The
danger many filmmakers come across when trying to tell a realistic
story is that the truth ends up looking very similar to what
they believe. A filmmaker has a great deal of power deciding
what happens and how it looks on film, and many filmmakers (Michael
Moore) have a hard time not using that power to get their own
point across. Not only is Paul Haggis’s film, Crash, a
brilliant weaving of an incredible multiethnic cast, but it
also shows the situations without passing judgment on anyone.
In a matter of 36
hours a group of very different people in Los Angeles will find
their lives intertwined with each other. Some occurrences are
just random encounters, but others will change their lives forever.
Crash deals with the issues of race in Los Angeles and how we
might think that we have the answers, but we can never really
know everything. From the racist cop to the television director
who is forced to sell out his race, Crash has an assortment
of characters, all of which differ from the next and yet there
is some of us in each character.
Crash is run primarily
on dialogue, although there is plenty of action involved as
well. There are scenes in which characters speak in absolute
honesty, no matter how brutal it sounds. The action which follows
often proves that the person speaking in these honest terms
doesn’t have all the answers, but that doesn’t make
them any less honest in what they are saying. By the end of
the film I had no idea what the message was, but it certainly
did make me think.
The DVD has a great
but simple menu with the soft music from the film over footage
from the film. There are also a few special features, although
not nearly as many as I would have hoped from a film this profound
and great. Fortunately there is director’s commentary
with the co-writer, Bobby Moresco, and actor Don Cheadle as
well. This commentary is great, with information sprinkled throughout
the film. There is also a behind the scenes featurette, which
is fantastic, but it is only ten minutes long. There is also
a music video and trailer. The DVD introduction by Paul Haggis
is perhaps the most useless feature on the DVD. He basically
just introduces the film and that is it. It is almost over in
less time than it takes to get to it through the menus.
Crash Cast:
Sandra
Bullock, Don Cheadle, Matt Dillon, Jennifer Esposito,
William Fichtner, Brendan Fraser, Terrence Howard, Chris
“Ludacris” Bridges, Thandie Newton, Ryan
Phillippe, Larenz Tate, Michael Pena