 The
"Unequivocally Reprehensible" Memo
The
Memo's Greatest Hits!
Praising Private Ryan
There's Something About Dumb Comedy
Out of Sight: What a difference
a director makes
The Truman Show: Jim Carrey's new clothes |

Praising Private Ryan...
Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan may
be the best movie ever made about heroism and honor in wartime. And that's because
it shows how heroic conduct can be extraordinarily difficult, instinctive, impulsive,
deliberate, and lucky -- all at the same time. In the chaos of the landing at Omaha
Beach, soldiers' flesh rips away like wet tissue -- when metal meets muscle, the latter
doesn't have a chance. Men are dropping right and left, before they -- or anyone
around them -- even knows what's hit them or where it came from. In a situation like
this, a person is reduced to pure survival instinct. And pushing up the beach --
particularly surviving the push up the beach -- becomes a heroic act. As
Sam Fuller's alter ego put it at the end of The Big Red One (Fuller's 1980
platoon-movie masterpiece, starring Lee Marvin and based on his own WW II
experiences): "The only glory of war is survival."
The Big Red One makes you feel the truth
in that statement, and Saving Private Ryan explores it even further. (I
wish Fuller could have been around to see this movie; I would love to have heard his
reaction to it.) For all the nostalgia about WW II as "The Last Good War,"
Spielberg demonstrates that combat is combat -- and to the people in the middle of it,
it's a pure hell of chaos and horror -- whether in a French village or a jungle in
Vietnam. At the end, a man who survived WW II, and whose comrades died in part to
save his life, asks his wife to tell him he's led a good life, been a good man.
That, the movie suggests, is also a definition of heroism: If the deaths of soldiers
are to have some meaning, then the burden is on the living to make their lives worth while
-- to "earn it," as one character says.
I'd begun to despair that anybody even bothered to think
about "being a good person" or "doing the right thing" anymore.
Most of the people I'm around day to day seem to worry mostly about their career and
financial ambitions rather than "leading a good life." The idea of doing
something just because it's good and right, and not because of the fear of damnation or
some other external threat or force, may strike us as all the more extraordinary in the
late 1990s. And I sure didn't think anybody would make a movie that could put
across such an idea with such power and conviction.
Anthony Lane in The New Yorker (you know,
that magazine Tina Brown used to work for...) has a phrase that perfectly describes
what Spielberg achieves in his battle footage: "high-speed Bosch."
It puzzles me, though, how Lane (and a number of other critics I've read) have sought to
praise Private Ryan by dismissing the filmmaking skills behind it. Just
because you don't notice them, doesn't mean they aren't there. It's just that
Spielberg's masterful technique, his astonishing fluency in the medium, is employed for a
different purpose here than it was in, say, "Close Encounters."
Lane writes that the half-hour opening sequence of Saving Private
Ryan "provides what must be the most telling battle scenes ever made, largely because
they tell you almost nothing. They just show." Well, nothing could be
further from the truth. In movies, there's no such thing as "just show" --
from the crudest cinema verite to the slickest big-screen music video, the medium is
the message. Technique is technique, artistry is artistry, whether you're conscious
of it or not.
Lane is quite right when he says that the
"sense of historical duty weighed heavily on the body of the action" in
the much-praised Schindler's List. But I don't think I'm merely quibbling if I
take issue with his next sentence: "The Omaha Beach sequence, on the other hand,
simply throws a barrage of detail at you and leaves you to work it out for
yourself." There's nothing "simple" -- or random -- about the way the
Omaha Beach sequence is put together. Oliver Stone may mix film stocks and speeds to
no particular end, but Spielberg knows exactly what he's doing from shot to shot.
The sequence wouldn't be anywhere near as effective if he didn't.
One moment, the images are jerky and blurry,
charged with nervous energy like a slightly under-cranked silent newsreel. Bullets
and explosions whiz and bang all around. Then, there's a concussive blow, and the
action shifts into slow motion -- your ears filled with an equally disorienting
roar. Conveying impressions like these, getting you to see through somebody else's
eyes (whether it's a soldier at Normandy or a suburban kid), is what moviemaking is
about.
When Lane acknowledges that "Spielberg's objective in these
opening minutes is to... make a film that doesn't look like a film -- or, at least, to
arrange his drama so carefully, and with such instinctive fidelity to the illusion of
chaos, that people watching it will forget that they are sitting in a movie theater"
-- well, he's right on the mark.
In contrasting Spielberg's approach to gunfire in Private
Ryan with Sam Peckinpah's in The Wild Bunch (and Cross of Iron),
Lane says, "This is not to deny that Spielberg himself is ceaselessly artful; it's
just that his art is relentlessly self-camouflaging." OK, but I still think
what he's observing has less to do with those movies than it does with the way we're
conditioned to respond to certain stylistic devices. Give us some grainy
black-and-white stock, or smeary video, and a hand-held camera and what we see feels more
visceral, spontaneous, "real" -- like a documentary. But those techniques
are the result of the choices just as deliberate as the ones behind a majestic CinemaScope
crane shot. When The Wild Bunch was new, Peckinpah's jarring shifts
between wide shots and close-ups, rapid-fire images and slow-mo ones, quick cuts and
excruciatingly drawn-out ones, hit like a series of punches to the gut. People cringed,
flinched -- even fainted.
For a perfect illustration of this, see (Spielberg
pal) Brian DePalma's brilliantly subversive 1970 political/porno comedy, Hi Mom!
In the middle of the movie, it suddenly turns into a b&w "National Intellectual
Television" documentary called "Be Black, Baby," about a theater troupe
that abuses its audience to give them the "experience" of what it's like to be
black in America. Of course, it -- and the movie of it, which is presented in a
little round-cornered frame in the middle of the otherwise black screen, like a little TV
-- is totally staged. But because of the "documentary" style, this segment
makes audiences very uncomfortable; every time I've shown it, people have walked
out in the middle. The illusion of aesthetic distance is gone -- until the movie's
protagonist (Robert DeNiro) shows up playing a cop, and then you can almost hear people
sigh in relief: "Oh yeah, it's only a movie..."
NEXT: Something
About Dumb Comedy
|