Just a little heads up for my readers (assuming both of you are still reading): Scotty's Movies N' Tunes is going on a little hiatus, possibly for a year. I'll be working on my new blog, tentatively titled Eastern Trails, documenting the adventures of me and my wife as we embark on a journey volunteering on a series of farms and such throughout the eastern United States. I'll try to update that one a little more frequently than I did Movies N' Tunes, hopefully once a week. If I find time to post anything to this blog, I will, but I can't make any promises. One thing I can promise is that I'll resume it once we return to our home base of Tucson, AZ sometime next year.
Thanks and appreciation to anyone who took the time to read this blog. No blogger can expect to draw much of an audience, and those who gave it just a little of their attention have earned my gratitude.
See you on the road!
Saturday, May 5, 2012
THE GREY
I should probably
warn anyone reading this who hasn't seen the movie that there might
be a spoiler, of sorts, even though I have no intention of giving too
much away. It's just that I can't talk about what I thought was the
coolest aspect of this film without going into the ending a little,
so forgive me if I accidentally—or just carelessly—ruin your
viewing of The Grey with anything you come across here.
Besides, knowing the ending won't ruin what is ultimately a
satisfying experience, assuming you like your entertainment kind of
gritty.
Any movie that starts
with Liam Neeson sticking the barrel of a rifle in his mouth promises
to be pretty dark, so you can't go into this hoping for a happy
ending. The title's kind of a giveaway—what would you expect from
a movie called The Grey? What other kind of movie would that
title be appropriate for? Something about the Civil War?
Depressing. About food? Disgusting. About elderly people? Boring.
No, grey is the color they invented Prozac for, it's the color of
suicide and horrible weather. It has little to no positive emotional
connotations. The filmmakers chose well.
Which is not to say
that The Grey is a downbeat experience. Far from it. Nearly
everything about it is gripping and intense, there's a good deal of
suspense throughout, and I believe anyone watching it would have a
hard time not picturing themselves in the same situation and
wondering if they could push themselves to the same extremes.
Neeson plays a man who
shoots wolves for a living in order to protect the lives of oil rig
workers in Alaska. One of the opening scenes of the film depicts him
taking out a wolf as it charges a couple of men, oblivious to what's
coming their way. It becomes clear early on that he's dealing with
some serious personal issues...As I said, he almost shoots himself in
the first few minutes. A little later, he boards a flight with a
number of workers, and on the way the plane goes down in a remote
part of the Alaskan wilderness in the middle of winter. Neeson and
several other men survive the crash, but have little food and not
much idea how to keep themselves alive in a hostile environment.
Along with the cold, a
hungry and very territorial pack of wolves makes life miserable for
these men. They have no choice but to try to find help, and that
involves a difficult, grueling trek across an unforgiving tundra.
This leads to a lot of tension between the characters, not to mention
some unproductive chest-thumping. I liked this element of the story,
mainly because I think it's pretty likely that a group of macho guys
like this would have a hard time working together under such trying
circumstances without somebody vying for the position of alpha male.
That person, of course, winds up being Liam Neeson, in case you had
any doubts. None of this comes across as clichéd or obvious, and
instead feels like a natural part of the narrative. It's fitting for
a story depicting these kinds of characters, and the actors bring it
all off convincingly.
It's a pretty grim
story of survival. I don't think I'm giving too much away when I say
most of the men don't make it. Between the wolves, the cold, and the
usual injuries that occur while tromping around blind in an
unfamiliar world—or trying to shimmy down a rope over a yawning
chasm—these guys don't have much working in their favor. It gets
to a point where you wonder if any of them are going to live.
That's what's so
surprising about The Grey, and what finally makes it a
rewarding viewing experience. Hollywood almost never makes movies
this genuinely intense or bleak. Oh sure, lots of Hollywood movies
look bleak or have dark themes, but few of them really go the
distance the way this one does. The only other one I can think of is
Se7en—no happy ending there. Even Fight Club and
Schindler's List sort of ended on high notes. The
Grey is a slightly different breed of storytelling.
In truth, this isn't
really a movie about survival at all. The fact that most of the cast
doesn't survive effectively underscores that point. What The
Grey is trying to tell us goes a bit deeper than that. This is a
story about the inevitability of death, and humankind's relationship
with its own mortality. All of us will die, and the only difference
between us in that regard is how we deal with it. Some of us are
stricken down without warning, some die violently, others quietly
accept their fate and wait for death to come, and still others choose
to fight it until their last. This film pretty much covers the full
range.
It's Neeson's character
who chooses to fight, and I have to say, the last final scene in this
movie is one of the most badass things I've seen in a while. I'd say
it's totally the equal of Chow Yun Fat sliding down a banister while
shooting two pistols at the same time in Hard-Boiled, or Clint
Eastwood blowing away a gang of rangy outlaws in A Fistful of
Dollars. Neeson faces down the alpha wolf of the very pack that
has been picking off his companions with nothing but a knife in one
hand a few broken airplane liquor bottles wedged between his fingers
in the other. The confrontation is executed perfectly, with zero
pandering to the audience. It is simply the toughest, baddest,
grittiest thing I've witnessed in a movie for years.
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