantino has let images speak more than the words. It's rewarding because he is such a splendid craftsman (and many of the images do speak as beautifully as his dialogue), and maybe the lack of memorable dialogue was the point. Vol. 1 could have functioned as a tease so Tarantino could unleash what he does best for the finale. The picture opens with a rehearsal for The Bride's wedding to her new husband, a man who has no idea who she really is. When she walks out of the church to get some air, we are treated to the sight of Bill for the first time as he plays a flute. It's a powerful sight, because without him even speaking, we're able to sense his sadness and anger at seeing that The Bride is still alive.

It is at this moment that we understand why he shot her. Bill is not a nice man, so wanting to kill her for breaking his heart seems like the route he would take (as he explains to her at the end of the picture). He knows this woman inside out, and knows above all that a "normal" life is not an option for her. There's a terrific flow to their dialogue as they make up for lost time. Bill is The Bride's family, which provides the first half of the bookends that the movie will hold (the other half comes at the conclusion when The Bride re-unites with her daughter). Along with motherhood, the love and acceptance of family is the key to Vol. 2. The conversation between Bill and The Bride and the act that follows is the perfect illustration of how the ones we are closest to are often the ones that make us the most vulnerable and are most capable of betraying us.

Tarantino cleverly makes what Bill did to The Bride seem like an act of love. Late in the movie, we learn from Bill's father figure that his reaction to her leaving him was a reflection on the way he was raised. It's amazing how well Bill's compassion is shown considering how little he is in the movie. Look for instance, at the moment we see the sword Bill gave his brother, complete with an engraving that says, "To my brother Budd, the only man I ever loved." The sword is, as Bill puts it, "priceless," and to the owner it was, but not in the traditional sense of the word. To see an even different angle, observe the way Bill carefully makes a sandwich for his daughter while he tells a story (the attention to detail is what counts).

When The Bride finally reaches Bill and sees that their daughter is still alive, her main objective is to keep the child from taking the same path she did. The first time they see each other, Bill and the little girl "pretend" to shoot The Bride and they all "play" dead. This is the perception their daughter has of life and death. As we soon hear when Bill describes how she found out death was real after her goldfish fell on the floor, it's evident she knows there is a difference, but still lacks the complexity to understand how permanent it is. The compelling idea in these scenes is realizing that each parent would probably take a different approach when explaining a subject they each know so much about. How do you make a child understand the finality of death, but even more so, how do you rationalize it when it's part of you job?

Learning she's still a mother changes everything for The Bride. As we've seen throughout, there's no doubt she still has no problem killing Bill, even if he is the father. But it lets us know just how important the idea of being a mother was to her (she was willing to give up everything). The best scene in the movie to me is the moment The Bride finds out she is pregnant while on an assignment. The assissin sent to kill her is a woman, so The Bride knows she can gain some sympathy since she is concerned for the well being of her unborn child. It's a fabulous moment, one of the best Tarantino has ever written. It is here more than ever that we are able to see that he's so much more than just a "genre" filmmaker. This is a writer who with a true understanding of what makes us human.

I think Kill Bill Vol. 2 is as great as anything Tarantino has done so far precisely for that reason. This is the picture where he, more so even than in Jackie Brown, wrote great dialogue as he always does and gives it to characters who could possibly exist in a world outside of the movies. I'm not saying it doesn't feel scripted, but it does threaten to finally break the wall down between fantasy and reality. He hasn't quite done that yet. I don't know if he ever will (and that's not a criticism). The thought of not getting to hear another speech similar to Bill's theory on Superman would be criminal.

I've spent all this time talking about the thematic elements of Vol. 2 and failed to focus at all on its style. While it is different than the last movie and the pacing is the exact opposite, Tarantino does not slack in the technical department. His roots are still evident throughout, specifically during a highly entertaining sequence where The Bride trains with legendary martial arts master, Pai Mei (Gordon Liu). The sequence is brilliantly stuck in the middle of The Bride being buried alive (which is set up with horror movie framing) and then having a literal re-birth (an homage to zombie pictures).

As expected, the movie ends with The Bride fulfilling the title, although it doesn't happen as we might have thought. Fitting with the tone of the movie, the final showdown is based more on being clever than violent. It provides a surprisingly tender exit for Bill, a man who can't help what he is, but doesn't deserve to live for it (you could almost say that accepting his fate is his redemption). As The Bride proves in the end, anyone can change. You just have to find the right reason. This is easily the richest movie of Tarantino's career so far. Like Pulp Fiction, it explores many genres and does so with great dialogue. For the first time though, it feels like, aside from transcending the genres, Tarantino is giving his characters a greater sense of purpose.



After the drastic leap taken with Kill Bill Vol. 2, Tarantino got to go back to his roots once again when he teamed up Robert Rodriguez to make Grindhouse. Even though his goal was to make a straight up genre picture, it is still loaded with subtext. Interesting that Tarantino decided to split his movie, Death Proof, into two parts in order to make the characters in the first half the victims and the second half the heroes. This is necessary, of course, so we can see the damage the villain, Stuntman Mike (Kurt Russell), is capable of doing. We already know how much Tarantino loves women pushed to the edge, and with Death Proof, there isn't just one the evil man has to deal with, but three.

