Profound and
stirring drama
By Ervell E.
Menezes
WHEN Steven Spielberg made The
Colour Purple he was criticised saying that only
Blacks can make films about Blacks. But that isnt
really true. Granted that Black filmmakers like Spike Lee
and John Singleton have given a whole new image to Black
cinema one cant make a sweeping statement like
that. Now, as if to reiterate this stand White director
Tony Kaye has made an absolute stunner of a movie on
racism in Los Angeles.
While most of these
racist dramas are centred on the household of a Black
family, American History X is a profound and
stirring drama about the consequences of racism in a
White family torn apart by hate. The story unfolds
through the eyes of Danny Vinyard (Edward Furlong), who
idolises his elder brother Derek (Edward Norton). Seeking
retribution for his dads murder for a way to vent
his rage, Derek finds himself transformed by a philosophy
of hate which propels him to the leadership of the local
White power movement.
This hate campaign ends
with Derek committing a brutal murder and serving a
prison sentence. Three years later (that is when our
story begins), the neighbourhood awaits Dereks
release. His mother Doris (Beverly D Angelo) prays
for his safety; his girl-friend Stacey (Fairuska Balk)
longs for his return, but most of all it is kid brother
Danny who is desperate for his brothers love and
guidance.
But Derek is a changed
man. Ashamed of his past, he is now in a race to save
Danny and the Vinyard family from the violence hes
brought down on them. It is on the very day of his
release that Danny is asked by his principal (Avery
Brooks) to write a paper on the circumstances that led to
Dereks incarceration. It is through the narrative
of this assignment that the audience explores the events
that haunt and even define the two brothers.
Director Tony Kaye gets
to the root of this racist thing from the word go.
Black-White bitterness comes across loud and clear.
Its about skinheads and White power and the
characters are well balanced. There is a repulsive White
and a commendable Black. The screenplay by David McKenna
is terse and Edward Norton is able to carry the film on
his shoulders. This Nazi sympathiser becomes a vehicle of
White hatred. And with Danny looking up to his big
brother the stage looks set for a major catastrophe.
There is always an
undercurrent of disaster running through this film but it
is some of the stunning scenes that merit special
mention. The family ruckus in the dining-room after Derek
returns is certainly the highlight of the story with some
of the prison violence scenes not far behind. The Venice
beach ambience is graphically recaptured and the bonding
of the two brothers could hardly have been bettered.
Slowly, layer by layer, the onion is peeled but just as
we get to the climax there is a red herring which gives
the story a stunning impact.
To say that Edward
Norton is brilliant is an understatement. And it is the
transformation of the character from one so despicable to
one not so despicable is achieved with amazing lucidity.
His Nazi badge of honour is in tatters by the end. Norton
is helped largely by Edward Furlong who is also brilliant
in the role of his kid brother.
Beverly D Angelo,
Elliott Gould, Avery Brooks, Fairuska Balk and Stacey
Keach also provide good cameos but it is the whole
pressure-cooker, cauldron-like atmosphere that is so
graphically recaptured. Not in a long while has one seen
such a devastating expose on racism. Kudos to
director-cinematographer Tony Kaye.
But The Mummy is
quite a disaster. Films dealing with Egypt have always
had enough scope because of the Pharaohs and that ancient
civilisation. But what begins as an Oriental adventure
shifts genres and becomes a spoof which is not bad in
itself. In the first half it manages to hold the
viewers attention but it is the second half which
tends to run riot and the story is inundated in action
which has little rhyme and even less reason.
Dashing legionnaire Rick
OConnel (Brendan Fraser), Egyptologist Evelyn
(Rachel Weisz) and her brother Jonathan (John Hannah) are
in search of a hidden treasure when they come upon the
curse of an ancient priest Imhotep (Arnold Vosloo). It is
yet another anything-is-possible Hollywood entertainer
reminiscent of Raiders of the Lost Ark and their
ilk. But for all its special effects, crawly creatures
and believably unbelievable sequences The Mummy flatters
only to deceive leaving the viewer quite numbed by the
excessive action and the never-ending story.
This
feature was published on October 31, 1999
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