Halloween: Resurrection
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 26 July 2002
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The
latest Michael Myers movie went through many "working
titles" before its release this past Friday. Way back in 1999,
hard on the heels of 1998's Halloween H20: 20 Years Later,
this 8th film in the series was called Halloween: Evil Never Dies
and then, Halloween H2K (this, presumably, was the plan for a
2000 release date). In 2000, someone thought to combine the two,
thusly: Halloween H2K: Evil Never Dies. By 2001, the
"2K" was clearly out, and so, the name mutated again, from
the rather perfunctory Hall8ween or Halloween 8, to Halloween:
Homecoming or Halloween: The Homecoming, to Halloween:
MichaelMyers.com. Now, at last, the title has been fixed and
perhaps less importantly, the film is in theaters, for a minute
anyway. And so you have it: Halloween: Resurrection.
After
all that time and wrangling: resurrection? Please. Since when is that
news in a slasher film? Maybe there's something to be said for an
unadorned, unclever, decidedly uncompelling promotional tactic. And
what does it matter what it's called, anyway? You know what you're
getting in this flick, whether you want it or not.
For
one thing, you're getting yet another appearance by Michael's
sister, Laurie Strode (played one more time by indefatigable
VoiceStream pitchperson, Ms. Jamie Lee Curtis, suddenly looking
very, very tired indeed). Lucky for her, she only has about five
minutes to endure, as she's locked up in an asylum following the
discovery that, when she thought she decapitated her brother, she
had actually wasted a paramedic, with conveniently crushed vocal
chords so he couldn't tell her who he was, as well as three kids.
One nurse tells another this story, to occasion flashbacks to the
previous film, and catch you up, in case you want to be caught up,
with where the action begins here. And begin it does -- cue John
Carpenter's theme music and stalker cam, a few shadowy shots of
Michael (Brad Loree) in infamously ooky white-face mask, another few
of the knife in silhouette and glinting in the light, and a few more
of the surveillance monitors, or more specifically, the monitors in
rooms where no one is watching. Michael has come to kill Laurie once
and for all, which he does -- big knife ripping right through her
and a magnificent slo-mo face-up plummet from a roof to boot.
Her
final gesture is a splendid one -- she kisses Michael on his
mask-mouth and growls, "See you in hell!" Tres nice
exit. So, Laurie better hope against hope that no one comes up with
a way to implant an alien baby in her so she'll return as Laurie
eight, or nine or ten, with acid for blood and a hankering for
basketball. Oh wait, wrong franchise.
Assuming
that Laurie is, in fact, finally done with the whole Michael Myers
business, you know that someone else will have to pick up the slack.
Not just the nubile-young-bodies-ripe-for-slaughter slack, either.
Someone has to be in charge, bring weight, and make you want Mike to
get his in the end. And that someone is -- get ready -- Busta
Rhymes.
Busta's
already proved he has chops, in the wildly gesticulating department,
as well as the mesmerizing performance department (check Hype
Williams' video for "Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could
See") and in subtler drama (see Gus Van Sant's Finding
Forrester). And he essentially carries this movie -- his every
appearance on screen produces yelps of delight. When all is said and
done, Busta does come out of this formula movie smelling fairly
rose-like. There are reasons.
First
off, the man is charisma on wheels, whether selling Mountain Dew or
dancing with digital elephants. This despite his role as Freddy, a
nefarious some-kinda-media producer, determined to cash in on the
whole reality-TV-internet-cam thing. Toward that end, he papers a
local college, to solicit a pack of Real World-er wannabes to
spend Halloween night in Michael Myers' childhood home, for a show
he calls Dangertainment. Catchy. Their adventures will be
aired live over the net via carefully placed cameras all over the
house and mini-cameras placed on the kids heads, à la MTV's Fear,
itself sort of derived/ripped off from 1999's internet-advertising
phenom, The Blair Witch Project. It's all very skritchy,
mobile-framey, and zig-zaggy: great when it comes time to confuse
you about who's where and when the next silhouette of a knife is
going to be pointed at someone's throat.
Second,
Busta is a hard worker. He's been promoting the bejesus out of this
film, with appearances all over, and not only the usual 106th
& Park, Leno, and MTV beach thingies guest shots, but also
the more creative. The other night he showed up on WWF Smackdown,
dueting with The Rock on "Under the Boardwalk." Seems
folks just love Bussa Bus, wherever he goes.
Third,
Busta makes sure that his guy, no matter how gnarly he might appear
at first, kicks ass. You see him early on watching kung fu movies on
TV in his motel room, alone (he's a serious trash-TV producer, not
screwing the contestants), and he practices his moves while he
watches, especially the eeiii-yahh screeches. Even if Freddy is an
ambitious, reckless entrepreneur at first, when he learns the truth
-- that Michael is still living at home, in the basement, by eating
live rats -- he does the right thing, and saves that Last White
Girl, for sure.
