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NYFF Reviews:

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  -Goodbye Dragon Inn
  -Good Morning, Night
  -The Flower of Evil
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  -Since Otar Left
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  -21 Grams
  -The Barbarian Invasions
  -Notes of the Ozu
   Retrospective


reviews:
  -Intolerable Cruelty
  -Pieces of April


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  Psycho Killer, qu'est que c'est?
ELEPHANT
dir. Gus Van Sant, U.S., Fine Line Features


There are certain people who would go a long way to redeem Gus Van Sant’s inexcusable shot-for-shot recreation of Hitchcock’s Psycho by arguing passionately that if anything, this peculiar remake is an implied argument for an overlooked homoerotic reading of the masterpiece, a slightly more literalized suggestion to what the original might have only expressed metaphorically. Viggo Mortensen’s bare bottom, the casting of an openly lesbian actress as Marion Crane, or Vince Vaughn’s mincing performance of Norman Bates are all manifestations, so the argument goes, of what could have been back then only implicit in Hitchcock’s work. But still, even if this were Van Sant’s main interest, it is still unclear to me how putting the original metaphor tag on the film’s sleeve might excuse its artistic chutzpah. Van Sant’s worst mistake in making this film seems to be his failure to realize that manifesting the implicit in Hitchcock’s work undermines the original intention, an acute analysis of the anxieties, violence, and psychic destructiveness which lie behind human sexuality, and maintain patriarchy. To render sexuality explicit is simply to miss the point. Elephant, Van Sant’s ambitious new endeavor about real-life psycho killing in American high schools—a problem about as easy to ignore as an elephant in the living room—is another effort to reach for what is hidden, to dig into what only lies beneath, and then to show it. With much more sensitive subject matter this time, Van Sant realized he might be aiming too high again, and tried to avoid making the obvious mistakes. He couldn’t afford to be too simplistic, condescending, or preachy if he wanted his voice to be heard. Sadly though, by retreating again to crude thematic explicitness adjoined by aestheticism which often gives ground to mannerism, his elephant, ironically, remains intact, almost unnoticed.

Winner of the Palme d’Or and Best Director prizes at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, Elephant atmospherically follows several suburban high school students throughout one memorable day in American history, after which school life would never quite be the same again. Shot in a recently de-commissioned high school in Portland, the film penetrates the students’ worlds, tracking them during the course of their day as they walk along the school’s labyrinthine corridors, classrooms, and locker rooms. Helped by his brilliant DP Harris Savides—who keeps himself busy exploring the different possibilities of the long take—Van Sant captures the alienation and solitude that characterizes so much of adolescence. It is when each one of these blissfully dazed kids is isolated in the frame, embodying his or her space in a disaffected environment, that Elephant’s existential formalism takes its full effect, and any idealized notion of a close-knit community breaks down. As with his abstract improvisational experiment Gerry, Van Sant strips his film of almost any narrative or character development, and sets forth to achieve documentary-like realism predicated upon only a sufficient amount of artifice. Intimate penetrating close-ups, astounding observational traveling long takes, and a soundtrack comprised of both musique concrete (electronic music based on natural sounds made to get rid of artifice) and traces of Beethoven are intertwined to support a constantly retracing chronology—events [non-events??] are revisited from different perspectives (a technique Van Sant openly borrows from Bela Tarr’s Sátántangó). This balance, however, is difficult to achieve, and by walking this thin line between naturalistic realism and overtly stylized postcard imagery, Van Sant too often calls attention to the aesthetic form and the artificiality of his own creation. Trying a bit too hard to prove his artistic merits to his supportive parents in HBO, Van Sant forgets he needs to think of his characters as subjects, not objects. Because if the kids are not alright, they deserve a better treatment than a purely aesthetic one. Besides, a film which seeks to maturely revisit a collective trauma could not (or should not) feel so often like a horror movie—the camera slowly wanders corridors in a terrifying spatial closure right out of The Shining, the dreaded imminent slaughter is saved for the eagerly awaited climax, and, yes, even an African-American named Benny, introduced into the narrative just minutes before he is shot, must die.

Which brings me back to the problem of explicitness. During the NYFF press conference, Van Sant made it clear that his intentions were obviously different than Michael Moore’s in Bowling for Columbine. With almost no previous research done about high school shootings (besides reading the papers and watching a tape of Columbine), Van Sant was not trying to grasp at any hard-core insights about the massacre. His Elephant is intended to operate as a "thought machine," from which the audience is required to extract the right answers themselves. In other words, it resists instant interpretation precisely because it refuses to impose it. However, by trying so hard not to provide a one-stop solution during the last 15 minutes of the murderers, Van Sant fires in all directions in a mindless, superficial manner, thus betraying his own attempt to provide context for the massacre in the first half of the film. In a condensed puritan blend of social and moral clichés about the roots of violence, he impregnates the shooters’ last afternoon with violent video games, Nazi documentaries, internet gun shopping, and even a sudden Larry Clark moment, where the two boys exchange an intimate farewell kiss in the shower (I can only thank Van Sant for not listening to his non-actors, who originally suggested the killers would instead gang-rape a girl before they go on their mission). Finally, on their drive to school, both kids momentarily become Travis Bickles, as one clarifies to the other: “…most importantly, have fun, man.” (After all, revenge is a dish best served cold, right?) Nuanced subtlety in the first part is replaced by simplistic transparency in the second.

Many critics labeled Elephant as irresponsible, accusing it for not being insightful enough, or for not providing sufficient context for the massacre. This, however, seems to be missing the point. Because if there’s one thing Van Sant achieved in this film by painstakingly observing a typical high school day, is to provide context, and a fairly sufficient one. What I still fail to understand, though, is why he needed to offhandedly disperse further moralizations when he had it all in his hands in the first place. So we come back to Psycho, wondering if both films, hardly cautious about their thematic challenges, can be seriously taken as anything else besides mere exercises in form.
—OHAD LANDESMAN

Elephant is currently in limited release.




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