‘Island’ slick, loud and commercial
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PEGGY J. ROGERS
Movie genres lock characters and their actions into a given place and
time. Characters are a product of their time and limited in action by
the available technology of the day.
In Westerns, for instance, cowboys and train robbers ride horses
and send messages by telegram. If the town sheriff rode off to catch
the bad guys on a motorcycle or send word ahead via cell phone, the
audience would realize something was out of time or place.
Science fiction, however, gets to bend the rules in ways most
other genres cannot. Sci-fi movies are free to create any type of
place in any given time and have access to mind-boggling technology
that only exists in the writer’s imagination.
Although futuristic films concern themselves with things that may
or may not happen in future, the story is usually rooted in a present
day socio-political issue or scientific discovery that may or may not
be good to pursue.
“The Island” uses the controversial ongoing medical-ethical debate
of cloning humans and, like the ghosts of Scrooge, shows the audience
a potential outcome if humans were to be duplicated.
In 2050, somewhere in America, Lincoln Six-Echo (Ewan McGregor of
“Star Wars”) and Jordan Two-Delta (Scarlett Johansson of “Lost In
Translation”) are living in an underground, segregated and regimented
sterile environment. Their lives are controlled, monitored and
regulated every moment. Lincoln, Jordon and hundreds of others accept
the prison-type lifestyle, lured by the promise of being sent to a
tropical paradise soon.
Just as Jordan is ready to leave for the island, Lincoln discovers
the awful truth about what really happens to those who make the
one-way trip. Hand in hand, Lincoln and Jordon look for a way out
and, in the process, learn the awful truth about who they are.
Even though science fiction flicks are free to speculate about the
future, including a sense of continuity and believability helps the
audience to suspend their disbelief.
“The Island,” directed by Michael Bay (“Pearl Harbor”) opts for
slick wall-to-wall action, comprised of crashing and exploding every
type of vehicle known to exist and escapes on foot over every type of
asphalt, concrete or metal that has been flattened, poured or shaped
by man, taking place above ground, below ground, across the desert
and down the city streets of the West Coast.
“The Island” is slick and commercial from the get go. With rare
exceptions, everyone is drop dead gorgeous, as if they stepped out of
a 60 second spot for the newest perfume. The only thing better
looking than the people are the cars, motorcycles, helicopters and
boats used to chase down Lincoln and Jordan. The machines have more
personality and depth then the characters.
Viewers will have an easy time knowing who is good and who is bad,
since the good guys wear white and the bad guys dress in black. It is
even easy to know which camp the fence sitters will finally decide in
the end.
For all its slickness, loud music and handsome people, something
is out of place in the movie. “The Island’s” brutally high body count
by film’s end spoils the thrills. Everybody, good, bad or
indifferent, finally participates in the carnage in order to survive.
The more the bullets and bodies fly, the faster the entertainment
factor gets killed off for the audience.
Wait for “The Island” to come out on DVD. It may look better on
wide screen then it does on the big screen.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
‘Rejects’ has one flaw;
it’s just not scary
When people talk about family values, they probably don’t include
the values of Rob Zombie’s sociopathic Firefly family. Zombie first
introduced us to the Fireflys in “House of 1000 Corpses.” He brings
them back to the screen in his new movie “The Devil’s Rejects.”
This movie is a faithful reproduction of low budget 1970s horror
movies that only played at drive-ins. Like most of those movies, its
fatal flaw is that it’s just not scary. The story is so confused that
it looks like Zombie wants us to see the sadistic Fireflys as heroes,
villains and victims simultaneously. Without anyone to really root
for or hate or fear, there’s no real focus and no reason to care what
happens to any of these characters.
Zombie’s first movie, “House of 1000 Corpses,” was a psychedelic
low budget gorefest that borrowed heavily from 1970s horror movies
like “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” “Last House on the Left” and even
the awful Chuck Connors movie “Tourist Trap.” Although it wasn’t a
terribly original story, “House of 1000 Corpses” provided plenty of
scares and worked well as a low budget genre movie. Innocent
travelers taking a wrong turn went to the Firefly home looking for
help. Instead, they found nothing but psychological torture and slow
lingering death.
In “The Devil’s Rejects,” Zombie has put the Firefly family on the
run from the law and turned them into outlaw gangsters. The problem
is that putting these sociopaths on the defensive makes them far less
menacing. Instead of being more frightening than your worst
nightmare, they’re just an average group of stupid thugs.
Their eventual victims are a group of touring country music
entertainers staying at a cheap motel in the middle of nowhere. This
once again proves my theory that people who leave the main road are
always doomed.
The biggest reason this movie fails to deliver is that the focus
isn’t the hapless victims of the Firefly family; it’s the Fireflys
themselves. Zombie doesn’t seem to want us to empathize with the
Fireflys’ prey and feel afraid for them. Instead, he wants us to
empathize with the Fireflys.
