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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Superman Returns, Pirates II, Clerks II: No
fount of impressions and emotions at present
By David Walsh and Joanne Laurier
27 July 2006
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Superman Returns, directed by Bryan Singer, screenplay
by Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris; Clerks II, written
and directed by Kevin Smith; Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead
Mans Chest, directed by Gore Verbinski, screenplay by
Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio
Popular culture is in a bad way. For the most part, its
not lively, or astonishing, or intelligent. It doesnt generally
amuse or move. There was a time when audiences found in the cinema,
for example, something astonishing, something to be grateful for,
something to cherish. It was, as Trotsky wrote, that inexhaustible
fount of impressions and emotions.
Human beings are resilient and eternally hopeful creatures.
Although perhaps in diminished numbers, moviegoers continue to
troop to the theaters. An expectant hush falls over the crowd
as each film begins. Even the most cold-eyed skeptic, or critic,
wants to be entertained. There really is no point in going if
you simply anticipate rubbish.
A few minutes of most films, unhappily, is enough to convince
the spectator that this is only more of the same. Disappointment,
mild or otherwise, sets in. The audience settles down, in many
case, to simply endure the afternoon or evening. On leaving, one
often feels relief, an onerous task accomplished.
Popular culture has a rich history in the US, in part no doubt
because of the mix of nationalities and traditions. The silent
cinema became a fact of everyday life for masses of immigrants
crowded into cities in the early part of the twentieth century
because it did not require them to understand English. Ironically,
the lack of independent working class political life in America
has also resulted in a great deal of inarticulate outrage, sadness,
joy and despair, which found more or less conscious expression
elsewhere, being channeled into popular culture.
There have consistently been artists and performers whose emotions
and thoughts went far beyond the individual, summing up vast and
often painful social experiences. A comprehensive picture of American
life over the past century or more would be almost impossible
to construct without taking into account popular music, film,
dance, theater and other forms.
There is no reason to expect every song or film to be a work
of genius. Great works emerge in circumstances where there are
many good works and a creative, critical atmosphere. Hollywood
films, popular music and theater for decades produced works that
made people laugh and cry, and even think.
The average film studio production of the 1930s,
1940s and even into the 1950s, was made with greater skill and
texture than at present. Writers, directors and performers, not
yet celebrities in the contemporary sense, were engaged
in life and reproduced that engagement in more or less artful
formof course with varying degrees of sincerity and complexity.
There have always been hacks and philistines aplenty.
To gain their social bearings people need energetic and engaging
pictures of life. Art, including popular art, ought to provide
such pictures. At present the images and sounds provided by film
and popular music in the US are extremely limited, weak, unenlightening.
And this has nothing to do with the supposed seriousness or non-seriousness
of the genre. Foolishness can also be illuminating, as well as
sensuality and adventure and suspense.
Tastes in popular culture differ. They have a great deal to
do with immediate family and geographical circumstances, the mood
of ones generation and so on. Theres virtually no
point in arguing with someone about his or her opinions about
popular music, for example. They are usually embedded in the experiences
of adolescence and early adulthood as in granite.
However, there is something heartfelt and elevating in figures
as disparate as Cole Porter, the Marx Brothers, Hank Williams,
Marilyn Monroe and Aretha Franklin. There are not many figures
about whom that can be said within the current entertainment
industry, composed primarily of market products imposed
on a defenseless, somewhat dazed public.
As though the talent in Hollywood were not already stretched
thinly enough, the major studios have begun laying off workers.
Walt Disney has announced plans to cut 650 jobs, revamp its Burbank
studio and reduce the number of films it makes. Recent moves by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. and DreamWorks SKG resulted in the loss
of another 1,350 positions. Revolution Studios has significantly
downsized its ranks and ambitions after too many box-office misses.
