Genre:
Action/Thriller
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Cast: Kurt Russell, Zoe Bell, Rosario Dawson,
Vanessa Ferlito, Jordan Ladd, Rose McGowan, Sydney Tamiia
Poitier, Marley Shelton, Tracie Thoms, Mary Elizabeth Winstead,
Michael Bacall, Eli Roth, Omar Doom
RunTime: 1 hr 54 mins
Released By: GV
Rating: M18
Official Website: http://www.grindhousemovie.net/
Opening
Day: 21 June 2007
Synopsis
:
For Austin’s hottest DJ, Jungle Julia (Sydney
Tamiia Poitier), dusk offers an opportunity to unwind with
two of her closest friends, Shanna and Arlene (Jordan Ladd
and Vanessa Ferlito). This three fox posse sets out into the
night, turning heads from Guero’s to the Texas Chili
Parlor. Not all of the attention is innocent: Covertly tracking
their moves is Stuntman Mike (Kurt Russell), a scarred, weathered
rebel who leers from behind the wheel of his muscle car. As
the girls settle into their beers, Mike’s weapon, a
white-hot juggernaut, revs just feet away…
Movie
Review:
As if the Hollywood machine and its swelling budgets
needed any more directors to help celebrate its arrested development
and self-satisfied ostentation, two of its biggest perpetuators
in Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez joined up in a mega
production called “Grindhouse”, a double feature
that included Tarantino’s “Death Proof”
and Rodriguez’s “Planet Terror”, with each
film envisaged as contemporary variations of the 70s genre
– grind-house, a culmination of horror, sex, gore and
cheap thrills that piled on as much as it could in its abbreviated
runtimes that all stemmed from the misunderstood school of
exploitation cinema.
Now,
from a prima facie viewpoint, there is something fundamentally
ridiculous and witless about spending close to a US$100 million
on a film style that was supposed to be cheap, guerilla filmmaking.
But with Tarantino’s and his leading stylistic impressionist
on board, it ended up becoming a “if you got clout,
flout it” sort of enterprise.
With
the onus squarely set on the duo, much was being made of the
ambitiously puerile simulation of a genre borne out of contempt
for Hollywood’s status quo. So even while the possibilities
attracted a great deal of fanfare before the film’s
opening, and when push came to shove, “Grindhouse”
failed at the box-office with studio executives citing the
extended runtime and debated whether audiences were apparently
“ready” for such a project, all backtracking with
tails between their legs it has to be said. Fortunately for
the studio, its misfortune was limited to its domestic prospect
and a decision was publicly made to release each film separately
with additional footage. And so we have “Death Proof”,
Tarantino’s killer-on-the-prowl pseudo-homage to the
muscle car road ragers from the 70s.
Referential,
post-modern filmmaking while becoming a patronising fanboy
director’s crutch, has been handed another layer of
conceit by Tarantino who is arguably the most established
trendsetter in this particular area of creating exaggerated
pop-culture universes, a trait that hit its creative peak
in “Kill Bill: Volume 1” with a celebratory pastiche
of high art and just as easily hit its nadir in “Kill
Bill: Volume 2” when it started to annotate its own
artistic debts by stretching for self-reflexive intelligence.
In
his truest follow-up in “Death Proof” (marketing
karma perhaps after the painful splitting of “Kill Bill”),
he carelessly flirts with the sweet spot just between silly
hyperbolic kitsch and an essential recreation of the genre’s
milieu and irreverence. There’s a certain symmetry to
the chaos that Tarantino whips up with his palette pointedly
set on deconstructing the genre from within that at times
recalls his best work and also his worst, which possibly derives
from the inevitable indecision of presenting a grandiose homage
or a modernised renovation of his frisson soaked inspiration.
From
an intellectual standpoint, “Death Proof” attains
its grind-house stripes. Being visually confident enough to
stage some balls-to-the-walls stunts and setpieces that never
really sustains itself, it has an aesthetically opulent style
that keeps the screen constantly busy. Ultimately, it offers
up some entertaining schlock (and considering its budget and
pedigree, I’d expect nothing less) that lacks any durable
depth. But from an instinctive point of view, “Death
Proof” is much too slick and polished and contradictory
to recreate the sort of anti-establishment impertinence its
predecessors professed by simply existing to get the piece
of the pie, no matter how small.
What
Tarantino achieves on his own when he does not simply amalgamate
the tropes he’s come to love is his distinctive style
of dialogue that holds no pretenses and is always direct to
the point with a purpose of building his characters (especially
gorgeous cardboard cut-out femmes who he expects us not to
take seriously at first glance) with an “action speaks
louder than words” ethos. This is an important aspect
to discern because it makes this film less a straight up homage
and more like a Tarantino grind-house lovefest, even to the
point of showing congenial originality and a personal touch
despite its many throwaway resemblances to films of yore.
But
above all the thematic gambits, Tarantino’s bull’s
eye as a director was to not wrangle in Kurt Russell’s
emphatic performance as Stuntman Mike, a psychotic boogeyman
in an indestructibly menacing muscle car whose cat-and-mouse
games continue on with Tarantino’s harem of Midwest
beauties. Russell does leave a lasting impression for many
reasons, and is on the level of Uma Thurman’s turn as
The Bride in “Kill Bill” so it’s just unfortunate
there’s not too much else to get excited about when
it’s just not invested enough for a truly memorable
revision of cult cinema.
Movie
Rating:
(At times self-indulgent and inconsistent but ultimately trashy
fun)
Review by Justin Deimen
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