It didn’t occur to me until this last viewing that this is
the Ridley Scott picture I’ve been interested in seeing for a long time. But first I wanna be clear that I’m not that
big a fan of Ridley, personally I enjoy more of brother Tony Scott’s
films. Yes, Alien is a masterpiece and probably one of my favorite movies, as
well as series, of all time. However,
all of his other movies aren’t that great (including Blade Runner, man is it boring).
What I do appreciate about his work though, and what keeps me coming
back, is that he always paints a very pretty visual picture. Even if the story is lacking he makes his shit
look fucking awesome.
Black Rain’s
cinematographer was Howard Atherton (Fatal
Attraction, Bad Boys, Indecent Proposal, Deep Rising) but at some point he
dropped out during filming. It’s unclear
how far along they were but it seems that at least half the thing was shot. So then to replace Atherton the incredible
Jan de Bont (Die Hard, Basic Instinct,
Dir: Speed, Twister) was brought
in. Both are formidable guys and whoever
shot the damn picture it looks fucking beautiful. There’s so much playing with colors and
shadows that you can tell these two were on top of their game for this
one. After a little while I consciously
tried to look for crappy shots but I couldn’t really find any. Of course there are some that aren’t as
interesting, especially in the context of an entire movie when you have so much
to choose from, but there’s always something nice to look at in the frame.
Combine that with a gritty story about two NYC cops, with Michael
Douglas (Falling Down, Disclosure) and
Andy Garcia (The Untouchables, Beverly
Hills Chihuahua) as the leads no less, that witness a public Yakuza mob hit,
by way of throat slitting, and have to escort the murdering crime boss back to
Japan only to have him escape once he’s on his home turf. The Americans stick around and pursue the
investigation even though they’re not allowed to which leads to culture clashes
as well as a fish out of water scenario.
The plot is classic western with transporting a high powered
villain, rival gangs, (essentially) outlaw cops and Japan has kind of a lawless
frontier feel here in that it’s foreign territory where the Americans stick out
and don’t know the rules (both formal and street). Also their lives are in greater danger than
normal because they aren’t allowed to carry their guns and they don’t know the
town so they don’t have a place to hide.
You’ve also got classic action movie tropes like a cop that
plays by his own rules and vigilante justice that are at the fore. Even though this mostly takes place in Japan this
is an American style movie all the way.
So if you’re looking for a blend you won’t get it here.
Michael Douglas’ character is also classic: he wears a black
leather coat, street clothes, aviator sunglasses, has long-ish hair, always has
a five o’clock shadow, a combative attitude and he rides a motorcycle. The character is completely unoriginal and
the type we’ve seen countless times in that era. But
it’s also a character type that I love and I love Douglas. He doesn’t pull off this rough and tumble
personality as well as the rich asshole one like most know him for but it works
nonetheless.
Garcia is the opposite with his fancy suits, shoes,
perfectly trimmed hair, clean shave and jokey and conciliatory nature. He’s the one that can relax, do some karaoke
and make peace with the Japanese police.
He’s not a lightweight though and in the scene where Douglas and Garcia
apprehend the Yakuza boss in the states he shows he can take care of business
when the time’s right.
This movie is one of a whole bunch that came out around that
time showcasing American and Japanese cultures butting heads (Gung Ho, Rising Sun, Mr. Baseball, Showdown in Little Tokyo, etc). The message they all convey is that we can
learn from each other and each society should be a little more like the
other. Japan should be less uptight and
show a little more gusto and America should reign in their wild west mindset
and aggressive tactics and be more thoughtful and structured. The thing is Black Rain actually plays more like Son in Law in that the Japanese cop that gets paired up with
Douglas and Garcia (Ken Takakura (Mr.
Baseball)) becomes a little more American by the end but Douglas and Garcia
don’t seem to become a little more Japanese in return. That’s a little fucked up in my opinion.
So how does this all add up?
It’s good, even really good if you’re in the right mood (I was this last
time). It’s an interesting convergence
of talent that makes for a gorgeous movie to look at but it also has tons of
attitude via Douglas and the
somewhat-solid-but-really-needed-to-be-worked-on-more script. This is Ridley Scott’s version of an 80’s
American action picture with a renegade cop, a vicious bad guy, shootouts, a
motorcycle chase and the whole nine yards.
No sci-fi, fantasy or period stuff which is almost all he had done up
until that point (he did Someone to Watch
Over Me right before Black Rain
but that’s a thriller and not an action movie).
I wouldn’t say it’s great though. Garcia is too goofy with all of his fuckin’ wisecracks
and almost constant grinning, the investigation is a little confusing although
you get the gist of what’s happening, Douglas eventually gets the bad guy using
his own way instead of through a combination of American and Japanese tactics
and there maybe could’ve been one more big action scene or at least the pacing
could’ve been adjusted better.
But really Black Rain
is pretty fuckin’ cool. I mean the title
alone is fantastic (it has to do with nuclear fallout) and there’s no shortage
of good filmmaking to get lost in (like they managed to not use subtitles
during the Japanese language scenes except for two I believe). So I’d recommend it.
No comments:
Post a Comment