Screen

Alleva, Richard

BLOODY-MINDED STONE'S 'KILLERS' liver Stone hears Amenca screaming, so he joins right in His latest film, Natural Born Killers, tries to depict our putative love affair with violence both...

...It's not horror we feel, or even detachment from horror, but "Gosh golly gee-whizz, how do those Hollywood guys do these stunts9" There is something thuddingly hteralist about all the visual effects in Killers If Ms...
...Only Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis are allowed to bring some variety and color to the proceedings Perhaps the actors benefited from the fact that, by story's end, they are virtually Stone's surrogates, dispatching the rest of the cast with a relish that their creator, I fear, shares That great radical magazine, Entertainment Weekly, has pronounced Natural Born Killers "revolutionary" (as well as "brilliant" and "hypnotic") Is it9 A revolution of consciousness, perhaps, is what Stone aims to bring about9 Trash TV, tabloids, much American cinema and fiction, all contribute nowadays to a sickening buzz that is a perfect accompaniment to, and perhaps an incitement of, the violence that is rending the fabnc of American life Did Oliver Stone hope to capture this buzz on film and amplify it so egregiously that his audience would finally beg for silence and sanity9 Perhaps...
...But a really good orator knows how to silence a roomful of loudmouths...
...The result is, if you'll pardon the word in this context, overkill...
...We see many violent images on the tube, apparently including one of a girl bound and gagged The couple quarrel and Lewis leaves the room in a huff...
...BLOODY-MINDED STONE'S 'KILLERS' liver Stone hears Amenca screaming, so he joins right in His latest film, Natural Born Killers, tries to depict our putative love affair with violence both satirically and hornfically by telling the story of two lovers (Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis) who are spree killers The first half of the movie displays their monstrous idea of fun and shows how the trash media capitalize on the carnage The balance of the story focuses on a TV interview of Harrelson in prison conducted by a Geraldo type (Robert Downey, Jr), the interview goes awry and more blood flows In some of his previous movies, Stone used extreme realism to so intensify the violent passages that the result verged on nightmare while remaining basically venstic This method helped make Salvador (still Stone's best movie), the first half of Platoon, and much of Talk Radio (an underrated work) his finest filmmaking Natural Born Killers is a departure an ostentatiously surreal movie from beginning to end, it doesn't employ nightmanshness only at violent moments, the whole work is a bad dream...
...And should we ignore the fact that other nightmare comedies—such as Dr Strangelove and A Clockwork Orange—achieve their satirical ends without sacrificing all logic and verisimilitude9 (Remember how real the War Room seemed in Dr Strangelove and how persuasive were all the technical details leading up to the missile strike9) Since Oliver Stone has made a nightmare, shouldn't we cut him some slack in the credibility department9 After all, a truly surreal style should cover a multitude of incredibilities Trouble is, Stone hasn't achieved any such style Ganshness, certainly, and plenty of high-tech display, but not style In the opening scene—a slaughter in a greasy spoon—computer technology has allowed Stone to seemingly perch his camera on a bullet as it whizzes toward a victim's skull, and on a knife as it zooms toward another victim's back...
...RICHARD ALLEVA 23...
...But, in art, even a nightmare must have its own logic How coherent is Natural Born Killers^ And how penetrating is it7 Shall we excuse the fact that much of what we see on screen flatly defies belief7 Of course, the lovers wouldn't be kept in the same (all-male) pnson Of course, the marksmen guarding Harrelson during the interview wouldn't all lounge around inside the same room with him, thus allowing the killer to grab a gun after he's distracted them with a dirty joke Of course, all of the many marksmen wouldn't be shot down or disarmed without anyone getting off a single well-aimed shot Of course, the ninety-nine-pound Juliette Lewis, with model-skinny arms and no karate training, couldn't duke it out with a truck driver and, later, an F.B I agent and easily win both fights...
...But Stone's derision seems directed against humanity itself You can see this most clearly in the interview scenes between Harrelson and Robert Downey, Jr...
...But, actually, it isn't If this is a memory of Lewis's, why is it cast as situation comedy9 Wouldn't she instead remember her victimization as a soap opera or as one of those prime-time social-problem-of-the weekmovies9 Or if we aren't seeing the incest from Lewis's point-of-view but from a more or less objective standpoint, why make situation comedy part of the indictment of violence7 Some sitcoms may be klutzy and unfunny, but most are decent enough in their intentions, depict family life with a mixture of skepticism and affection, and certainly don't promote violence or incest Granted, Stone's styllzation distances us enough from the domestic horror so that his satire isn't overwhelmed by our revulsion, but the satire itself misfires The pain and death that the protagonists visit on people are stylized, too...
...And this nationally notorious couple, whose faces have been on the cover of People magazine, spend night after night in motels for months without managers and maids recognizing them9 (But, when it suits the plot, people recognize the pair instantly...
...He lowers his voice...
...Given Killers' s satirical animus against the media, this choice may seem both clever and apropos...
...Late in the movie, mystical murderer Harrelson informs his interviewer that all people have committed at least one act for which they deserve to die Stone's staging of the death agonies seems to support his killerhero's view But there are two exceptions That aforementioned Native American foresees his own death and goes to it with courage and dignity The strenuously politically correct Oliver Stone won't be caught photographing any such martyr of white imperialism as pop-eyed or sweaty with fear as he goes to meet the Great Spirit And, in the movie's best scene, Harrelson and Lewis are in a motel room making love with the TV set on...
...The victims are photographed in close-up at the moment of death and are made to look stupid, craven, repellent, and bereft of dignity...
...Only then do we see that the tied-up girl isn't a televised image but a real person forced to watch her captors have sex while awaiting her own demise Hers is real horror laced with satire But perhaps it's only because we never got to know that girl that we can feel at least a trace of fear and pity for her Since Stone expends much of his cinematic energy making us despise all the other victims, the net effect of Killers is to make us feel that all humanity should be slaughtered for cravenness, vulgarity, and physical unattractiveness But then what happens to the film's satire9 Satire, after all, is a chastisement of morals and manners in the service of human decency...
...Lewis dreamily speaks of angels to her lover, Stone floats angels up into the sky If Lewis fantasizes about horses flying, we see flying horses...
...Media maven Downey comes off looking and sounding like a maniac, while killer Harrelson keeps his cool This could be a legitimate satirical reversal of our expectations if Stone zeroed in on some moment in the interview in which Downey's realization of his own lack of conviction in the face of the killer's certitude drove the journalist into a frenzy...
...If Stone needs a symbol of coiled violence, we get coiled rattlesnakes In fact, there's a rattlesnake motif running through the first half of the movie, cumulating in a visit to an old American Native who lives so sagely and with such self-control that he can—you 22 SCREEN guessed it1—tame rattlesnakes...
...Stone's dramatic strategies often turn out to be incoherent For instance, he stages a flashback to Lewis's family life, rife with child abuse and incest, as a TV situation comedy that includes canned audience laughter...
...Instead, the director has Downey talk frantically, crazily from the start so that we despise him for his style rather than for his opportunism Satire should be savage, but Stone's methods are cheap Not surprisingly, the entire supporting cast, stuck with playing oafs, cretins, and shmeballs, has a rough time of it at Stone's hands Almost everybody is wildly overdirected, with the great Tommy Lee Jones, forced to yell his every line, delivering the worst performance of all...

Vol. 121 • October 1994 • No. 17


 
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