Bear in mind, much of what follows is based on a single viewing of a film seen almost two years ago. This isn’t to forgive my own subsequent inaccuracies as much as to stress the profound disturbances elicited by this movie that I still hold dear. Perhaps we’ll just start at the beginning. My memory is a little fuzzy, but I’m almost positive I remember an acknowledgment in the opening credits addressing some Australia Council for the Arts (or something like that), which read like an author’s acknowledgment to one of those writer colonies where writers go to complete their big books. This was no doubt to prepare the viewer for the next thirty minutes of what can only be best described as a Rough Guide documentary to a Foster’s Beer commercial (lots of desolate landscapes, intercut with the obvious drunken co-ed party where a guy—get this—JUMPS OFF THE BALCONY INTO THE POOL!! Crazy!). Give filmmaker Greg McLean credit, sadly he knows what’s naturally beautiful: vistas, desserts, craters, spunky athletic women, dirt. And he seems to be working hard to earn the grant one feels he needed to make his film. But what
Once our crew visits the majestic crater of the (misspelled) title, it’s all down steppe from there. Naturally the car dies, but thanks to the kindness of stranger (a “quacky” bushman named Mick Taylor, played by John Jarratt) our scrumptious victims of sexual tension find themselves (after an effectively long ominous car towing) in one of the sketchiest junk yards this side of Eddie and the Cruisers. It should be noted at this point that John Jarratt (the actor--scroll down for that link and you'll see what I'm getting at) looks a lot like an older Harland Williams (another actor/comedian) ten years after realizing his last big break was Rocketman. For those like myself, weaned on the tit of the unstoppable-force-of-nature-I-must-kill-the-babysitter-slashers, and who spent our summers at
Nope. Apparently Rocketman—I’m sorry “Bushman Taylor”—likes to cut-up, torture, brutalize, simulate/and actually perform rape on women. And, given the amount of time Mr. McLean spends wallowing in these images, one has to question what issues he himself might be dealing with. It would be one thing to write the film and its maker off as the continuation of a genre and that women in peril is the métier of the slasher flick. You wouldn’t be wrong. Yet be it Janet Leigh, or her daughter Jamie Lee Curtis, or any of the hundreds of interchangeable “racks” found in such gems as I Spit on Your Grave, one thing always remained the same: Women can and eventually—after a lot of blood and pain—stop being victims (I Spit on Your Grave is actually really called Day of the Woman--so claims IMDB). Sure, more than one woman may have to die. But eventually there is justice at the end of a confiscated/stolen/found machete. In Wolf Creek, what starts as a wet and grainy romp of some aesthetic appeal, becomes an exercise most vile.
It’s a lot to put these kinds of accusations on a filmmaker. But you are what you make in the art world. What McLean, and other isolated and clearly frustrated white-men like him have to realize, is that a film like this is your legacy. Make Jane Austen if you want Mr. McLean, if you think it will clean your conscious. But those of us out there who’ve marked your name in our brain the same way we’ve marked sharecropping produce companies, or former oil company CEO’s who are now vice-presidents, or cars that blow up when rear-ended, will know that, beneath all the pomp and circumstance of art house respectability, you can’t help but think, “How would Emma do on a date with Bushman Taylor? Let’s see her British wit help her now!” Any doubters need only look to the last scene featuring the despicable Rocketman—I’m sorry, Mick Taylor: After dispatching Kristy from a distance with his rifle (trust me, she doesn’t get of easy in the slightest), a sense of melancholy invades his face—surely not from the fact that this was an innocent woman he simulated sex with a large cutting instrument—but that the fun ended earlier than he would have liked (he had so many more toys!). And we’re left to helplessly watch
2 comments:
There are live musical performances every weekend and you can catch all the Pittsburgh Steelers games and other sporting events on the large screen televisions. [url=http://www.super-onlineblackjack.co.uk/]online blackjack[/url] online blackjack uk Boys II Men, the multi winning Grammy award winning R&B group will be bringing their Motown Philly style to The Mirage Hotel and casino beginning March 1, 2013. http://www.super-onlineblackjack.co.uk/
Can you share reverse phone lookup - identify the someone Behind the Phone amount. [url=http://www.mr-reversephonelookup.com/]reverse phone lookup[/url] reverse phone lookup Love Story 3. http://www.mr-reversephonelookup.com/
Post a Comment