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During the Ides of the 1980s,
all seemed lost for American cinema. It was the era when comic
book heroes became our reality, incarnated in Sylvester Stallone
and the uber-American Arnold Schwarzenegger. Real life
characters had all but disappeared from cinema, relegated to
painful nostalgia for the early 1970s. Stallone, Schwarzenegger,
Jingoism, Steven Segal, Manichean politics, Hulk Hogan, Mr. T.
Bleak days.
But then things changed.
Stallone and Schwarzenegger got paunchy, Sly falling into what
appears to be early onset Alzheimers (Rocky VI, at the age of
60?) and Arnold assuming his inevitable and true vocation as a
Head of State, seemingly only fit now for Leni Refenstahl
movies. But, sadly, she’s gone. As is his film career.
Costner—a mercifully short blip—has fallen victim to his own
self-importance and our short-lived indulgence, and Mel Gibson
has ascended into the ether and has long been given enough
rope…(his new movie filmed entirely in ancient Mayan…it’s going
to be too delicious!)
Like a weed impossibly forging its way through a crack in the
concrete, American independent cinema popped up and flourished.
There was hope. There is hope. Even though the term
Independent has been snatched up and soiled as just another
brand by the accountant-run studios, there still remain the
small voices of true filmmakers as well as the load of steaming
horseshit that passes itself off as independent. Two recent
movies represent the zenith and the nadir of the current state
of American Independent film.
Riding in on the Tarantino
Pimpmobile, Hostel is an affront to all that is decent.
BBFC gave it an 18 ‘strong
bloody violence, torture and strong sex’. What about warnings
for idiot behavior? What about restrictions
against gratuitous tilts-down
to asses? What about offences to credulity (the
man disposing of the corpses in the dungeon was a hunchback)?
I don’t mind a lingering,
loving close-up of a drill bit with a little offal stuck to it
when the little bits of meat belong to an obnoxious, jingoistic,
self-righteous American bully. What I find far more morally
offensive and dangerously imitable (the greatest concern of the
BBFC, by the way) is the institutionalized frat boy arrogance
and unblinking solipsism of these Americans abroad.
Hostel
is the tale of Paxton and Josh, two American backpackers
trekking through Eastern Europe and showing these former Iron
Curtain countries how ugly an Ugly American can be. With
episodes of adolescent geek fantasy (hot Slovakian underwear
models clambering to have three-ways, dispensing Ecstasy from
their hooker-like tongues), pervasive chauvinism (at one point
Paxton rages at the people in the rural regions of their own
countries because they won’t speak English), and fetishized
violence (mere gore is no longer frightening or clever; it’s
just gore), Hostel has all the appeal of a war in Iraq.
The xenophobia is rampant.
The film is aggressively bigoted, the blameless Americans
mocking, among other things, the fact that some European adults
smoke (the most egregious of all moral sins, though they have no
qualms about ingesting any drugs they can find and drinking
until they puke), European circumcision practices, and
Icelanders. Surely there must be some BBFC provisions against
the mistreatment of Icelanders?
Oli is a character they
meet up with in their travels and, mercifully for him, is the
first one to die (which hardly seems justifiable
when there were
two perfectly good American assholes to kill).
But not before he must suffer humiliations no country should
(and no country—save an equanimous Scandinavian one—probably
would) endure. Oli must not only paint a face on his buttocks
and make it sing, he must repeat the pain-inducing attempt at a
catchphrase, ‘I’m the king of swing!’
Apparently
Eli Roth, the director, issued a formal apology to the Icelandic
Minister of Culture for all the damage Hostel may cause
to Iceland’s reputation. Which is fine, but what about the
Germans, who are made to look like Dr. Mengele? Or the rampant
Slovakophobia? All
Slovakians were evil ruthless sadists, from the aforementioned
hot underwear models to the desk clerks to the police to the
imps on the streets. This actually was alarming considering the
movie had been filmed in the Czech Republic at the great
Barrandov Studios. The Czech and Slovaks used to share a
country. It seemed a little petty.
