What?!
No conspiracy?!
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A Date
With Density. by
Jon Dunmore © 25 Aug 2006.
The pitch: Two men get trapped in a mine shaft. Nothing happens. Then they get
rescued. The end. The suits harrumph: where's the drama? The screenwriter and
her agent scramble: well, we flash back to generic good times with families and
watch the trapped guys banally discuss heroism and loyalty and STARSKY AND HUTCH. The
screenwriter and her agent squirm: the suits aren't buying it. Seen it a thousand
times in movies and LASSIE episodes and probably on GILLIGAN'S ISLAND.
The
screenwriter lightbulbs. Change "mine shaft" to "World Trade Center."
Suddenly: funding. And now, not only can they append the wholly untrue "based
on a true story" with impunity, they can also afford Oliver Stone and Nicolas
Cage and Maggie Gyllenhaal and Maria Bello
But
it's still just "two guys trapped in a mine shaft."
Oliver
Stone's WORLD TRADE CENTER is not about the World Trade Center. Nor does
it posit stances or pose questions on conspiracies, religionism, racism, political
ideologies, oil collusion or White House incompetence. Which raises the obvious
question: why then make a movie about the World Trade Center at all?
To
invoke a known audience. "World Trade Center" has become synonymous
with "9-11" (itself a contraction of a culture-shocking event) and both
have become shorthand for identifying the modern version of the Common Enemy and
proselytizing on courage and heroism and misplaced patriotism. Attaching that
moniker to any media - however tangentially - sells tickets.
WORLD TRADE CENTER is about two beat cops, John McLoughlin (Nicolas Cage) and Will
Jimeno (Michael Peña) who are trapped in the rubble of Tower 1's collapse
before they even get the chance to rescue one civilian. (Guess we've added yet
another criterion to the term "heroism": anyone who intends to rescue
people but needs to be rescued himself after doing nothing.)
The
first act is restrained film-making at its best, as Stone shows us Tuesday, September
11, 2001, dawning like any other mundane workday, New York populace going through
the motions of city life. Comparisons with the unobtrusive camera of Paul Greengrass's
superior UNITED 93 are unavoidable, and - like
that movie - a vicarious thrill builds in our bones, for we know something that
the New Yorkers don't: that today is going to be so far removed from mundane it
will gouge out its own vernacular in history.
The
first intimation that there is something horribly awry with this particular September
11th is an ominous plane-shaped shadow whooshing over the cityscape
Stone does not explicitly show airplanes impacting Towers (it would remove
focus from his characters), but his scenes of destruction and mayhem are as good
as cinema gets. And though there are still whiners puling "too soon,"
the audience yet extracts a rubbernecker's glee from watching this unimaginable
tragedy unfold with astoundingly seamless special effects from a Ground Zero ringside
seat. Stone has also captured excellent performances with the shock,
surprise, horror and incredulity of the officers arriving at Ground Zero. Those
of us who were not there could never hope to imagine what uncontainable emotions
overwhelmed each rescuer's breast as he gazed up at a tableau which the wildest
imagination could never conjure. And
after injecting us into the heart of the action, with a breath-stopping sequence
trapping our stars under mountains of rubble, the film - like the World Trade
Center - collapses. For there is nowhere to go - literally and figuratively -
and it becomes obvious that inexperienced screenwriter Andrea Berloff has formulaically
set up a tearjerker just waiting to happen.
There's
a fine line between restrained and boring. And Stone's hand seems so stultified
by the gutless executives who funded this project that he resignedly points his
camera over the wrong side of that line. Though he tries to retain relevance to
the 9-11 Götterdämmerung (by inserting actual newsreel footage
of slimy Mayor Giuliani, faux-President Bush, reports on United Flight 93, the
Pentagon crash, et al), even the earth-shuddering impact of the WTC Towers
collapsing is soon forgotten when the story turns its focus on the wives of the
trappees (Maggie Gyllenhaal and Maria Bello) and their maudlin, Academy-tilted
performances. It turns into just "two guys trapped in a mine shaft."
The
movie also loses what little objectivity it strived for when Jimeno launches into
an extended "heroism" speech (which veritably bends over
and spreads its cheeks for the hero mongers). Meanwhile, Cage's initial heartfelt
performance of McLoughlin diminishes over time, as he uses up the film's one allocated
swear word (as decreed by the MPAA for PG-13 films) early in his desperation and
then becomes non-believable, as no one in this mind-breaking situation ever swears
after that one transgression, making it all as painfully PG-13 as any Freddie
Prinze Junior debacle.
And while Jimeno has dumb Jesus dreams, McLoughlin
inertly flashes back to his four kids with the hands-down hottest MILF in the
neighborhood (Bello). The flashbacks are smartly executed: one partner is shown
beginning the flashback and as the syrup reaches danger levels, the other partner
is shown at the tail end of the flashback, making it seem like both partners were
flashing back on the same LEAVE IT TO BEAVER moment. (If any of our lives
were half as idyllic as the "real life" characters portrayed in any
9-11 movie, the Muslims who razed the Towers would have defected over to white-bread
Christianity millennia ago. Or maybe that's why they razed them.)
Nothing
continues to happen, proving conclusively that not every true story is worth telling.
The
rescue of the two men contains its fair share of nail-biting and was apparently
instigated by an ex-Marine, Dave Karnes (Michael Shannon), who abandoned his job
in Connecticut and traveled to Ground Zero because "God called him."
(While talking to Karnes, God must have neglected to head on over to Emma E. Booker
Elementary School in Florida and talk to Bush about the attacks. Without a direct
word from God, how could anyone be expected to abandon the compelling Pet
Goat to lead a country? Evidently, only after the attacks does God
deign to start talking with W.) As we learn of Karnes's delusional
nature (obsessing over Marine ethos to the point of asking to be addressed as
"Staff Sergeant"), we realize this is the exact type of bulldog
fundamentalist bred by the American Armed Forces, and that it wasn't God calling
him after all - it was his red neck.
Staunch
performances by the supporting cast (Stephen Dorff, Frank Whaley, Brad William
Henke) add little to the pat formula. To
its credit, the story does not make it seem like rescuing its two stars puts an
end to the horror, and the unfinished nature of the rescues and aftermath are
noted; Jimeno's family walk past a wall posted with hundreds of missing person
flyers, Karnes emerges from the rescue rubble talking of retribution, Dorff's
policeman laments the multitude not accounted for, and McLoughlin himself had
to undergo 2 years of medically-induced comas and 27 surgeries - well, that'll
happen when a World Trade Center falls on you. Or maybe he just wanted to look
like John Travolta again. Only
20 people were pulled out of the WTC rubble alive. Only eighteen more True Stories
with movie deals to go
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