The
Ice Storm Movie Review:
A
few days ago I read a user comment on the Internet Movie
Database which said this movie was a failure because it
obviously came from a conservative point of view, and that
such conservatism was "sick". These viewers must have been
offended by a movie that actually tries to say that such
liberal movements from the 1960`s and 70`s may not have
been so great after all. They apparently forgot to appreciate
the film for at least trying something which doesn't usually
get said too often in the movies, which is that indulgence
may feel good in the short term, but comes with a price.
The
story takes place in the 1970`s during the era of sexual
revolution and drug experimentation. The focus is mainly
on one family (Kevin Kline and Joan Allen as the parents,
Christina Ricci and Tobey Macquire as the kids) who on the
outside seem very average. But nowadays, no family depicted
anywhere is average. Dysfunction and detachment exist throughout.
First off, the husband is having an affair with the neighbor's
wife (Signorey Weaver). The wife, in turn, feels constrained
by her marriage, and wishes she was free. The daughter is
a bold sexual experimenter who, in one surprising scene
in her neighbors bathroom, bluntly tells their youngest
son "I`ll show you mine if you show me yours." The son,
probably the most squeaky-clean of them all, only manages
to have an interest in Fantastic Four comic books and discouragement
that he's still a virgin at 16.
In
leisurely fashion, we see the activities of all these individuals,
and their attempts at any form of happiness or excitement.
Since none of these people have any sense of morals or guidance,
they sleepwalk their way through life, searching only for
cheap thrills and personal gratification. It is indicative
of how deep the detachment in this society is, when even
a minister, of the long-haired new agey variety, is depicted
as alienated from the morals which he should be ministering.
Like the flock, the shepherd also views life in an individualistic,
subjective way. He is in fact one of the guests in a key
party, a game where guests put their car keys in a bowl,
and whomever key one picks up at the end is the person that
lucky guy or gal goes home with.
The
key party is a crucial event, because it is one of the major
examples the writers use in defense of their argument. Such
impersonal sexual role-playing and, in most cases, wife
and husband swapping is impossible to maintain for it only
brings about jealousy, heartbreak, and disappointment. Kline,
in a drunken jealousy, cannot stand to see Weaver`s character
going home with someone else. He, like the other guests,
try to maintain a casual coolness and good humor around
something which is emotionally dangerous, and spiritually
draining. And while the guests act as if this sort of sexual
experimentation would be awesome, it certainly isn't so
in private in a good scene involving Allen's character and
the neighbor. Such things only create disappointment and
guilt.
Another
important theme in this movie is the influence of these
70`s hipsters on their children. The sexual experimentation
and coldness manifests itself on impressionable teenagers,
most vividly with Ricci`s character, who is blunt and heartless
in her verbal expression when it comes to sex. We see seances
where she and other 13/14 year old girls talk about fillatio
in vulgar ways. And of course, I've already mentioned the
scene in the bathroom. Another scene is absolutely priceless
and hilarious. She dons a rubber Nixon mask before saying
how far she will go in "messing around" with the neighbor's
oldest son, when they are (they believe) alone in the house.
The mask stays on even as they fidget with each other's
zippers. All I can say is that it was probably difficult
not to laugh on the set. Perhaps the Nixon references are
important. Just as Nixon, the president of the United States,
lied to his people, therefore undermining the sacredness
of the institution he represents, the parents generation
"lied" to the children. The parents pretend to uphold the
ideals of family, yet underneath they are corrupt, and this
lying and hypocrisy is scarring the children.
The
movie is conservative, without a doubt. I think it is saying
what many people like to say; that children ultimately get
their behaviors from their parents. It is very ironic when
Kline bursts out in front of Ricci and the boy for their
fooling. Why is Kline in the neighbor's house! He's waiting
for the neighbor's wife to get home, that's why. So he is
even worse than his daughter is. The daughter is only doing
what comes naturally. And if parents are detached in their
own relationships, it's only natural that the kids feel
very detached as well. When Weaver's character comes home
to find her youngest son blowing up his toys (sounds like
another Littleton case to me!), she angrily wonders how
the oldest son and Ricci could not have heard anything.
They are too entranced by the television to care. The only
expression of a true coming together comes at the end, and
even that is cramped, for it is something no one in this
movie had ever comprehended. And this can only come after
a family tragedy. While I`m not quite so sure that this
movie is entirely convincing in its belief that a greater
personal freedom results ultimatly in destruction and family
breakdown (I guess I just don`t want to sound like a crazy
right-winger) it certainly gives one something to think
about, like it or not.
The
surrounding elements help to convey the sense of coldness
and doom which accompanies this kind of lifestyle(s). Flutes,
chimes and xylophones encompass the soundtrack giving a
haunting and reflective feeling. The title of the movie
refers to an actual event near the end, and like that ice
storm, these lives are cold and stiff, with no true warmth.
And those ice storms contain the potential for disaster
and tragedy, if one doesn't watch out.
This
is the kind of movie "inexperienced" viewers will dismiss,
because all they will see is a bunch of pathetic people
doing pathetic and depressing things. Those viewers will
insist there is "nothing" going on, there is no story, (they
don't say it's a bad story, but that there is none at all)
and the characters involved on it are disgusting. I wonder
sometimes what their definition of "story" is, and even
more so, how they define a non-disgusting character. Do
you really think that an action-hero, who massacres many
people (bad guys, sure, but still.....) for the enjoyment
of the audience, is really that good of a person. And, apparently,
a story is only a story if it has the right number of exciting
events, in the proper order, and with a happy ending. This
shows how little many viewers know or care about movies.
They are unwilling to tolerate very much in the endless
creative variations. And in a way, those viewers, in unwilling
to accept stories which try to understand the human condition,
are nearly as distant as the people in this movie, and that`s
unfortunate.
David
Macdonald
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