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Dark City.
Reviewer: James
Berardinelli
THE
CROW will forever be remembered as the final performance of buddingstar
Brandon Lee, who died as a result of a tragic behind-the- scenes
accident. However, as intense as the hype associated with Lee's
death was, it could not obscure the most impressive aspect of the
1994 feature: director Alex Proyas' startling, unforgettable vision.
It's rare for any film maker, whether a veteran or a newcomer, to
create the kind of compelling, endlessly-fascinating environment
that Proyas brought to the screen in THE CROW. Now, with his follow-up
movie, DARK CITY, the director incredibly manages to one-up himself.
No movie can ever have
too much atmosphere, and DARK CITY exudes it from every frame of
celluloid. Proyas' world isn't just a playground for his characters
to romp in - it's an ominous place where viewers can get lost. We
don't just coolly observe the bizarre, ever-changing skyline; we
plunge into the city's benighted depths, following the protagonist
as he explores the secrets of this grim place where the sun never
shines.
DARK CITY has as stunning
a visual texture as that of any movie that I've seen. Line up the
other recent candidates, which include Tim Burton's BATMAN, Ridley
Scott's BLADE RUNNER, Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro's DELICATESSEN
and THE CITY OF LOST CHILDREN, and Terry Gilliam's BRAZIL, and DARK
CITY equals or bests them all. Visually, this film isn't just impressive,
it's a tour de force.
Thankfully, DARK CITY
doesn't have an "all style, no substance" problem, either,
because there's a mind-challenging story to go along with the eye
candy. Proyas hasn't written this film for the passive viewer. To
become involved in DARK CITY, thinking is mandatory.
Unless you're puzzling
out the answers alongside John Murdoch (Rufus Sewell), you're going
to miss more than one revelation. Very little is spelled out in
this movie; the answers are all there, but you have to recognize
them for what they are. How often do we get features like this,
that don't pander to the least common denominator?
Ironically, two months
into 1998, my top three films to date (SLIDING DOORS, OPEN YOUR
EYES, and DARK CITY) all question the nature of identity and reality.
DARK CITY is much like OPEN YOUR EYES (which was shown at the 1998
Sundance Film Festival and will open theatrically later this year
in North America) - both are meditations on the importance of memory
to an individual, and how everyone's personality is comprised of
the sum total of his or her remembrances.
In the way DARK CITY
tinkers with the boundaries of what's real and what isn't, it recalls
THE GAME. Some viewers may also be reminded of TOTAL RECALL, although
Proyas' film plunges deep into issues that the Schwarzenegger vehicle
used as icing for an action-laden cake.
DARK CITY opens by immersing
the audience in the midst of a fractured, nightmarish narrative.
The protagonist, who later learns that his name is John Murdoch,
has amnesia. He begins his "new life" as a full-grown
adult naked in a bath tub, uncertain of how he got there. His only
company in the grungy hotel suite is the nude body of a dead prostitute.
Did he kill her or not? He doesn't know. Suddenly, Murdoch receives
a phone call from someone named Dr. Schreber (Kiefer Sutherland),
who claims to have his best interests at heart. Schreber warns him
to get out of the hotel immediately.
Soon, without a clue
about his identity, Murdoch is fleeing from corpse-like creatures
with incredible mental powers. But it turns out that Murdoch is
not defenseless against his enemies - his mind, like theirs, can
shape reality, although he doesn't understand how to harness his
abilities. Soon, his quest to unearth his past links him up with
Emma (Jennifer Connelly), a woman who is supposedly his wife, and
Police Inspector Bumstead (William Hurt), who believes Murdoch to
be innocent of the prostitute's murder.
But Murdoch's small group
of allies offer little help when it comes to dealing with his powerful,
ghoulish adversaries, the amoral Mr. Book (Ian Richardson) and Mr.
Hand (Richard O'Brien).
Proyas' inspiration for
his Dark City appears to be New York during the first half of this
century, but, using a style that is part science fiction, part noir
thriller, and part gothic horror, he has embellished it to create
a surreal place unlike no other.
Film lovers will find
that DARK CITY is overflowing with references to classic pictures
- everything from the silent DRACULA adaptation, NOSFERATU, to Hitchcock's
masterful VERTIGO. Throw in a little TWILIGHT ZONE and STAR TREK
for good measure. Even if you get bored with the story-line, which
is extremely unlikely, there are still plenty of these little details
to absorb your attention.
Proyas' excellent vision extends to his casting choices. Rufus Sewell
(currently appearing in DANGEROUS BEAUTY) makes a perfect John Murdoch,
since he is equally good as a confused, desperate refugee and an
avenging angel. Kiefer Sutherland, affecting a limp and a strange
accent, evokes images of a Nazi scientist who's more concerned with
the experiment than with its victims.
Jennifer Connelly, who
looks the part of a classy, black-and-white screen siren, plays
her femme fatale role to a "T". And William Hurt is sufficiently
gruff in the kind of part that Humphrey Bogart would have been at
home in.
If there's a flaw with
DARK CITY (and it's a small one, to be sure), it's that the film
takes a little too long forging a link between the audience and
Murdoch. For the first thirty minutes, we're left floating, watching
the confounding narrative unfold, marveling over the strange occurrences,
and waiting for film to really grab us. Once that happens, it's
difficult not to become completely engrossed.
So, is the lengthy setup
necessary? Almost certainly, and, as I said, any slow spots are
only a tiny blemish on the face of a film that offers a gratifyingly
original and stunning science fiction experience.
Copyright 1998
James Berardinelli
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