Disney dramatically scaled back its Miramax Film specialty unit
from the mini-studio that it had been under its founders, Bob
and Harvey Weinstein. And Time Warner Inc.s Warner Bros.
cut about 400 jobs. (Los Angeles Times)
A Wall Street analyst told the Times, The media
companies dont like it as much as they used to. They dont
see it as a prime engine of growth anymore, so theyre farming
out as much of the risk as they can to private-equity and hedge-fund
partners. They are just not as interested in throwing additional
capital into the business. In response, producer Brian Grazer
commented, Its as if the managerial elite has made
a secret pact to adhere to certain business principles that they
want to enforce on agents and artists. Thats never happened
in the 25 years Ive been producing.
The iron rule of this managerial elite, to whom the immediate
bottom line is everything, will only further deepen the artistic
crisis in the film industry. There will be even less margin for
maneuver, even less room for experimentation and controversy,
an even more relentless pursuit of the bland, bombastic blockbuster
(Oh, think the financiers, if the film studios
could only produce each year a single $10 billion-dollar film
that would earn $50 billion worldwide!). The process will
also accelerate the emergence of artistic alternatives, born in
deep hostility to the deadening corporate dominance of filmmaking.
The world needs a savior?
Superman Returns, directed by Bryan Singer, is not the
worst of todays entertainments, but interest in it eventually
collapses under the weight of the films self-seriousness
and overbearing special effects.
Superman (Brandon Routh) returns to earth after five years
absence to discover the planet in as much difficulty as ever and
his former love, Lois Lane (Kate Bosworth), possessed of a child.
Supermans alter ego, Clark Kent, resumes his job at the
Daily Planet, alongside Lois, where he goes mysteriously
unrecognized as the superhero. Arch-criminal Lex Luthor (Kevin
Spacey), accompanied by his latest nitwit girl-friend, Kitty (Parker
Posey), has plans to bring a new continent into being in the Atlantic
Ocean (and submerge much of North America) thanks to crystals
from the planet Krypton, which he discovers in Supermans
arctic lair. Needless to say ...
The film begins pleasantly and concretely enough. Routh and
Bosworth are not especially dynamic, but they exude a certain
charm and intelligence.
For some reason, however, Singer and his screenwriters, Michael
Dougherty and Dan Harris, proceed to turn the comic book hero
into a Christlike figure. We are reminded that Supermans
father on Krypton, Jor-El, sent his only son to do
good on Earth. In Supermans absence, Lois has written a
Pulitzer Prize-winning essay on Why the World Doesnt
Need Superman. In a pivotal scene, Lois returns to this
theme: The world doesnt need a savior ... Superman
asks her to listen. I dont hear anything, says
Lois. Superman responds, I hear everything. You wrote that
the world doesnt need a savior, but every day I hear people
crying for one.
Indeed, it turns out that the world, descending into crime
and chaos, is very much in need of saving. This seems an unhappy
theme at this moment in history (although perhaps unsurprising).
Did the filmmakers bother to think about the matter, or did they
simply conclude this would represent a clever twist? Even in a
film based on a comic book, the notion that human beings are essentially
helpless and in need of rescue from above seems irresponsible.
Or as one Christian web site has it, Lois Lane may claim,
The world doesnt need a savior but the headlines
betray her. We understand Loiss bitterness. We share her
abandonment. How could something like 9/11 happen? Where was God
when the buildings burned? It is easy to lose faith when the victims
of terrorism tumble to their deaths. Yet amidst the gnawing doubt
arise the pleas of the people. Lois says she doesnt need
a savior, but Supermans finely-tuned ears confirm that Everyday
I hear them crying out for one.
Having avoided in this manner a drama that would in some fashion
address itself to compelling contemporary human issues, instead
of this lazy supernaturalism, it is hardly surprising that Singer
and his screenwriters turn, in the end, to another kind of deus
ex machina, cinematic special effects, to solve their artistic
problems. The last portion of the film, taking place on or around
Luthors new continent arising out of the Atlantic, is simply
tedious.
