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Different climates: 'Road to Perdition' & 'Sunshine State'. (Screen).


It's nice when two talented directors serve up films from opposite poles of inspiration, like Sam Mendes and John Sayles, whose current movies form this summer's referendum on what you want from cinematic art.

Road to Perdition, Mendes's study of Depression-era Irish mobsters Mobsters is a 1991 crime drama detailing the creation of the National Crime Syndicate/The Commission. Set in New York City during the Prohibition era, it's a somewhat fictionalized account of rise of Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Meyer Lansky, Frank Costello, and Benjamin "Bugsy"  in a small Midwestern city, features Paul Newman as John Rooney, the aging boss whose patina of gravitas grav·i·tas  
n.
1. Substance; weightiness: a frivolous biography that lacks the gravitas of its subject.

2.
 can't hide his ruthlessness; Daniel Craig as his violent and wayward grown son, Connor; and Tom Hanks as Michael Sullivan, the orphan Rooney raised to become his trusted hit man and surrogate son. When Connor makes a brutal move against his nemesis, a series of lethal events ensues, and Sullivan and his own, twelve-year-old son must take to the road as fugitives.

Mendes, you'll recall, is the young English director whose first film, American Beauty, won him an Oscar. For Road to Perdition, he has brought along his brilliant cinematographer, Conrad L. Hall, and the new film is almost pathologically gorgeous. Every scene, every frame looks beautifully composed--whether the slow drip of ice packing a coffin at a wake, or a bobbing hatted multitude on the sidewalks of Chicago, or the wavery reflection of rain on a hotel room wall at night. The movie culminates in a silent, slow-motion nocturnal ballet of death staged on a rain-drenched city street, with a posse of mobsters machine-gunned down as residents gaze operatically from their windows. During the massacre, Newman keeps his back turned to the gunman, and not only is he somehow never hit, but as his men are mown down on all sides, he doesn't blink, doesn't even look. It's a whopper Whopper - WarGames  of a visual conceit. And what about those spectators at their windows? Wouldn't they be crouching in terror? Go with the lovely pictures in this movie, and you'll be fine. Start asking questions, and the thing unravels.

Road to Perdition is based on a graphic novel--a comic book--which may explain its drastically underwritten script. The theme of father-son struggle is announced, portentously por·ten·tous  
adj.
1. Of the nature of or constituting a portent; foreboding: "The present aspect of society is portentous of great change" Edward Bellamy.

2.
 ("Sons are put on the earth to trouble their fathers," Newman's Rooney growls), but never made to arise from the interactions of characters themselves. There's as little dialogue here as in a Clint Eastwood spaghetti Western (Jennifer Jason Leigh, as Sullivan's wife, has about thirty words to say), and as a result, the actors have to do extra work with their faces. Mostly they pull it off: Hanks with his fleshy, sorrowing potato-face, and Newman, his ageless blue eyes glaring out with a predatory serenity, conjuring something Shakespearean and damned. But there's only so much faces can do.

Steadfastly wintry and elegiac el·e·gi·ac  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or involving elegy or mourning or expressing sorrow for that which is irrecoverably past: an elegiac lament for youthful ideals.

2.
, Road to Perdition is all about mood, a dreamy visual poem that carries period-piece authenticity into a rapture of atmospherics at·mos·pher·ics  
n.
1. (used with a sing. verb)
a. Electromagnetic radiation produced by natural phenomena such as lightning.

b. Radio interference produced by electromagnetic radiation.
. Instead of characterization, Mendes gives us sets and costumes, a world of dark Victorian interiors and heavy, three-piece woolen wool·en also wool·len  
adj.
1. Made or consisting of wool.

2. Of or relating to the production or marketing of woolen goods.

n.
Fabric or clothing made from wool. Often used in the plural.
 suits. Thomas Newman's score incorporates Irish themes into a plangent plan·gent  
adj.
1. Loud and resounding: plangent bells.

2. Expressing or suggesting sadness; plaintive: "From a doorway came the plangent sounds of a guitar" 
, throbbing throb  
intr.v. throbbed, throb·bing, throbs
1. To beat rapidly or violently, as the heart; pound.

