Battle
Royale Movie Review:
There
are not many films nowadays that can provoke much reaction
from a jaded audience, hardened by sensory overload exposure.
It seems nowadays that the only emotion that's ever excercised
these days is boredom, or contempt.
So
this is one of the reasons why I think Battle Royale is
an amazing film. I felt a range of emotions which probably
shouldn't be mixed together, like the ingredients that make
up TNT. Based on a manga which itself was based upon a book,
this film is set in the near future, where society is on
the brink of collapse due to economic disaster. This dystopia
is covered by a thin veneer of civility, stretched to near-invisibility
by the resultant pressures and. The rate of juvenile delinquency
rises as the families break down. In a desperate knee-jerk
reaction, the government passed the "Battle Royale"
Act, where each year, a class of these little shits are
kidnapped and transported to a deserted island, and forced
to kill each other with whatever means possible. The lone
survivor will be allowed safe passage off the island and
supposedly back into a 'normal' life.
This
film is shocking. It is not so much the violence - although
there is plenty of that, depicted in all its blood-spurting,
screaming entirety - but the way it mind-screws with you.
And don't think it's in the same mould as the teen slasher
movies either - the characters and emotions depicted here
makes it difficult for a person to easily dismiss the film,
and therefore you're left with no mental insulation or protection
from what's been splattered across the screen. The actors
here genuinely look like 13 or 15 year olds, conveying with
such horrible ease that quality of innocence and naivety,
necessary to make this film work. You are constantly being
disarmed every time you try to deal with and shield yourself
from the implications of the ideas in this film. Yet it
is also a comedy, very black to be sure - coming from the
cheesiness and banality of some of the scenes. For example,
a tender moment between a boy a girl gets mowed down in
a hail of bullets by a psychotic student. A group of close
friends set up domestic bliss together, joking and carrying
on like normal teenagers - before it all drowns in a bloody
Pulp Fiction-like showdown. You've got to laugh, but obviously
you feel uncomfortable for doing so. This alternation between
black comedy and uber-violence twists you like a broken
back. The director knows his craft well like a torturer
knows his instruments.
Yet
I think there's more to this film than it being just a more
deadly version of a South Park cartoon. Beneath all the
violence depicted, there are moments when some normal human
behaviour is depicted, their presence giving more weight
to the impact of this film. There are also some Lord of
the Flies elements here, where long-held tensions between
various cliques finally found themselves freedom of expression
by way of a crossbow or a semi-automatic machine gun. Most
of the kids aren't killers, but when push comes to shove,
they can do it and do it with alarming ease and naturalism.
When one of them asks the teacher why they were forced to
do this, the adults curtly tells them that they had no one
to blame but themselves. The film could be an extreme realisation
of some of adult's darkest fantasies, coming from a fear
and resentment of teenagers. How many times have you heard
an adult wishing that the skateboarding teenager who nearly
ran him down on the sidewalk would get some kind of appropriately
dire and preferably disfiguring punishment?
I have friends who, on hearing about this film, thought
it was absolutely deplorable. Yet some of these are the
same people who rated Requiem for a Dream highly, because
it had the effect of a mental punch to the solar plexus.
It is for the same reason why I rate this film highly -
it shakes you out of your stupor and complacency, especially
about violence. I doubt western studios would tackle something
like this though - at least not by using such young protagonists.
It would surely re-ignite the impossible debate about violence
and film. If I can risk being pretencious here, art is all
about provoking a reaction, to make you think and or feel
in ways you rarely have before. However, having said that,
I would not be in any hurry to watch a film like this again.
Frankly I need to sleep at nights.
Eden
Law
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