Clerks II, directed by Kevin Smith, is a dreadful film.
Its story about a couple of New Jersey natives who work in a fast-food
restaurant is witless and vulgar. Badly written, directed and
acted, it sheds no light on anything. This is American independent
filmmaking at its worst. Only Rosario Dawson escapes the wreckage.
The film takes up the lives of its two protagonists, Randal
(Jeff Anderson) and Dante (Brian OHalloran), ten years or
so after Smith first created a drama around them, the original
Clerks. Forced by a fire to relocate from their original
jobs, the pair end up at the McDonalds-like Moobys.
Brian is about to move to Florida where hes to be married
and handed a new house by his in-laws. Responsibility and adulthood
loom. Randal has a foul mouth and abuses, with varying degrees
of nastiness, everyone around him. He regrets Brians departure.
Becky (Dawson), the manager, and Brian have feelings for each
other. Will Brian leave New Jersey for Florida and a conventional
life?
There is not a compelling or convincing moment in the film.
Smiths guiding principles seem to be informality, looseness,
anything goes. Unfortunately, intellectual laziness
and sloppiness are poor principles in any field. They produce
nothing of value. Nor is the vulgarity on display transgressive
or audacious, but simply sophomoric and unpleasant. The film panders
to the worst in its targeted youthful audience. Smiths film,
in fact, is congealed pandering. No one has the right to be proud
of such an achievement.
A previous WSWS reviewer of a Smith film, Dogma, entitled
his comment, A mind so open that the brain fell out.
One can hardly improve on that.
* * * * *
After his Oscar-nominated performance as Captain Jack Sparrow
in the first Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse
of the Black Pearl (2003), Johnny Depp reunites with Orlando
Bloom and Keira Knightley in Pirates of the Caribbean:
Dead Mans Chest, the second episode of what
promises to be a trilogy.
Gore Verbinski again directs, from a screenplay by Ted Elliott
and Terry Rossio. Extending nearly two and a half hours, the film
is ponderous and self-important, thereby breaking ranks with the
first Pirates, a silly but refreshing work with sufficient
imagination to conjure up the ghost of Robert Louis Stevenson.
In developing his androgynous Sparrow, Depp revealed in an
interview in 2003 that he had to buck the films producers,
who were nervous about how the actors unconventional approach
would affect the films box office. Reviewing The Curse
of the Black Pearl, the WSWS wrote: [Depps] elementary
choices, which contributed greatly to elevating the character
out of the ranks of the ordinary and clichéd, were seen
as eccentric and potentially dangerous to the films financial
success!
One way or another, in the second film calculated commercial
interests, which are generally guaranteed to kill off genuine
audience enthusiasm have won out.
While the first installment, Curse of the Black Pearl,
benefited not only from Depps Sparrow, but also from Geoffrey
Rushs BarbossaSparrows arch-nemesisthe
new film is short on interesting characters and dialogue and long
on pyrotechnics and plot convolution. Matched against an endless
procession of generic rivals, Jack Sparrow, much less hypnotic
than the first time around, comes across as an isolated whirling
dervish. An exception to the films dull characters is Will
Turners long-lost father, played by Stellan Skarsgard, who
injects a much needed dose of the human.
Additionally, the first Pirates pitted Jack against
the British authorities. As a roguish thorn in their side, Sparrow
spent a good part of the film avoiding the noose. His anti-establishment
deeds were amusing and spontaneous, coming as they did with the
warning never to trust a pirate.
Taking a number of steps back, Dead Mans Chest
has Jack fighting Davy Jones (Bill Nighy), the personification
of death at the bottom of the sea. When the British Empire makes
an appearance in the form of a rogue elementthe nasty Cutler
Beckett played by the talented Tom Hollanderit does so essentially
as a plot contrivance, further adding to the leaden quality of
the film. In a final tilt to commercialism, the film ends by heavy-handedly
foreshadowing the third Pirates film, slated to
be released in 2007.
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