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Trespass

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Kyle Miller lives in what I imagine was once an Art Deco installation, and does so while looking intriguingly like a cleaned-up Raoul Duke. Even for one of Nicolas Cage’s latter-day exercises in expressionism, that makes for a strange combination. His place in this far-fetched siege drama is to appear like a man who just isn’t going to take it anymore, only to invariably do just that. If his perpetual state of wide-eyed agitation is anything to go by, he has also acquired a rather tremendous coke habit.

Cage is as Cage does then, or, How Joel Schumacher Finally Surpassed Even Batman And Robin. He opens with an aerial shot of a sports car winding its way through the forest. As Kyle drives, he talks with a client on the phone, dazzling him with a mix of cliche and breakneck acumen. The second shot is from inside that artful home, where his wife, Sarah, and daughter Avery argue listlessly about some party or other. Kyle pulls up and doesn’t care to intervene, retiring instead to a home study all the better to project bullshit from. You’ll note, contemptibly, that no one has yet made him as a none-too glorified used car salesman.

Before long, he goes to leave once more. “I wonder how many times this has to happen before I’m not going to care anymore” Sarah sighs, an expensive black dress clinging to her lithe frame. Unbenknownst to them, little Avery is upstairs taking her parents marital strife as the cue to sneak out to that forbidden party. Her departure is a timely one, coming not five minutes before a buzz on the intercom. The mystery callers are begrudging invited into the gated property, though Mummy is too busy pouting by the window to notice her husband being clubbed round the head by a masked gang.

Their balaclavas haphazardly askew, the visitors explain – in what we presume counts as exposition – that the house has been under surveillance for some time, and that they’re here for the family jewels. Kyle desperately wants to pretend like they don’t have any, but he’s about one cold sweat away from leading them to the safe. Which he absolutely will not open. Unless they release his wife, in which case he just might. Only, probably not, since they’ll just kill him if he does. The solution is clear: Kyle must somehow convince the gang to let him broker the sale of his own diamonds, before returning to split the proceeds equally.

So.

Such bumptious behaviour comes at a pace you’d expect from Cage, an actor who trades in the brisk unfathomables. Conceivably, such rapid-fire delivery might have served some bamboozling scheme, except these are no ordinary criminals. More accurately, they’re Joel Schumacher criminals, which makes them special in a purely euphemistic sense. They seem to understand their role is one of stealing something, but can’t quite agree upon what that is, or why. Indeed, their objective (and the means to acquire it) seems to change almost as often as Kyle finds a reason to deny it them.

Don’t be surprised when the tearaway daughter returns home early from her party, because no one else is. She hears her parents desperate pleas to make good her escape, which she naturally takes as an invitation to become another hostage. Thankfully, she’s seated just in time for the beginning of the moody backstory, in which a prior entanglement between Sarah and one of the robbers is revealed in the soft-focus style of an Australian soap – albeit one mired in an elaborate metaphor of the foreclosure crisis, as aided by black-market organs and the irksome curse of myopia.

Trespass is a strange comedy of errors, with its every screw-up taking us further from an already muddled motivation. Were the acting not so atrocious, the occasion so farcical, some semblance of consistency might have made clear what – if anything – was at stake. Without that, all you have are these ridiculous vignettes about whichever shiny object happens to be in frame, stolen for whatever purpose is narratively convenient at the time. A kidney transplant, a maybe maybe-not affair, rope-a-dope villains, and each hostage escaping four or five times a piece. I couldn’t even begin to tell you what happened in the finale. Perhaps the storyboards might help, even if they were drawn in waterproof crayon.

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Beautiful Boy

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Michael Sheen and Maria Bello give brave performances as a married couple trying to come to terms with the quite incomprehensible. They shared a family home, yet found words increasingly hard to come by. Every strained dinner conversation was another reminder of the extent to which they’d used their son as a panacea; once hoping that a life of recitals and college tuition might somehow bridge the void. Now they seemed more like middle-aged strangers than partners, bound by a child they barely heard from. Vacations first postponed, then cancelled. Messages left were seldom returned, and even those that were took the form of vacuous pleasantries. Family, like marriage, becomes just another routine when you stop asking anything of one another, and how sad it is that it took their son killing himself and his classmates to remind them of that.

Films can be so focused on the event that they forget to consider what happens afterwards. Beautiful Boy exists almost entirely in that forgotten space, so much so that our only glimpses of the son are in a phone call on the eve of his death. Had his parents thought to truly listen, they might have sensed his growing preoccupation. They did not; there would always be tomorrow. Bill (Sheen) cut him short in favour of the evening paper, just as his mother (Bello) could think only to remind him to study hard and stay in school. Such words, imparting neither love nor warmth, are unlikely to have been those she’d have chosen with prescience, but then life always did have a way with irony.

