So,
“The Purge” may have gotten a lot more attention than I
originally thought it would when seeing a YouTube advertisement for
it months ago. I am glad for that because I thought from first look
that it would be an interesting movie. For those of you who have not
seen a trailer or commercial for it the basic premise of the film is
that after a revolution America's society is reconstructed with an
emphasis of a night of lawlessness that provides catharsis to the
constant violence living inside everyone thus causing crime rates to
drop and general standards of living to go up.
Yes
I am aware that this has some very basic flaws not the least of
which is how the hell you could get enough people to agree to doing
this that it would be enforceable? Maybe I am just a hopeless dreamer
but I like to believe that most people would be against the
legalization of cold-blooded murder for even one night, if only for
reasons of self-preservation.
The
movie provides most of the answers to the very basic plot questions
that might arise, demonstrating a religious reverence for what can be
assumed to be a military state considering the level of surveillance
portrayed in the film.
The
more important plot element is introduced first through a radio
broadcast as an academic discussion that is arguably supported by the
events of the film. This argument was that the Purge was designed by
the government as a means of eliminating the poor who can't afford to
protect themselves and thus boosting the economy and lowering crime
statistics not actually by lowering crime, but by creating a window
of opportunity.
I
don't want to spoil the actual meat of the plot because there are
some red herrings and twists that are fun to puzzle through. My
opinion on the film is largely positive when it comes to the idea.
The acting was also very good, especially Lena Heady. You get the
feeling that she doesn't believe her own support of the Purge from
the very beginning. She is drinking from the moment she walks on
screen and she plays secretly tortured very well. The son is also
quite good, in a heartbreakingly pure kind of way. Ethan Hawke is
just surprising. I haven't seen him be such an entitled douche since
Reality Bites and it was kind of nostalgic. (Secret, I kind of hate
Reality Bites)
The
scene stealer is (unsurprisingly) the villain. Smiley as I am want to
call him, is named in script as Polite Stranger. He is polite,
truthfully. I have never seen someone so very polite in such an
extreme homicidal rage. It was well done. The guy is very creepy
(reminded me of Viserys Targaryen) but is also just so charming.
Really. It is a little unsubtle and I am pretty sure that the guy was
probably imitating Paul Ryan the whole time (really, the message was
that heavy handed . . . elitism with a sympathetic face will still
kill you). He is unfortunately the major problem with the film.
Short
version review is that while it was fun to watch, the mechanics of
the film left something to be desired and the world created had so
much more potential than what they gave it.
This
is where the spoilers begin, also the curse words.
Why
the fuck with such an interesting premise did this film turn into
your everyday home invasion stalker story? Yes it has some novel
developments, namely that the family is not the target of the killers
but it is instead a homeless man let into the house by their son (the
only person who seems to vocalize that killing is probably bad from
the beginning). This creates an interesting game of hide and seek but
makes the main characters of the film so very unsympathetic that it
is hard to watch.
First
off, I thought it was the neighbors who were going to kill them from
the beginning and in a totally unsurprising 'twist' they come to save
them from the strange home invaders with less than honorable
intentions (basically you sold me a home protection system and I hate
you for gouging me). The best plot twist from what the perspective of
a home invasion could totally have been that the strangers really
couldn't have gotten into the house and the people in the house were
monsters for trussing up a homeless man and sending him out to be
killed. I thought this was coming for most of the film and honestly
once the strangers got in the home I lost most interest with the
exception of really enjoying Lena Heady breaking the nose of her
bitchy neighbor.
It
really did become your stereotypical slasher film with a great
setting, the only interesting thing was the political commentary
which was for the most part sloppily handled. . . with the exception
of what I really want to talk about: Security Systems.
As
the strangers threaten the home it is revealed that while the
security system might handle looters, it was never meant for the
worst case scenario of someone desperate to break in to kill you. For
me this was much more interesting than the obvious (though true and
heartbreaking) reality of class biased crime laws. It raised a lot of
points about obsession with the semblance of security in America. The
movie drops lines from 'things like this aren't supposed to happen in
our neighborhood' to ' it looks good and it works 90 percent of the
time' (not direct quotes don't skewer me). It made me think about
'good neighborhoods' and the hypocrisy of truly believing that humans
are capable of the worst, but only in certain places. More than that
it made me think about the efficacy of security systems and how for
the most part we are just hoping that the little sign and the loud
noise scare away an intruder, because if they really want to rob you
or kill you, the police couldn't respond quickly enough to stop them.
It is an elaborate construct to make us feel safe that really doesn't
have much effect on the problem. And the film explores all sorts of
moral issues stemming from selling this kind of system. It is
probably the best part of the actual film excluding the setting. It
really is to bad that the producers seemed to think that this wasn't
worth the focus of the film and it fades to the background of a
'daddy please save the day' plot.
I
recommend it purely on a few satisfying moments and the fact that the
premise is good and I think we should reward that, but it was lazily
executed. Comment on my facebook or on the blog here with all the
things you would have liked to see explored in the film. For me it
would have been “ what do the anti-purge people do on purge
night?”.
No comments:
Post a Comment