Dead Man Walking

Reviewed by: Angel-Five

February 7, 2000

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Well, I finally saw Dead Man Walking.

I for the life of me don't understand why Sean Penn doesn't get more acting accolades. Every movie I see him in he's phenomenal, absolutely incredible.

If you see enough movies and learn enough about the movie-making process it can detract from the simple pleasure of watching cinema, because you're reminded of the artifice involved. None of what you watch is really happening, it's what Baudrillard called a simulacrum, a copy of something of which there was never any original. It's fake.

I mean, people walk in from their lives, out of their trailers on the movie set, get made up, and stand in front of bright lights and perform these scenes a shot at a time, whith whole legions of people standing around who are employed to make the fakery as hard to detect as possible, who use well established tricks and gimmicks, and their own skills, to make it into something that a director can later piece together and augment into a film that looks real. I guess it's a testament to the skill of a good director that the viewer watches a movie and perceives a flawless whole, a slice of reality, and it's all pieced together from the most fake stuff imaginable.

For me, being aware of that can make it hard to enjoy some movies, even good ones. Little flaws in the finished product combine with my knowledge of how films are made, and consequently here and there in the film I'll be suddenly reminded that I'm watching actors on a film set someplace being directed in their actions while a cameraman films them. Considerably more often if the movie is bad.

And, you know, I'll be reminded that I'm watching the interpretation of a set script, that certain conventions of scriptwriting are going to be followed and that certain things will or will not happen based upon the fact that I'm watching a film of a predetermined length. A film that has to sell to a public anxious to be entertained, viewers that have general beliefs and needs that are marketed to and exploited by producers, who are, in the end, selling a product to a customer. All of this makes me pretty cynical about cinema in America, and acutely conscious that I'm watching a marketed falsehood, none of which ever happened in any real form.

I guess it's a testament to Sean Penn that I never watch one of his performances and get reminded that he's an actor on a stage. And it's a real testament to how good of a movie Dead Man Walking is, because I watched the whole thing without once stepping back and taking that cynical kind of look at the film. It was incredible.

I mean, I'm hardly the only person in the world who looks at cinema this way, and it's why all these levels of meta-criticism have evolved about films, where the main point of a movie doesn't seem to be the story itself but the way a director reinterprets certain cliche scenes or the way a scriptwriter will ignore certain conventions or the endless hunt to find a new way of doing an old thing. And it's why some filmmakers seem to have given up on making you believe the story and instead constantly call attention to the fact that you're watching a movie.

It's also why people like me will watch movies just for one actor or actress or the newest CGI, even if we've heard that the movie stinks. But it's really nice to see a film every once in a while like Dead Man Walking. I rented it because I heard that Sarandon and Penn gave killer performances and that Robbins had done well with it, but I really didn't expect it to be as good as it was in the round and I didn't expect to get drawn into the story the way I did.

 

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