By choosing to look beyond their tortured son, the film imagines instead what two perfect strangers might do when faced with the truth. Within minutes of the police making the announcement, a sea of reporters and cameras arrived to camp out on their lawn. The couple hide upstairs in the darkness of their son’s bedroom, finding stories and artefacts, but few explanations. How could they? Senseless acts are both more than the sum of their parts and, inversely, nothing at all. As parents, it must have been maddening to try and reason with that, no less so for it having been committed by a child they must now accept they hardly even knew.

Before long, they go to stay with Kate’s brother, who has a young family of his own and accommodates them as best he can. Bill quickly retreats to the comforting routines of work, only to find his presence there drawing the stares of co-workers who mistake judgement for concern. His wife, increasingly adrift, grows dependant on mothering her nephew. The fairytales that once delighted her own son are now gifted to him, in bedtime rituals that try to make sense of where she might have gone wrong. Late one night, as they dissect their roles, the hand-held camera draws in closer. Bill snaps. “I wish to god we hadn’t had him” he rages, throwing his wife to the floor. “I wish we hadn’t fucking had him”.

There are brief moments of relief. The couple break into unbridled laughter in a dinky motel room, meeting over cheap vending-machine snacks that kindle some forgotten passion. In all other respects, this remains a bleak and understated film, as arguably it must. There’s always the risk that drawing too much drama from a tragedy can leave it a silly artifice of grief, and Shawn Ku directs accordingly, with caution that leans on silence over words. Just about everything he wishes to convey can be found in the motionless prayers of a father, or a wife’s resentment that seems to extinguish all hope of redemption. To lose a child is to ask questions that cannot hope to yield answers, and Beautiful Boy must content itself with documenting the cogs’ futile spin.

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Snowtown

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Between 1992 and 1999, a small Adelaide community were witness to a series of gruesome murders. Of the eleven people that died, eight were discovered in barrels, with the remaining three buried in shallow graves. Some of the victims were child molesters, while others committed crimes no more heinous than to be gay or, in one instance, merely handicapped. The events that led to their deaths are a lesson not just in the horrors of unchecked ideologies, but in how such horrors can find willing accomplices in desperate communities.

Jamie Vlassakis was a thoughtful young man when he was stripped and photographed by a neighbour, and no less so the day a family friend raped him on the living room floor. The camera observes these moments with little interest, the lone sound of the test match commentary on TV a signal that such brutality has somehow become normalised. It watches, too, the insidious arrival of John Bunting, whom we recognise now as one of Australia’s most depraved serial killers, but who seemed then if not exactly charismatic, then at least conducive to a greater good.

The ease with which Bunting emerged as a community leader is frightening in its verity. He was undoubtedly a child of history; all too aware of the power that comes from a commanding voice in bleak times. As depicted, he would call impromptu kitchen meetings for friends and neighbours, using the occasions to exploit an undercurrent of fear – fear that Snowtown was awash with paedophiles; fear the police were powerless to intervene. Manners and grace saw him quickly ingratiate himself with the Vlassakis family, whose eldest son he saw as possessing an enduring and particularly malleable innocence. It was Bunting himself who insisted Jamie sit in on his first meeting, in which he was encouraged to echo back the vitriol of the group. Later, he would faithfully execute Bunting’s own dog.

Here is a movie that takes an unflinching approach to barbarism. Cathartic revenge – the pair dumping rotting offal on the porch of a local voyeur – eventually gives way to a more brutal form of vigilantism, so aggressively unpleasant that at times I felt moved to step away. That isn’t something that could ever be said for the cartoon violence of The Human Centipede, a film that doesn’t even begin to equivocate with Bunting savagely torturing a man in a blood-smeared bathroom, only to repeatedly back off so as to extend his own pleasure. It is one of the most indescribably horrific scenes to be committed to film, made all the more unpalatable by Daniel Henshall’s intense, focused performance, and his depiction of a living, breathing monster.

The sad truth of Snowtown is that for every inhuman act, ordinary people stood quietly in support. Bunting and his associates may have acting out their fantasies alone, but they were not so when it came time to vilify the so-called ‘undesirables’ of the community, nor when Bunting advocated their executions to a baying crowd. More frightening still is that he was happy – and able – to confound genuine menace with his own misguided bigotry, coaching the bile in a language that will be familiar to anyone who has had the misfortune to observe a modern-day political lynch mob.

The enemy of my enemy is not a friend, and to watch Jamie, then just 16-years-old, being pulled into that world is to experience a profound sense of helplessness. The brave, the incendiary, the innocuous John Bunting was a Trojan horse for evil unbound, destroying a young life for little more than sadism and vengeful infamy.

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