Hostel
presents a world view, in this shooting-fish-in-a-barrel crime
ring, that Americans are worth more because they cost more than
any other nationality. And why shouldn’t they? The lead
character was tortured with an electric drill, had his hand
chainsawed, and was truncheoned with a garden trowel, presumably
filling him with holes. But, being American, he oddly suffers
very little ill effect, include blood loss. Nothing can stop
him from becoming a vigilante superhero and grabbing the
firearms and killing the bad people, or foreigners, although
that’s pretty much the same thing.
‘Welcome to your worst
nightmare’ the posters proclaim. Indeed.
Junebug,
directed by Phil Morrison, is not just a fish out of water story
(though it is), nor is it just a mockery of Southern Christians
(which would have been fine). It is a superb and very funny
movie about the everyday emptiness that we try to ignore. The
film benefits from what true independents must—a low budget.
Without the possibility to throw bundles of money at problems in
order to solve them (or 150 gallons of blood, as was the case
with Hostel), they have nothing to fall back on but
talent. Without the dazzle camouflage of special effects to
plug up a bad script, films—like Junebug—need an
excellent script. And excellent actors. There is nothing to
hide behind.
Madeline (Embeth Davidtz)
meets George (Alessandro
Nivola) at an
auction at her upscale art gallery in Chicago. It’s certainly
love at first sight, but an instinctual love. Lust, in other
words. But a gentle kind of lust, a considerate lust; the sex
is kindly and constant, but there is little else besides sex.
They don’t really know the geology of each other, just the
topography. What they have in common is not shared backgrounds
or shared interests or any sort of history; what they have in
common is innate goodness and the fact that they love each
other.
When they travel to North Carolina in order for Madeline to
secure a reclusive folk artist for her gallery and finally meet
George’s family—who don’t even know they’re married—their lack
of mutual knowledge becomes abundantly and dangerously
apparent. George’s rural world is very different from his urban
one. Madeline’s facile charms and her ease with touching,
compliments, and cheek-kissing—reflexive to her and therefore
meaningless—are shocking to a family not accustomed to touching,
not accustomed to being touched. As different as these two seem
what all characters have vitally in common is isolation. No one
can truly connect. For George’s mother, Peg (Celia
Weston) and
his father, Eugene (Scott
Wilson) communication is just used for
recrimination. Peg is locked in her routine of bitterness and
suspicion, and Eugene spends the moments he’s not out buying
cigarettes for his wife alone in his woodworking shop in the
basement, so taciturn
his face is practically ossified. George’s brother, Johnny (Ben
McKenzie) is consumed by a wordless simmering hatred for his
brother and the inevitable comparison he provides for Johnny’s
own undreamed of potential. When Johnny needs to say something
it’s with an elbow, a
kick on the foot, unlike Madeline whose garrulous emotionalism
bewilders and confuses her in-laws. Words are not weapons in
the arsenals of these people, whose empathy and compassion have
long since atrophied from lack of use. These characters are so
isolated and lonely that epiphanies come not through reaching
out but through recognition of each other’s emptiness. That’s
enough. That’s communion, however feeble.
In the midst of it all is
Ashley (Amy Adams), ebullient, empty-headed, heavily pregnant,
guileless, and constantly chattering, seemingly without a filter
between her impulse to speak and her mouth. She idolizes
Madeline and is immune to the neglect and pain around her. She
is the glue of innocence that holds the movie together.
The film is rife with
surprising moments of grace. At one point George is cajoled
into singing a hymn at a church dinner. This could have been an
easy joke—which such a moment usually would be in the hip and
cynical world of indie filmmaking—but instead it becomes a
touching moment of community, of grace, of surprise to the jaded
Madeleine who didn’t even know her husband could sing, let alone
remember the words to a Baptist hymn. We really don’t know much
about people who share our lives, but do we know enough?
Junebug
is aggressively non-Hollywood—there is little causality, only
scenes of deepening character. There is also a boldness in the
direction. Morrison stops all time to give us agonizing frames
of inertia, empty landscapes, empty rooms, bereft of people,
while the soundtrack itself becomes empty: no music, no
atmosphere, just absolute silence. These are surprising and
courageous moments—surprising in their naturalism and honesty,
not the pat resolution of clichéd bathos reflexive in Hollywood
movie.
This is a gentle,
haunting, compassionate movie about the easy ways our lives can
slowly become devastated: not with a bang, not even a whimper,
but merely with silent neglect.

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