Equilibrium
Oct. 21st, 2004 10:44 pmI finally watched Equilibrium.
I remember when it came out and wanting to see it despite the awful reviews, but I never got there. Then fandom erupted in squeeing over it for about five minutes, and I still couldn't get motived. Then all this time later I got it from Netflix but was too busy with work, auditions and costuming to get to it, and now finally.
It's... so strange, in that the dialogue is awful, the plot holes immense, the naming of things terrible enough to be nearly unacceptable (fortunately for this film, Chronicles of Riddick happened, and you just can't beat "Necromonger"), the issue and message over simplified, everything that's not sledgehammer obvious is nearly too subtle to be clear, etc etc etc.
And yet, it's one of the most visually intelligent films I've ever seen (and beautiful, and references other films in ways that are something other than a director going wink-wink nudge-nudge -- I mean this is a world where people burn films, and are shown doing it, and remnants, reminders of films presumeably destroyed in this world are echoed trhough the film that tells this story -- it's all meta and neat), and the ending is profoundly, weirdly, surprisingly dark -- obvious sure, but it's the place you always want movies like this to go and then they lose their nerve. This doesn't.
I watched the first 90% of the film thinking this, instead of The Vampire Lestat, could have saved my life when I was twelve, had the timing been different, and the last 10% of the film realizing it would have made me an appallingly cold child (something that would have probably been useful for a few years in there).
It's not a good film, and in all ways easy to describe it is, in fact, pretty damn stupid. But the attempt that it is, is worth seeing, especially if you have any interest in toltalitarianism as portrayed in film, as this manages to slide right through everything from Metropolis to Leni Riefenstahl to the vastly inadequate but still echoing film version of 1984.
Really interesting if you allow yourself to accept it merely as a sketch of a film orchestrated as if it were merely the same nightmare its creator had been having since the age of nine.
For a full day of flawed science fiction, following it with 28 Days Later and then Gattaca would work nicely. That said, 28 Days Later scares the crap out of me, and Gattaca makes me cry and this... just reminds me of my smile, and that my friends, is a little creepy.
I remember when it came out and wanting to see it despite the awful reviews, but I never got there. Then fandom erupted in squeeing over it for about five minutes, and I still couldn't get motived. Then all this time later I got it from Netflix but was too busy with work, auditions and costuming to get to it, and now finally.
It's... so strange, in that the dialogue is awful, the plot holes immense, the naming of things terrible enough to be nearly unacceptable (fortunately for this film, Chronicles of Riddick happened, and you just can't beat "Necromonger"), the issue and message over simplified, everything that's not sledgehammer obvious is nearly too subtle to be clear, etc etc etc.
And yet, it's one of the most visually intelligent films I've ever seen (and beautiful, and references other films in ways that are something other than a director going wink-wink nudge-nudge -- I mean this is a world where people burn films, and are shown doing it, and remnants, reminders of films presumeably destroyed in this world are echoed trhough the film that tells this story -- it's all meta and neat), and the ending is profoundly, weirdly, surprisingly dark -- obvious sure, but it's the place you always want movies like this to go and then they lose their nerve. This doesn't.
I watched the first 90% of the film thinking this, instead of The Vampire Lestat, could have saved my life when I was twelve, had the timing been different, and the last 10% of the film realizing it would have made me an appallingly cold child (something that would have probably been useful for a few years in there).
It's not a good film, and in all ways easy to describe it is, in fact, pretty damn stupid. But the attempt that it is, is worth seeing, especially if you have any interest in toltalitarianism as portrayed in film, as this manages to slide right through everything from Metropolis to Leni Riefenstahl to the vastly inadequate but still echoing film version of 1984.
Really interesting if you allow yourself to accept it merely as a sketch of a film orchestrated as if it were merely the same nightmare its creator had been having since the age of nine.
For a full day of flawed science fiction, following it with 28 Days Later and then Gattaca would work nicely. That said, 28 Days Later scares the crap out of me, and Gattaca makes me cry and this... just reminds me of my smile, and that my friends, is a little creepy.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-21 08:41 pm (UTC)It's almost as if it was a mediocre adaptation of a novel, and if it had been, we'd all be saying the novel was better and the film was a bit cheesy and lame and off; but the story is powerful enough that it came through despite some of the weaknesses or excesses of the film. And it would have had one hell of an impact on my teenage years, too.
I think there's a few weird parallels to Cyteen in there, actually, in that whole control of emotions/public face game thing.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2004-10-21 08:46 pm (UTC)The concept of the film is way more interesting than the film ends up being.
I wasn't sure if I liked the gun kata or not, but it looked fantastic and kind of made sense in a weird way.
And yes, visually brilliant and beautiful.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2004-10-21 10:37 pm (UTC)So I guess it is no wonder why I constantly bitch about the lack of any subtlety in US films. Apparently, the American population is just too slow for subtlety.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2004-10-22 05:31 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:far closer to matrix meets Farenheit 451 than 1984, i thought
Date: 2004-10-22 10:42 am (UTC)However going back over the film knowing the end, you can read the whole thing quite differently, as games within games within games. And so while everyone keeps a pretense that they are only aware of what seems to be going on, they are actually all playing the deeper levels. Very similar to medieval japan in this regard.
it also features one of the best bit of cimeatic shorthand i think i have seen, the use of the lie detector as "i know you know i know you know" device is to my mind brilliant. The sheer depth of cinematic reference is stunning, i particuarly like the citizen kane reference, oh and the hommage to the matrix goverment lobby scene.