Unleashed and Crash (review)
Nonviolent Protest
"I don't wanna hurt people anymore." It's not exactly what you expect to hear from the martial-
Unleashed is no less than a fable for the 21st century, a tale of leaving behind our indoctrination and our cultural programming to find a new comfort zone that isn't about race or tribe but about beauty and kindness and art and the more rarefied things that transcend the concrete stuff we fight about as a species (land, resources, money). Sure, you can look at this as just another action movie, maybe one a tad more thoughtful than most, but look a little harder and you see that it verges on the brilliant, becomes a modern fairy tale with a power to speak to our most elemental fears -- of isolation, of loneliness, of difference -- and desires -- for love, for acceptance, for family -- one with a power to haunt our dreams and nightmares.
It's the newly astonishing Jet Li who says that destined-
Bart's world is horrendously brutal and unfeeling, of course, but hardly to a degree unrecognizable to anyone who's seen a Vin Diesel movie. It's the other world of gentleness and compassion that sits beside it in this same movie that makes Unleashed so extraordinary, in more than one way. See, Danny escapes from Bart's clutches and falls in with a blind piano tuner, Sam (Morgan Freeman: Million Dollar Baby, The Big Bounce), and his young stepdaughter, Victoria (Kerry Condon: Ned Kelly, Angela's Ashes), a music student... and they and everyone they introduce Danny to are warmly accepting of his oddity and his weird shyness -- he has little experience of the world and is emotionally a child, and they can all deal with that just fine. It is, perhaps, as much a fantasy as the savagery of Bart's world, which includes fight clubs and human beings battling to the death for the entertainment of others... that is to say, perhaps not much of a fantasy at all. The stark and vivid contrasts of the two realms Danny travels between are jarring -- though Leterrier never loses control of the film, never makes us feel as if we're watching two different movies -- but if anything, they are a jarring reminder that these two worlds sit side by side in reality, too, if rarely in the movies (at least not so well as they do here) and we chose which one to live in. We can decide to live with mistrust and fear, with fists and guns solving our problems, or we can live in the kind of place where -- heh -- a black man and a white girl and a Chinese guy can eat potato-
The script is wonderful, aching with fairy-
Human collision
There's just one world in the world of Crash, one in which all the sharp dichotomies and contrasts of Unleashed come, well, crashing down into a swamp of fear and anger and bitterness, where black and white and every color in between live together but not comfortably, engaging in an endless vicious-
With its clear and obvious choices -- think Eddie Izzard's "cake? or death?" bit -- Unleashed really is a fairy tale next to Crash, where half the time when you think you've got a grasp on what's the "right" thing to do and the "right" way to live, you turn out to be wrong, even if the other guy is wrong, too. How the world can possibly be such a mess, such a complicated human disaster, and yet one film can clearly and simply cut through all the bullshit to lay bare the foundations of the mess is startling and mysterious to me, but that is the cinematic sorcery at the heart of Crash: it holds up a mirror to reality that is so incisive and so harshly honest that, at moments, it sears right through you and jolts you with its wisdom.
This is a sprawling story of people getting spat on or kicked in the gut and paying it forward, spitting and kicking the next person in line, and even though some of the reasons for that are ostensibly tied to race here, that's almost incidental -- that wouldn't have to be the case, but in a melting pot like Los Angeles, chances are good that the next person you meet is not going to look a helluva lot like you. It makes it easier, for most people here, that that next person you're in a malicious mood to kick just happens to be the same color -- not your color -- of the person who just kicked you for no reason. It's not that Crash ever justifies racism or general meanness or exculpates bigots or miserable bastards of other stripes... but it's looking past the surface to find a root cause that maybe is fixable if we can pinpoint it.
And that root cause, Crash suggests, is fear. Man, this is a hard film to get through -- all the characters are so afraid and worn out and on edge just getting through the day, and even the ones that you're dead set against liking or at least begrudgingly sympathizing with at first eventually wear you down once their frailties are exposed: like Sandra Bullock's (Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous, Two Weeks Notice) bitchy rich suburbanite and Matt Dillon's (One Night at McCool's, There's Something About Mary) rough-
But there is one devastating moment in the film, a scene that I don't imagine I will ever forget the power of, in which one character is suddenly confronted with the frangible humanity of someone he'd previously dehumanized in the basest way. The genius of Crash comes down to this one electrifying moment, when the vicious cycle is turned upside down and we -- audience and fictional characters alike -- are shocked out of rote habitual thinking and forced to really recognize that everyone else is just as alive and scared as we ourselves are.
‘Crash’ won the Best Picture Oscar for 2005
Unleashed
viewed at a semipublic screening with an audience of critics and ordinary moviegoers
rated R for strong violent content, language and some sexuality/nudity
official site | IMDB
Crash
viewed at a private screening with an audience of critics
rated R for language, sexual content and some violence
official site | IMDB










