RE: The Last Movie You Watched
November 2, 2020 at 8:02 pm
(This post was last modified: November 2, 2020 at 8:07 pm by Rev. Rye.)
This week in the Deep Hurting Project will not be Rock: It's Your Decision, as I had previously announced, but instead, Sean Penn's The Last Face, this movie that just got added to TVTropes' "So Bad IT's Horrible/Film" page. Its defining flaw? Mostly being set in a Liberian refugee camp and focusing on this bland relationship between two white people. Can The Reverend be any more specific? Well, I can try...
So, next week is going to be a horror movie week, and we've got a bumper crop of shitty horror films that are shitty in very different ways, and I'm going to see if we can figure out which one would make the best inaugural entry (All parenthetical titles are mine alone and not something the filmmakers or studios were dumb enough to put into the titles):
- Opening titles: “Ten years apart, the Liberian civil war of 2003 and the ongoing conflict within South Sudan today, share a singular brutality of corrupted innocence. A corruption of innocence only known to the West, by any remotely common degree … through the brutality of an impossible love … shared by a man … and a woman …” Is Penn comparing these two civil wars in Africa with a love story? Or is this their way of admitting that the only way these westerners could get a movie about Africa's geopolitical clusterfuck greenlit was by making it about two white people falling in love?
- "Especially when he would take me with him, I cherihed the days with my father." The wonky syntax that starts a brief monologue by Charlize Theron and a setof flasbacks that look like the crappiest imitation of Terence Malick. And worse, this keeps happening when we flash back to the Liberian Civil War and we get scenes from her perspective. Once she finally comes to Liberia, it keeps switching back between a relatively normal film and I Can't Believe It's Not One Of Terence Malick's Crappier Movies.
- Is sand animation usually this quick? Something that can be effectively done in the span of a piece of classical music?
- So, Charlize Theron is actually from South Africa, just like her character . Is this actually her real accent? Has she just been putting on an accent all this time?
- Huh. It's set in Liberia, and it's taken about 20 minutes for a black person to actually have a line.
- Jesus God, this guy's talking about a girl who was raped (along with her sister), ripped from vagina to anus (something that, thankfully, is not seen), and he's still saying "she's beautiful." Dafuq?
- You know what I'm reminded of? I get the feeling Penn wants me to think about Casablanca (admittedly, a bit of a stretch, given how tightly-plotted that film was and how it's based in a different part of Africa, one with darker-skinned residents) or Hotel Rwanda, but what's coming to mind is something very different. Last year, there was a little play on the West End called All in a Row that caused a lot of controversy, first, for focusing on the raising of a non-verbal autistic oy with behavioral problems that was played by this horrifying little puppet, and then, once the actual content of the show came to light, that the parents were the sort of people who compare the disabled to animals, sexually assault her autistic son's carer while her husband is off in another room but their son isn't, and crap on the pillow and blame his son. And like this movie, it created a patronising portrait of a given issue that was several degrees removed from the experiences of those who had to deal with it. And unlike that show, this doesn't even have the potentially redeeming quality of having the three humanneurotypical characters be complete dumpster fires (I get the feeling that this might have worked if there was some moment where said autistic puppet actually gets to speak, even if it is in an aside and point out how fucked up everything is or even if it's just about the confusion that leads to him having behavior problems because of a fundamental mutual non-comprehension between himself and the rest of the world like it was for me, though, by all accounts, this doesn't happen). I'm 40 minutes in, and I struggle to think of anything that distinguishes Javier Bardem's and Charlize Theron's characters from, well, any doctor characters I've seen in fiction. Their actors? Javier Bardem owning a green headlamp?
- Is she flirting with him by brushing her teeth?
- So? Are there any good things about this movie? Well, some of the music is good. Especially the actual African music, and there's also a love scene with the Red Hot Chili Peppers' "Otherside", although it's kind of annoying when they decided to switch between three very different versions (a string quartet, the original, and a solo acoustic guitar version). And it's always nice to see Charlize Theron's feet. Sure, they're only in one scene, but it's actually a good one.
- Is that Jean Reno? Please tell me that isn't Jean Reno. Fucking Hell, it is Jean Reno. And his name is Dr. Memhet Love. You know what, unless you're making a Blaxsploitation movie, never give your character the last name Love.
- And she's upset that he loves "Otherside" that she storms out of the car, he tells her there are snakes around, and when she comes back to poke her head into the car to harangue him, he tries to close the door window on her face and starts to put the car into drive. Jesus fuck, who taught him bedside manner, Dr. Kelso?
- "I've never seen the oppressed not become the oppressors." The sad thing is this is disturbingly accurate. Admittedly, this mostly applies when the oppressed gain power, and this probably should have been stated in a different context, preferably one that points out this is as true in the wealthier, whiter, nations of the world (the French Revolution would be a huge example, and you could probably argue that a far milder example of this is why, say, Clinton and Obama, despite being of the nominally center-left party, and hated and feared by the left, had a lot of policies that weren't all that different from their forebears.)
- Huh. Refugees are us. Well, at least we know Lauren Southern didn't write the screenplay. It would have been nice if we got some more of that in the filmproper.
- Wait, is the orchestra playing "Peace Train" along with a Pre-recorded Cat Stevens vocal track? Is this just a coincidence? Does Sean Penn just not know that maybe having the band perform and having an entirely different piece of music is really needlessly confusing?
So, next week is going to be a horror movie week, and we've got a bumper crop of shitty horror films that are shitty in very different ways, and I'm going to see if we can figure out which one would make the best inaugural entry (All parenthetical titles are mine alone and not something the filmmakers or studios were dumb enough to put into the titles):
- Alone in the Dark (wherein Uwe Boll makes his first and likely only entry in the Project)
- Apartment 1303 (wherein yet another Japanese Horror Movie gets remade by people who strip away any redeeming qualities the original may have had.)
- Beast of Yucca Flats (Wherein we actually have a film that Mike and the Bots once riffed that's not exactly So Bad It's Good)
- Bless the Child (Wherein Paramount made a very stupid religious horror film and autism is apparently involved, even if it is possibly just psychic ability, fuck if I know.)
- Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (Wherein one of the guys who made the Paradise Lost documentary was tapped to do a Blair Witch Sequel, it turns out the studio has a very different idea of what it should be, and they just smash the two ideas together.)
- Haunting of Sharon Tate (Wherein Daniel Farrand manages to take a movie about the Manson killings boring as all fuck.)
- Life Zone (Wherein a Christian Filmmaker tries to make pro-life propaganda and ends up with the biggest cinematic Own Goal since the Nazi Titanic movie.)
- Shark Exorcist (Wherein, I shit you not, they shoot a shark movie in landlocked Nashville, in what was, for a while, the worst movie I Hate Everything had ever seen.)
- Werewolves of the Third Reich (Wherein, somehow, Josef Mengele is married to Ilse Koch who just run Auschwitz for most of the movie, and there are no werewolves until the last 20 minutes.)
- While She Was Out (Wherein Kim Basinger has to survive in the woods and avoids being killed off by the least plausible gang-bangers in film history by turning into Jeff the Killer.)
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.