By James Bowman on 10.24.07 @ 12:02AM
A story of madness, cowardice, and death -- along with directorial abdication of moral responsibility.
"From the last place on earth comes a true story of courage and
survival." Though the tagline for Robert Sarkies's Out of the
Blue focuses on the positive, it's also a story of madness,
cowardice and death. But it turns out that the salient detail is
the one about "the last place on earth." It's not a bad way to
describe the southeastern part of the South Island of New Zealand
where wild and beautiful landscapes, shared by the sparse human
population with penguins and seals, remind you that the next stop
is Antarctica. But what has the location to do with this tragic
story of a nutcase and his semi-automatic rifle? You'd think
America would have plenty of crazed-gunmen stories of her own to
tell, without having to import them from pacific New Zealand.
Mr. Sarkies's camera does its best, however, to persuade us that
the murderous rampage David Gray (Matthew Sunderland) went on in
Aramoana, New Zealand, in November of 1990 was somehow connected
with the place where it happened. For a movie containing so much
sickening violence, this one has an almost idyllic appearance and
pace. Often, the camera cuts away from its narrative duties to
shots of the stark and beautiful New Zealand coast-line --
sometimes in static aerial shots which seem intended to give us the
impression of looking down on the human tragedy from an immense,
god-like height, like that of the persona Keats imagines for
himself, even as he rejects it, in his sonnet on the "Bright Star"
--
...watching, with eternal lids apart,
Like Nature's patient sleepless Eremite,
The moving waters at their priestlike task
Of pure ablution round earth's human shores...
It's an interesting idea, thus to supply a purely cinematic and
passionless perspective on such emotionally harrowing material. Is
it meant to echo a moral perspective, or to take its place?
The title provides the clue. Like most artists these days, Mr.
Sarkies regards violence as being practically an act of God. There
is no accounting for it. It can simply be taken for granted. The
question of how David Gray came to the point of gunning down
thirteen of his neighbors doesn't really interest him, therefore.
If it hadn't been Gray murdering people for no reason, it would
have been somebody else.
Of course, some viewers may regard Gray's murders as not being
"out of the blue" at all. According to the normal conventions of
filmmaking, he is an obvious killer from the start: a loner and a
gun-nut with an anger problem and more than a hint of paranoia
about him. If his neighbors had seen him in a movie, as we do,
they'd have known what was coming long in advance. But that's just
it. When you've lived all your life next door to, or down the
street from the guy, you don't see him the way a movie audience
would. When things have been the way they are for a long time, or
have only gradually become that way, it's hard to understand how
everything can change in an instant.
The great virtue of Mr. Sarkies's film is that he sticks very
closely to what must have been the actual point of view of the
people caught up in the shooting rampage. The sickening fear of
knowing that there is a crazy man nearby who is shooting people at
random but not knowing where he is, of seeing badly wounded people
lying out in the open but not being able to go to their assistance
without becoming a target yourself -- these things are well
conveyed. That empathetic approach extends even to the gunman
himself. If evil is something that comes "out of the blue" and not
as a result of rationally explainable moral choices, then Gray must
be as much its victim as those he kills. The last we see of him
here is meant to make just that point.
Likewise, the policeman (Karl Urban) who has him in his sights
and can't bring himself to pull the trigger is meant to be seen as
merely the victim of his own compassion and decency, not a fool and
a coward whose hesitation must have cost several lives. The film
makes no moral judgments, here or anywhere else, instead preferring
to enjoy the artistic prerogative of creating a tableau of tragedy
and victimhood which can be appreciated aesthetically and
emotionally. To me, that is a serious limitation, an abdication of
moral responsibility. But those who are less particular about such
things may find much to like about the movie -- especially its
sharply-observed, often comic portraits of the Aramoanans, who are
seen as a sort of kinder, gentler version of American rednecks.
Deserving of special mention is the grandmotherly Mrs. Helen
Dickson (Lois Lawn) who's just had her hips "done" and can barely
walk, but who crawls and drags herself back and forth between her
house and a badly wounded man in the road outside it in an effort
to bring help. She serves as a welcome reminder that not even the
most determined efforts of the aesthete and the non-judgmental but
still god-like observer can quite deny us a hero -- any more than
they can altogether deny us a villain. For I suspect that most
viewers will be somewhat less inclined than Mr. Sarkies appears to
be towards regarding this murderer of women and children as an
object of pity.
topics:
Law