Sunday, February 11, 2007

Pan's Crapyrinth

Huh. Well, that sure sucked some balls. I’m referring, of course, to the subject of 2007's first movie review –

Pan’s Labyrinth.

Billed as a fairy tale/horror story, I can say with confidence that it was pretty damn horrific. Set in Spain after the rise of Generalissimo Francisco Franco and Facism, Pan’s Labrynth tells the story of a young girl (Ofelia) who goes with her pregnant mother to live with her adoptive father, the father of her baby brother, a powerful Captain in Franco’s army. The girl gets drawn into a labyrinth by a fairy and taken down into some otherworldly location, where she speaks to some grotesque-looking faun. He tells her she’s some reincarnated princess for this land below, and she can return if she completes three tasks. Meanwhile, the Spanish army people are fighting off resistance fighters, the Captain is a sadistic asshole, and having the baby may kill Ofelia’s mom.

Warning: Spoilers follow. Seriously, if you want to watch the movie, don’t read.

So what’s the problem? First, there appears to be gore for the sake of gore, which I really don’t care for. I complained about the second episode of Heroes for the same reason – it seemed like they were mutilating corpses willy nilly for the sake of shock value, like “Ooh, this villain is so scary/badass, he somehow nails people horizontally to a wall, or freezes them and rips the upper portion of their body off, for no apparent reason.” If there’s a purpose behind the gore, that’s one thing. If there’s symbolism, that’s another. But if it’s just gore, I’ll pass. Maybe the symbolism was that this girl is experiencing horrors, real horrors, absolutely terrible things, and the only way to portray them adequately was to make them as disgusting as possible. Fine. But then the Captain bashes some guy’s face in with a bottle. Okay. Then some chick sticks a knife into his mouth (?) and slashes out the side of his face. Ew. Not only ew, but stupid. If you’ve got that much leeway in slashing him, why not cut his throat and be done with him? No, she sticks the knife in his mouth and cuts his face, allowing him to survive, then come after her. Retard. Then, at the end, the resistance fighter shoots him through the cheek. What the fuck? Are we to assume his aim was bad, or just that he honestly thinks shooting people through the cheek is a good way to finish them off?

Then there’s the “fairy tale” portion. Absolute crap. The frog in the tree – I’m assuming that was symbolic for something. Maybe the Nazis/Facists getting fat and rich off the people, and stifling growth. Fine. But that’s not exactly a bold statement, since the Nazi’s don’t have much of a fanbase these days.

Then the feast and the monster with eyes in his hands. First of all, why, when the monster has eyes in his hands, does he have to hold his hands up by his head, where most creatures’ eyes are? Doesn’t that kill the advantage of having eyes on your hands – that you can look all sorts of different places, that you can look around corners, that you’ve got an expanded field of vision? No, let’s hold them up by our head to look ridiculous. I mean, come on. Is he intended to be scary? Bizarre, certainly. Mentally challenged, clearly. But scary? Eh. Then, the idiot girl who eats the grapes, after being warned repeatedly not to eat the food. The faun told her straight out, it was a matter of life and death. Eat the fruit, you’re likely to die. So she goes in there, gets what she needs, starts to leave. Looks at the feast, and thinks “Hey, let’s have a grape, even though everyone and they momma said not to.” The fairies fly in, warn her off, she swats them away, and starts eating grapes. Her excuse afterward? “I didn’t think anyone would notice.” Dumbass! What about the “life or death” concept? Forget the monster sitting dormant at the end of the table; didn’t it even cross your mind the food might be poisoned? And Kristin pointed this out - - it’s not like there was any real compulsion. She wasn’t starving. There was no enchantment on the food drawing her to it. She was just a retard. “I didn’t think anyone would notice.” Gah. I wish the monster would have killed you.

Then there’s the two-dimensional Captain, who is always either a) an imperious soldier, committed to his own supremacy, the idea of honor and duty, and dying like a soldier, or b) bat-shit crazy and sadistic, killing and torturing at will, generally an asshole to those around him. A villain should have some sort of depth, something that makes understand and sympathize with what they’re doing. The Captain, much like this movie, had no redeeming qualities.

And the fairy tale ending? The girl died, spilling her own blood, thus completing her final task. Then she was rewarded in her kingdom. But the fairy tale clearly didn’t exist in the real world, because the faun wasn’t there when the Captain found Ofelia in the Labyrinth, and then she died. Lovely.

Okay, so maybe there was more to the movie. It’s gotten rave reviews, and everyone who I know that’s seen it seemed to enjoy it. I can see how someone would appreciate the story, find it moving, find it heartbreaking, find it mystifying. To me, it was just depressing. That’s not the kind of movie I want to watch.

So from what I can tell, the moral of the story was life sucks, then you die, and if you endured enough pain and suffering in life while still doing good deeds, you will be rewarded in the afterlife. Which, for an alleged fairy tale, is pretty fucking dark.