And
fourth, Busta out-acts and out-spectacularizes Tyra Banks, who plays
Freddy's assistant, Nora. Okay, so the out-acting is no biggie. And
okay, so she doesn't have much time on screen: Nora and Freddy
exchange a few knowing glances while shooting the kids'
intro-confessionals; toast one another with wine when, early on, it
looks like the project is going well; and other than that, Nora/Tyra
has only one more-than-thirty-seconds scene, in which she does not
speak, but does slither-dance while making a
whipped-cream-and-coffee, and elaborate bit of nonsense so that she
doesn't see her camera-guy being harpooned by Michael, on the very
camera that camera dead-camera-boy has just that second carefully
placed by the stairwell... well, la-dee-da! You know Miss Latte will
be punished for this sexy display and self-indulgence. But you don't
even see her bloody horrible death scene, just the considerable
blood slick she leaves on the floor, above which she dangles, so
very pop-eyedly.
Of
course, even without Nora's slaughter, there are more than enough
gruesome violences committed against young bodies -- all locked in
the house because they've signed their webcast contract. The group
Freddy assembles and instructs to "search for clues" (and
then endeavors to scare silly by planting various Michael
paraphernalia, like aggressively marked up coloring books, a high
chair with nasty leather restraints for baby Mike, skeletons in the
basement wall, first dead sister's hairbrush at her now-cobwebby
dressing table, etc.) consists of the kind of fresh meat you're used
to seeing in slasher flicks -- kids looking for a break, ready to do
anything to be the next Johnny Depp or Josh Hartnett.
This
crew consists of Last Girl Sara (Bianca Kajlich), tarty literature
major/impalee Donna (Daisy McCrackin),
bleached-blond-TV-star/decapitated girl Jen (Katee Sackhoff, who is
actually charming, as far as she goes), boring-as-heck/throat-cut
kid Bill (played by forgettable American Pie cast member
Thomas Ian Nicholas, apparently still looking for that break), and
gothic-affecting music major Jim (Luke Kirby) -- I actually forget
what happens to him, but he deserves it because he comes on to Donna
by saying, "You've got great legs. What time do they
open?"
The
single character who seems sensible and un-irritating, and has seen
enough of these movies to know how not to act, is Jen's
bong-smoking buddy Rudy (Sean Patrick Thomas, who also made Dracula
2000 before he blew up in Save the Last Dance, and is
apparently part of this equally old project because the director
Rick Rosenthal, aside from directing Sean Penn's Bad Boys
nineteen years ago and Halloween 2 twenty-one years ago, has
recently done episodes for Thomas's TV series, The District).
Rudy works in the cafeteria down at the college, which suggests
that, unlike the other kids, he knows a little something-something
about the world. It also gives him a "hook," which is that
he's into food and nutrition, going so far as to float the theory
that Michael is murderous because of a poor diet. Plus, Rudy knows
his way around a knife drawer, which comes in handy here, briefly,
anyway.
You
keep track of all these kiddies by way of Halloween: Resurrection's
major gimmick, that is, the cameras on their heads, and the
split-images on the computer screens, watched by a bunch of kids at
a Halloween party, wearing costumes and laughing at the killings,
because, like you (the presumed viewer of this film), they've seen
way too many slasher flicks, and know how they all turn out. The one
observer who takes the events seriously is Sara's email-pal Myles
(Ryan Merriman), who's dressed like Vince Vega in Pulp Fiction:
truly, a meaningful costume. Myles sends Sara helpful messages on
her palm pilot like, "He's on the stairs!" and "GO
NOW!" She plays resourceful Last Girl just fine, slipping out
half-open windows, kicking Michael in the head, and, importantly,
getting interminably stuck under some debris just as the room is
going up in flames and Michael's sitting bolt upright from his
deadlike splay on the floor -- again.
All
this takes place as multiple audiences watch -- Freddy, the internet
viewers, you. While Rhymes' Freddy is most fun to watch (especially
facing off against Michael) and makes a fine speech at the end about
the evils of invasive cameras, the kid participants in Dangertainment
surely have a sense of what's at issue, long before Michael makes
the scene. At first they think maybe they'll just all stay together
in one room, unmoving, for the night; Jen, who aspires to stardom,
reminds them of their duty to a viewing "public." They
agree to "perform," trudging off to "explore"
the Myers' creaky, dark, awful rooms.
Like
most films in the genre, this one is self-knowing. Unlike most of
them, it does have something to say beyond the body count. If you
can see past the obvious machinations on its surface (which,
granted, demands some tolerance for the genre), Halloween:
Resurrection poses real questions about responsibility even as
it gives you what you paid for -- quick splatter and even quicker
dread of splatter. For one thing, it doesn't pretend that white kids
are the only ones who appreciate the genre; for another, it invites
meta-audience participation via that palm pilot device, as you get
to read along with internal catcalls.
And
for one more thing, it makes a grim, grand metaphor out of reality
TV and insidious observation technologies (both encroaching on daily
experience by the minute). This extends beyond its reference to The
Osbournes (which must have been added after the film came off
the shelf), to timely and occasionally insightful concerns about
surveillance culture. After several frazzling and frustrating
moments, she takes off her head camera and points it at herself:
"You watch," she snarls, her face close and blurry in the
frame. "You watch!" It is what you've come to do, after
all. |
Directed
by:
Rick Rosenthal
Starring:
Busta Rhymes
Bianca Kajlich
Tyra Banks
Sean Patrick Thomas
Jamie Lee Curtis
Brad Loree
Katee Sackhoff
Written by:
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17
requires
accompanying parent
or adult guardian.
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