AMERICAN
CINEMA PAPERS PRINT ARCHIVE 2001 |
SEXY BEAST:
UNDERWORLD by Harlan Kennedy
The gangster wrap (n.m.) Dismembered meat and accompaniments wrapped in an
unleavened script with seasoning of ‘style’ plus add-your-own sachets of
spurting red liquid. Like any fast food, can be mouth-watering or tasteless
depending on where you buy it. What a time to be alive in British cinema. Just when it
seemed that Following the promise of Paul McGuigan’s
1999 GANGSTER NO 1 (by the same screenwriters, Louis Mellis
and David Scinto), Jonathan Glazer’s film isn’t
just about crime, it is about life, death, birth, love, pain and the whole
damn thing, directed by the guy who made those Guinness ads, notably the one
with white horses stepping over mythic surfwaves,
the ad voted best of all time in a recent poll. British audiences who thought they had died and gone to
Purgatory in the 1990s can now look back on the first-wave gangster pics almost fondly. Perhaps we needed them to lay the
ground-rules for these new films. What the early batch offered – FACE, MOJO,
LOCK STOCK AND TWO SMOKING BARRELS, FINAL CUT, ESSEX BOYS, RANCID ALUMINIUM,
LOVE HONOUR AND OBEY… - was a mod-Jacobean picture of post-Thatcher Britain:
a world where lovably overweening villains rose to the top or tried to, where
the crime world was the perfect scientific environment to study ‘the survival
of the fittest’, where the individualist, me-first ethic of Mrs T ("There is no such thing as society")
kept returning like the revitalized dinosaurs of JURASSIC PARK. That
atavistic resurgence menaced the liberal centrism and prescriptive
egalitarianism of the Major and Blair times. For the one thing everyone
prefers – or at least every filmgoer – to earnestly evangelized new virtues
is vividly dramatized old vices. The only trouble with the initial gangster wave was that
the dramatizations weren’t vivid enough. The worst of them assumed it enough
merely to behave badly – to present a thieves-fall-out plot and people it
with Gangster Rep actors and corrosive dialogue, spiced with stunt moments of
violence or humiliation. But the result wasn’t a new vitality, more a
treadmill of new cliches. Fake menace: effortful
black comedy; labored plot twists and counter-twists. GANGSTER NO 1, scripted from their own play by Mellis and Scinto, was the
first breakthrough. As directed by Paul McGuigan it
didn’t back away from the tradition to date, it transformed, intensified and
at the same time critiqued it. The verbal comedy went beyond slick to
mordant. The moral bleakness was shocking, not shop-window. The piece de resistance, in a plot about a
preening gang lord (David Thewlis, dressed and coiffed as if to resemble
politician and ex-Thatcherite poster boy Michael
Portillo) toppled by his right-hand hitter (Paul Bettany),
was a victim’s-eye-view killing that stormed every citadel of taste and
destroyed every scrap of audience security. We virtually watch ourselves
being stabbed and dismembered. The killer is messianic in his passion. This
isn’t a joke death, it is judgment day as
eschatological savagery. And the disorientation, as we peer up from the floor
at our own murderer, is terrifying. That severed arm – is it ours? That
curtain of blood – is that over our own eyes?… Guy Ritchie’s SNATCH, released in Now comes SEXY BEAST and all bets are off concerning the The movie is about rebirth in every sense. This aging
non-Adonis swimming in uterine waters of a second babyhood is visited by a
demon from the past, played by Ben Kingsley with a mesmerizing,
machine-lathed cockney rasp. Don Logan (Kingsley) wants Gal Dove (Winstone) back in Metaphor as farce is a nice beginning: the waters are
about to break in every way. Gal Dove has it too good; his nemesis comes
rattling out at him like a monster from the deep, scripted for obscenity.
Every four-letter word that Kingsley didn’t use 15 years ago as Gandhi has
been saved for him here. And the movie has a captivating tendency to purvey
dreams, reveries and nightmares as if they were an extension of reality:
broad-daylight psychic asides. A heart-shaped smoke ring blown by Dove ‘becomes’
a vision of intertwined lovers floating Chagall-like in a night sky. The
picnic table in the middle of an unidentified pampas which is visited by a
dark-furred, rifle-toting rabbit-man on a horse – the movie’s absurdist bogey
leitmotif – is Dove’s nightmare, but it is shot like a slice of life. (Lest
we doubt that Glazer is a Luis Bunuel fan, his next
project is a collaboration with Bunuel’s
latter-day scenarist-in-chief Jean-Claude Carriere. Before Gal agrees, reluctantly, to the bank heist the two
men must quarrel to the killing point. The rage of the movie’s first act is
elemental, hilarious. The second act in The movie’s final scenes return to a kind of realism, but
by now we distrust the everyday. The story’s immersion in elements of memory,
water, reverie and the unconscious have made us see in the ‘real’ only the
lurking – and laughing – oneiric. SEXY BEAST has flaws, notably a sense that two
almost-separate stories have been knitted together. But it far outstrips the
dilettantism of recent British gangster cinema. Though faithful to the notion
of criminals as a ‘separate society’, its gangsters don’t have the
aren’t-they-funny archness of the Thatcher Hangover
style. The characters more resemble revenants from classic revenge drama,
victim-pawns of a capricious destiny, people whose will to survive or destroy
is demon-driven, arbitrary, poetic. Glazer, who was initially to have directed GANGSTER NO 1,
has the measure of Mellis and Scinto’s
ornamental nihilism. Almost every shot is a subtle disruption, re-ordering
the movie’s perspective, forcing us to ask new questions. The film is also
about characters asking questions of themselves, looking in life’s mirror
(literally in one funny-unnerving scene of Kingsley rehearsing threats in the
bathroom), wondering how much they love or hate what they see, asking
themselves what can be done about it. Nothing is the almost certain answer. Gal Dove’s rebirth
is a joke in the form of a dream in the form of a nightmare. He ends up where
he was before, a mildly traumatized retiree in sunny southern COURTESY T.P.
MOVIE NEWS. WITH THANKS TO THE AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTE FOR THEIR CONTINUING INTEREST IN WORLD FILM. ©HARLAN KENNEDY. All rights reserved. |
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