This just doesn’t work. It’s like asking people to empathize with
serial murderer/rapist John Wayne Gacy and not his victims.
Zombie’s Southern rock soundtrack doesn’t really fit with the
action and just adds to the story’s overall confusion. Seeing the
Fireflys ride down the highway to the sound of “Freebird” makes you
wonder what on earth Zombie is trying to say.
The cast is full of cameos, and you get the general idea that
people wanted to be in this movie just to have fun working with Rob
Zombie. If you see this movie, be sure to look for cult movie icons
P.J. Soles and Ken Foree, television wrestler Diamond Dallas Page and
porn queen Ginger Lynn.
If you’re hoping for an all-out gore-fest that will make you cover
your eyes instead of watching the screen, I recommend you skip “The
Devil’s Rejects.” If you enjoy really bad movies that could have
starred Peter Fonda 30 years ago, then you might enjoy this one.
My advice is to wait for “The Devil’s Rejects” to come out on DVD.
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
If easily offended, skip ‘Wedding Crashers’
Good comedies seem to be the most difficult films to make. We have
all sat through countless films in which the trailers contained all
the really funny moments.
I suppose this is why there are so many romantic comedies -- or
even more suspect, “dramadies.” Such formats allow the writers to
place a few choice humorous moments in the film rather than sustain
the hilarity.
Some of the laugh-out-loud funny movies of recent years have
depended on foul language, sexual situations and even bathroom humor.
Virtually anything by the Farrelly Brothers (“Kingpin,” “There’s
Something About Mary.” “Shallow Hal”) falls into this category, as
well as last year’s vulgar but hilarious “Bad Santa.”
More clever perhaps is “Wedding Crashers,” starring Owen Wilson
and Vince Vaughn. “Wedding Crashers” got a bit of notoriety due to
the assignment of an “R” rating, which has been considered box office
poison in recent years. Nonetheless, “Wedding Crashers” seems to be
doing brisk business nationally and the theater I attended was nearly
sold out on a Sunday night.
As the title implies, John Beckwith (Wilson) and Jeremy Grey
(Vaughn) attend weddings to which they are not invited. Their sole
purpose for doing so is to prey on the young women who are all in
some type of romantic stupor due to the nuptials. Jeremy is the main
perpetrator for this farce, having learned the seemingly endless
rules of the game from a former associate named Chaz.
From the montage shown at the beginning of the film, we see that
John and Jeremy do their homework and actually pass themselves off as
distant relatives of the family. Not only that, the two are front and
center at each event, doing everything they can to be noticed in a
positive light, thus ingratiating themselves to all the women
present. To do this, the two dance with the flower girls and little
old ladies, make balloon animals and offer sappy toasts to the bride
and groom.
All is fun and games until the boys decide to crash the Cleary
wedding. The head of this clan is the Secretary of the Treasury
(Christopher Walken). The wedding is the social event of the season
and unbelievably lavish. Once there, John and Jeremy proceed as
usual, but are soon derailed by two beautiful Cleary daughters.
John is instantly smitten with Claire and is crushed, after things
get off to a promising start, to find she is there with her
boyfriend. Jeremy hooks up with the younger Gloria Cleary, who turns
out to be a manic and clinging nymphomaniac.
Despite Jeremy’s desire to leave immediately, John jumps at an
invitation to stay a few days at the Cleary compound to get some more
time with Claire.
Once at the family home, the full picture of the Kennedy-like
Cleary family comes into focus. Claire’s boyfriend, Sack, is a cruel,
sadistic bully who uses the requisite touch football game to inflict
punishment on Jeremy. The entire Cleary clan is slightly off,
including the seductive mother (Jane Seymour), the foul-mouthed and
opinionated grandmother (Ellen Abertini Dow) and the “artist” son
(Keir O’Donnell).
Of course, when a love affair begins amid such subterfuge, matters
are very likely to go awry. The plot of “Wedding Crashers” throws
more than its fair share of barriers in the path of John and Claire,
often with hilarious results.
Wilson and Vaughn very early on demonstrate a pleasing ebb and
flow of comedic interaction. Vaughn particularly delivers lengthy
soliloquies in a staccato cadence that is a joy to watch and
downright funny.
At one point, John decides to confer with Chaz, the originator of
the wedding crasher rules. Chaz is played by an uncredited Will
Ferrell and he steals the few scenes in which he appears.
I feel “Wedding Crashers” is exactly as advertised: a risque
comedy with rampant profanity (though not inappropriate in its
context), sexual situations and somewhat gratuitous nudity. If this
offends you, by no means should you see “Wedding Crashers.”
However, if you are a fan of the Farrelly Brothers and their ilk,
you will enjoy it completely.
* VAN NOVACK, 50, is the director of institutional research at Cal
State Long Beach and lives in Huntington Beach.
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