Genre: Drama
Director: Wim Wenders
Starring: Sam Sheperd, Jessicca Lange, Gabriel
Mann, Tim Roth, Sarah Polley
RunTime: 2 hrs 2 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Coarse Language)
Opening Day: 17 August 2006 (The Picturehouse)
Synopsis:
Once a big Western movie star, Howard (Sheperd) now drowns
his disgust for his selfish and failed life with alcohol,
drugs and young women. If he were to die now, nobody would
shed a tear over him, that's the sad truth. Until one day
Howard learns that he might have a child somewhere out there.
The very idea seems like a ray of hope that his life wasn't
all in vain. So he sets out to find that young man or woman.
He discovers an entire life that he has missed.....
Movie Review:
Sam Shepard co-writes and stars in “Don’t Come
Knocking”, where an aging Western star in a moment of
alcohol-fueled realisation deserts the production of his latest
film to search down his past in order find a new future. Howard
Spence is the quintessential lone ranger, no place to call
home and a drugstore cowboy at heart, dependent on booze and
women to get him through his days. Blessed with a bevy of
talented performers and a seasoned director/co-writer in Wim
Wenders, the film doesn’t quite live up to the expectations
set with Shepard and Wender’s last collaboration, “Paris,
Texas”.
It’s
very much the same sort of endeavour, but they’ve lost
their edge and the understanding of the painful realisations
of lost glory and rediscovered pasts, which they had carefully
constructed back then. While the truth of their storytelling
might be wavering by contemporary standards, the message does
not change in their latest effort. Unfortunately, an over-wrought
and glaringly miscalculated script hinders the potential that
this film had.
Crafted
with an awkward surrealism in the setting and its characters,
Wenders puts together a effusively insincere and dreary account
of an unsympathetic and constantly inebriated lothario who’s
motivation is never quite clear to anyone, especially to himself.
Bogged down with a screenplay reeking of self-awareness and
a discomfited atmosphere of pretension, it’s a stale
study of male menopausal midlife crisis punctuated with obligatory
regrets and the exaggerated interpretations of its remnants.
Howard
traverses through the desert and through trailer parks to
reach his mother (Eva Saint Marie) to hide out from the insurance
company tracer (Tim Roth) that is commissioned to bring him
back and complete the production of his film. In Shepard’s
version of this suspended reality where unnatural occurrences
happen as if commonplace, his relentlessly cheerful (hints
of alcoholism) mother, who hasn’t seen her son in over
30 years, bears no animosity or curiosity over her estranged
son’s veritable abandonment. From here, he learns of
a son that he never knew existed and sets off to Butte, Montana
to seek him out. Here on out, there’s a very strong
semblance to Bill Murray’s own portrayal of an aging
lothario in search of a son in “Broken Flowers”.
But while, he gives an ardent and minimalist performance in
that role, Shepard’s Howard is loudmouthed and gauche
with no redeeming qualities to root for.
The
mother of this son, Doreen (Jessica Lange, who was also in
“Broken Flowers”) does not welcome Howard back
but instead gives an uncomfortable and undecided reception
to him. He meets his son, Earl (Gabriel Mann), a Chris Isaak-esque
crooner with Faizura Balk playing a role as his bizarre groupie-girlfriend
that seems to be a composite of every character she has ever
played. All while a peculiar girl named Sky (Sarah Polley)
carries an urn with a mother’s ashes while following
Howard around to confront him with an apparent mutual connection.
Polley plays it with a demeanour so sweet and enigmatic but
with a coy obliviousness that strangely enough, almost seems
like she actually knows everybody’s story inside out.
It’s definitely an interesting comparison to the overt
self-denial that everyone around her appears to suffer from.
These
characters are just means to an end. They are mere props to
propel the story, but are given heavy and undue representations
that are too heavy-handed for each of them to adequately pull
off. With its multitude of pointless and meandering sequences
to get to the main gist of the plot, I suppose it’s
to its credit that it does not circle about the important
revelations when it does approach them but it still does it
with relative trepidation. It’s best served during its
moments of quiet meditation. Especially in an effective scene
involving a revolving camera and a reflective Howard sitting
on a couch on the streets with the traffic passing by, which
begins a welcome epiphany leading to its climax.
What’s
left is a maudlin attempt to signify the emotional impotence
that Howard and his film’s cadre laughably tries to
portray throughout the film. Untrue characters and their reactions
give the film a tainted look at the disintegration of family
values and its consequent effects that the flawed atavistic
ideals of the Old West cannot change.
Movie
Rating:
(A
picturesque bore with frustrating and clichéd characters
that are unable to communicate the point of the film)
Review by Justin Deimen
|