At least the movie ended. So, I guess, in a way, the theme came true – we suffered through a disgusting, depressing, thoroughly disappointing movie, and the only reward we got came once it was over.

My grade: D
Recommendation: Only if you hate yourself, and either want to subject yourself to a terrible movie, or you want your life to seem better by comparison.

5 comments:

RPM said...

I agree that Mercedes was an absolute idiot for not killing the captain when she had the chance. The "catch and release" method of knife-fighting fascists doesn't work, unless about 100 of your clandestine buddies are there hanging out 15 yards from the fascist headquarters, ready to save you. Maybe the idea is that when basically good people stand up for themselves against authority like Mercedes did, most aren't suited to the fight.

I also agree the monster scene was ill-conceived. I hate when hourglasses are half-expired after 2 seconds, then last for another 2 minutes. But remember this stuff had to come from the mind of a child, so I'm more forgiving of the fantasy.

The captain did have some depth. He was a manipulative master. He had a system for deflecting his conscience. I didn't need to see the bottle bashing, but he justified his actions despite killing innocent men, because his soldiers didn't do a proper investigation. He still believes a system where he can just kill anyone suspicious is sound. That is the terrible allure of fascism in 30 seconds. That moment is revealing, and I wish there were more moments like this to flesh out the character.

The story was touching. I know it is risky to attack fascism these days, but they pulled it off. The movie is a downer, and I can understand how that isn't something you seek from the movies. Expand your mind, man.

Vice said...

So maybe I overestimated the terribleness of the movie. I was working off a visceral reaction to the movie - I just straight up didn't like it. I'm told now that the Toad and the Monster scenes were allegorical of things actually happening in Spain at the time, which I had pretty much assumed, but didn't care to learn. There was only so much grotesquery and depression I'm willing to tolerate in my entertainment. I like a dark story, I can deal with a sad story, but one that starts off sad and spirals downward into abject misery - that I can't take. I'll admit that I overstated how bad the story was, but that's how it felt when I left the theater.

It's not just this show though. I read The Jungle by Upton Sinclair in high school, and I couldn't possibly have hated that book any more if I tried. The story of an immigrant worker getting used up, spit out, and cast aside by turn of the century American industry was certainly a powerful denunciation of capitalism at the time, but every page was more miserable than the last, and then the guy became a socialist, and Sinclair spent the last 100 pages or so on the glory of socialism and the failure of capitalism. But for my money, when the infant crawled into a gutter and drowned, and the guy's wife and sisters whored themselves out to keep the family from starving, I just stopped caring.

Or, for example, Studio 60. Used to be smart and funny, now it's all depressing character drama. Spare me.

I don't always need my entertainment to be happy and uplifting, but when it goes too far in the opposite direction, where all hope is lost, I find it hard to keep watching/reading.

Anonymous said...

I disagree that the film's message was one of hopelessness. I think del Toro left it up to the viewer to decide for him or herself what to believe. Ofelia's life was fiercely violent. But she was able to escape that world for one full of beauty and magic. Some viewers might quickly dismiss the film's fantasy as a child's psychological defense mechanism. But to Ofelia that world was real. Some might see the Captain not seeing the Faun at the end as incontrovertible evidence that Ofelia's world didn't exist. But some might see the blooming flower as a source of hope and faith, evidence that Ofelia was right all along. It's up to you.

I'm wondering (assuming you read it), which story in Life of Pi did you believe?

Vice said...

Hmm...I agree that the meaning can be up for interpretation; I was merely submitting what the meaning seemed like to me. Maybe there was an element of hope that I completely missed.

However, saying that Ofelia was able to escape her violent life for a world "full of beauty and magic?" It seemed to me like the faun presented the opportunity to escape into a world of beauty and magic, but the fairy tale world she actually ventured into was nearly as horrific as the one she lived through. Crawling through that disgusting much, with giant black bugs crawling all over her, confronting that disgusting frog? Trying to steal from the monster with eyes in his hands who ate countless children and attempted to eat her too? That seems a far cry from a world of beauty and magic.

It seemed to me that she only got to the world of beauty and magic after she died. It was all still horrific and violent while she was alive. So if death counts as her escape, then I'm sticking with my interpretation that the life was pretty much hopeless.

awaybirdiesweep said...

The movie looked pretty, interestingly shot, different. I hadnt gone anywhere all week and I wanted to go with my boyfriend and see a nice movie and take a walk in the park afterward.
I'm 9 months pregnant, my boyfriends ex-wife hemmoraghed almost to death with her baby's birth and he passed out. Needless to say more...if you've seen this you can tell its the worst movie we could EVER choose to see. Why didnt the commercials say "a gorey, hellish movie you'll see and think "well i'm sure something nice will happen soon?" and each scene is only followed by one somehow even more grotesque disturbing." It was made out to be a fairytale on the commercials. We both left early, I sobbing and wondering why we can never go out and have a nice time. A movie has never ruined my day before.