The first part of the movie is shot like a grungy '70s horror show and Stuntman Mike is introduced like a slasher. His first appearance on screen showcases only his eyes, as he is a voyeur intent on killing (as he sees it) defenseless women. It's a nice touch that he puts in eye drops before getting close to his prey (it feels like he's trying to mask the evil inside). Before actually meeting Mike, Tarantino introduces us to four women who are heading out for a night on the town. Their dialogue consists of banter about relationships, hook ups, and getting drunk. In other words, topics that will make them perfect candidates to die.

Stuntman Mike is a classic movie stalker. He's patient as he spends the whole night sitting at a bar watching these girls get wasted and vulnerable. He doesn't seem like he is really up for a challenge; the more off guard the victims are, the more fun he will have with the kill. Tarantino sets him up in the most disgusting way possible: by showing close ups of his mouth as he eats nachos. Once Mike opens his mouth to speak, it is immediately obvious what a charming guy he is (even the bartender knows him really well). The movie sets the four women up as lonely people drifting through life without a care in the world, which is probably why Mike chose them in the first place. Tarantino is able to draw us into their isolation and the sense of distance they have from men by showing text messages that reek of disappointment. And is it is a stretch to say that the rain surrounding the bar is a device to keep them from escaping before Mike's had a chance to study them?

Not surprising that the men in Death Proof are weak (yes, even Stuntman Mike as we learn during the second half). Everything they say is stupid and arrogant and involves getting a girl drunk so they can screw her (one guy even whines about wanting to make out). As with most slashers, Stuntman Mike's sexual frustration is the reason why he kills. It's eluded to when he orders a virgin pina colada and the bar tender reconfirms by pointing at him and saying "virgin." The reason he is at this particular bar is because one of the girls, due to an announcement on the radio, has to give a lapdance to the man who recites a certain poem to her. Mike does it, of course, and she honors it because he's smooth and creepy in equal measure. The lap dance scene is classic Tarantino: it's sexy and has a feeling of impending doom, because we know that Mike is enjoying the fact that, before long, this free spirited girl will be dead.

Stuntman Mike's phallic weapon is his car. He gets off on the thrill of using his tool as an instrument of death (appropriate the hood ornament is a duck, since Mike enjoys toying with his victims, as we see more in the second half). The kill scene of the four girls is gruesome and tragic. Tarantino shows the crash from each girl's perspective so it's as if we are experiencing it with each one of them.

The girls in the second half of the movie are the opposite of Mike's first victims. Their early scenes are the same: four women, in a car, discussing relationships. But instead of being aimless and carefree, these women are confident and tough. Two of them are stunt women and enjoy the high they get from driving a fast car. They trick a redneck into letting them test drive his 1970 Dodge Challenger so they can play a game called "Ship's Mast" where one person gets on the hood and lays on their back while holding onto belts tied to the side view mirrors. Mike notices them long before this of course, but his interest peaks when he sees that they, like him, live on the edge.

Mike goes after them while they're playing their game and adds another level of danger by ramming into them. To him, they speak the same language, so trying to run their car off the road is the equivalent to foreplay (you can tell how turned on he gets every time his car makes contact with theirs). As expected, he's not used to anyone else taking the upper hand, so when these women retaliate by pushing back, Mike goes from confident to cowardly. He's never had to be the victim. They come back after him with a phallic weapon of their own (a metal rod) and then proceed to beat the ever living crap out of him. His punishment is the price for thinking all women are defenseless. Stuntman Mike's fate goes back to the era of Reservoir Dogs in the sense that he is incapable of being redeemed.

The dialogue in the second half of the movie is not quite as involving as it was in the first, mainly because the topics of conversation are the same as they were before. What stands out is that Tarantino ditches the dirty look and goes for a more polished one, almost as if he is saying it's time to get down to business. The chase scene between Mike and the women is excitingly staged, further proving that Tarantino is as good at directing action as he is at writing dialogue. The energy of the last twenty minutes of Death Proof easily made me forget the fact my attention was beginning to waver during the dialogue at the start of the second half.

The biggest reason to see Death Proof is for Kurt Russell. While not necessarily in need of a comeback, Tarantino has given him the juiciest role he's had in ages. Nothing is quite as hilarious as watching his breakdown once the tables are turned as he cries and begs for mercy. It's obvious how big of a fan Tarantino is if you observe the t-shirt on the wall in the bar during the first half (I'll give you a hint: Jack Burton). Russell milks the part for all it's worth; seeing him in such prime form made me wish Tarantino would cast every actor I love in one of his movies, even if it's a minor role.



I noticed as I got further into Tarantino's career, I began to talk less about the technical aspects of his movies and more about the content. That is not to say he hasn't progressed technically; what it means is that he has evolved drastically as a writer and a director. He makes movies he will enjoy watching, and as he's continued to see and love more movies, it has helped him become a more skilled and interesting filmmaker. He is continuing to expand and improve on what he has learned from the screen. With each movie, he keeps finding ways to revolutionize the very foundation he gets his inspiration from. Will he ever make a movie that isn't stemmed from the genres that have influenced him the most? At this point in his career, it's hard to say. He is so damn good at what it does, I can't argue with the path he's chosen. All I really know is that I don't think there's a filmmaker who understands my celluloid passion better then he does.


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