Crying Game Reviews

Crying Game

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MrsNormanMaine
Epinions.com ID: MrsNormanMaine
Member: Vicki Lester
Location: Hollywood, California
Reviews written: 371
Trusted by: 247 members
About Me: Glamorous Hollywood Star! Still Entertaining After All These Years...

Ah, But Underneath...

Written: May 30 '01 (Updated May 30 '01)
  • User Rating: Excellent
  • Action Factor:
  • Special Effects:
  • Suspense:
Pros:Superb script. Excellent performances.
Cons:Occasionally stagey rather than cinematic.
The Bottom Line: Neil Jordan's small, moody film, is a surprisingly deep meditation on the nature of humanity.

Plot Details: This opinion reveals minor details about the movie's plot.

Norman has recovered from his disappointment at the delay of his new film project, and from the hangover which accompanied his drowning of his sorrows. He and Nurse Tameka sailed out of Chateau Maine this morning, along with his pills, his breathing apparatus, his port-a-potty, and his emergency defibrillator to go to a meeting with his management about other potential projects during this unexpected hiatus. They returned five minutes later as Norman had, once again, forgotten to put on any clothes and they thought it unwise for him to stroll through Century City in the nude. We found a nice Versace ensemble for him and they were again dispatched. I spent the morning going through the new pages of Toxy Foxy, Troma Studio's new musical sequel to 'The Little Foxes', in which Regina moves to Chicago and pairs up with the Toxic Avenger. I'm still not sure about this project. Norman thinks I should do it but I am uncertain about the scenes in the Union Stockyards where I lead five hundred head of beef cattle in a slaughterhouse ballet.

The 'VickiWear' project appears to be on schedule. Mr. Carducci called and said the first cargo container of Indonesian seamstresses had arrived at the plant and had started on the 'Sound of Music' and 'Tobacco Road' collections. I'm thinking about adding a Samuel Beckett look based on 'Waiting for Godot' and 'Endgame', a sort of timeless clown look, only with more bugle beads. Bob Mackie hasn't been able to come up with the right look yet but anyone who can make Barbie look stunning at forty, should be able to handle modern existentialist comedy. Wal-Mart and Pic-n-Save are so delighted with the VickiWear concept that they promise major displays in their apparel departments when the first designs are released.

Feeling satisfied at having done a good days work, I retired to the home theater where I stumbled across a film I had not seen for some years, Neil Jordan's 'The Crying Game' from 1992. The film created a furor when Miramax first released it to theaters due to a celebrated plot twist (which is now well known but I will not spoil it here) which dominated cocktail conversation. (Have you seen it? Did you know? Were you shocked? Blah, blah, blah...). This scene and its revelation, somewhat shocking to American standards of film decorum, tended to overshadow the films many other merits and it was interesting to approach it with fresh eyes and knowing how the plot would work out. The famous plot twist is not the only major shocker in the film, there are least two other moments that are equally harrowing and send the film spinning in a fresh direction. Hollywood should learn a thing or two from this. The audience is not as dim as it would like to believe.

The film sets its tone during the opening credits sequence, a slow pan, looking out from the shadows under a bridge, at a traveling carnival on the further shore while Percy Sledge's 'When a Man Loves a Woman' plays in the background from the carnival PA system. This is a film about alienation, relationships, and ultimately, what it means to be human, independent of the labels we wear due to ethnicity, gender, idealogy and the like. At the carnival we meet Jody (Forest Whitaker), a black British soldier stationed in Northern Ireland to combat the troubles there. Jody is seduced and then captured by Jude (Miranda Richardson) and her IRA allies Fergus (perennial Jordan favorite Stephen Rea) and Peter (Adrian Dunbar) and the other members of their cell. If the British do not release an IRA figure they are holding, they will execute Jody in retaliation. Fergus makes the mistake of being an honest and decent man in an uncaring environment, befriending their hostage. Jordan shoots these scenes in an autumnal, elegaic tone, so we sense that this relationship is ultimately doomed, no matter what happens. The growing friendship, frowned upon by the other IRA members, consists predominantly of conversation and seems to have started life as a stage play, rather than a screenplay, as it quietly and effectively sets up all that is to come. The hostage situation is ultimately resolved, in an entirely unexpected manner, but absolutely true to the nature of the characters as defined, and Fergus finds himself on the run. He hides himself in London where he tries to enter Jody's life, meeting and eventually falling for his beautiful girlfriend, Dil (Jaye Davidson).

A complex web of relationships with unexpected turns and dangers is set in motion with these developments. Jordan lets us explore the nature of humanity, both individually and collectively and touches upon some remarkable themes in the subtext of his screenplay. Most of the more interesting ideas are not explicitly stated but to be savored later, in reflection. I left marvelling at how much I was thinking about the human connections between individuals and how we tend to muck them up with preconceived ideas and prejudices. Neil Jordan won a well deserved Oscar for his effort. The superficial (The IRA, the flight, the hiding in London) are really of no importance in this film and it could have been made with any setting or background.

Stephen Rea, who vies with William H. Macy in the Huckleberry Hound look-alike contest on an annual basis, is a soulful hero. His job as protagonist is not so much to act but to grow and learn, which he does. Ultimately making sacrifices that not even he completely understands. Rea must be given credit for making the character transformations completely belivable, even during somewhat artificial moments. Miranda Richardson is compelling as the villain of the piece, with an ability to transform herself and a soul of ice, she is the antithesis of Rea's Fergus. One sees that she ends up in the IRA as she is not capable of making a human connection and has to make political ones instead. Jaye Davidson brings quiet grace, to the pivotal role of Dil. Her character is undereducated, down on her luck, and emotionally needy but we recognize her as being human and worthwhile, despite all her faults. Forest Whitaker, as Jody, suffers some by comparison. The fault being primarily in the script which calls for him to be a static victim. We have little sense of him as a man outside of this role.

I thoroughly recommend this film to thoughtful adults and older teens. It's not eye candy, but nourishment for the mind and soul.

Carnival games. Canvas hoods. Gauzy drapes. Christmas wreath dress. Multiple haircuts. Cricket batting. Slimy construction company owner. Friendly bar tender. Assassination plots. Boy George song.

Recommended: Yes


Viewing Format: VHS
Video Occasion: Fit for Friday Evening
Suitability For Children: Not suitable for Children of any age

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