2. To vibrate, pulsate, or sound with a steady pronounced rhythm:
 symphony as relentlessly lavish as the film's look. With its speakeasies and machineguns, mobsters and molls, the scenario couldn't be more Edward G Robinson; but the mood is more like the New Age music of Enya--not hard-edged, but soft; a smooth and lulling fantasy.

Again and again Mendes and Hall make visual poetry out of violence, softening it. When Hanks's character becomes a one-man wrecking crew--you haven't seen this much death dealt out on behalf of a good man's family since Mel Gibson in The Patriot--there's plenty of blood, but the aestheticizing takes the horror out of the violence, making it safe. Ultimately the film's beauty sabotages its own moral inquiry, burying the question of goodness and evil set up nicely by casting an actor like Hanks against type as a ruthless professional killer, and turning the son's opening voice-over question--"some say Michael Sullivan was a decent man; some say he was no good at all"--into mere nostalgia. Road to Perdition is one of the most beautifully banal films you'll ever see--a cinematic mirage.

It's hard to imagine a filmmaker less like Mendes than John Sayles, whose Sunshine State serves up a sourly hilarious satire of contemporary Florida. In contrast to the fantasy stylizations of Mendes and Hall, Sayles rarely seems to care much about the look of his movies. There's an artlessness to many of them, an urgency about content and a corresponding impatience with form. With its abrupt cuts, minimal score, copious dialogue, and large ensemble cast, Sunshine State has an underproduced, semi-documentary feel. No poetry here, just the plentiful prose of a filmmaker with something to say.

Like Matewan, Sayles's 1987 chronicle of labor wars in a West Virginia mining town, Sunshine State offers a big chewy chunk of American social and political conflict. It's set in fictional Delrona Beach, where the Temple family, white motel owners, and the African American Stokeses, who live in a historically black section of modest beachfront beach·front  
n.
A strip of land facing or running along a beach.

adj.
Situated along or having direct access to a beach: beachfront hotels; beachfront property.

Noun 1.
 homes, are beset by competing developers trying to pry, wheedle whee·dle  
v. whee·dled, whee·dling, whee·dles

v.tr.
1. To persuade or attempt to persuade by flattery or guile; cajole.

2.
, or trick their owners into selling. A quartet of snowbird snowbird: see junco.  golfers, headed by Alan King, recurs throughout, waxing metaphysical about Florida as a developers' paradise. "Overnight, out of the muck and the mangroves, we created this!" they exult. "Golf courses--nature, on a leash!"

Sayles shows us characters peddling debased de·base  
tr.v. de·based, de·bas·ing, de·bas·es
To lower in character, quality, or value; degrade. See Synonyms at adulterate, corrupt, degrade.



[de- + base2.
 versions of history and culture put to the service of marketing. Like men in ties traipsing through the wetlands, touting their "village concept" of deluxe homes. Or the farce of Delrona Beach's "Buccaneer buccaneer: see piracy.
buccaneer

Any of the British, French, or Dutch sea adventurers who chiefly haunted the Caribbean and the Pacific seaboard of South America during the latter part of the 17th century, preying on Spanish settlements and shipping.
 Days," with Mary Steenburgen in a delightful role as the addled ad·dle  
v. ad·dled, ad·dling, ad·dles

v.tr.
To muddle; confuse: "My brain is a bit addled by whiskey" Eugene O'Neill. See Synonyms at confuse.
 chairwoman of the Chamber of Commerce promoting this dubious affair. Such programs, Sayles makes clear, form a kind of cultural and political revisionism re·vi·sion·ism  
n.
1. Advocacy of the revision of an accepted, usually long-standing view, theory, or doctrine, especially a revision of historical events and movements.

2.
, turning the gritty conflict of history into something that can be sold. "People don't realize how difficult it is to invent a tradition!" Steenburgen complains. Sunshine State explores how corruptible we are, not just brazenly, through shady payoffs (though these are here too), but in the more insidious accommodation of our imaginations to money-making, the theme-parking of our minds. In a bar, Timothy Hutton's character, a landscape architect working for the developers, describes his work to Marly marl  
n.
A crumbly mixture of clays, calcium and magnesium carbonates, and remnants of shells that is sometimes found under desert sands and used as fertilizer for lime-deficient soils.

tr.v.
 Temple (Edie Falco of TV's The Sopranos) in terms of Frederick Law Olmstead's nineteenth-century visionary populism, only to bail out halfway through. "OK," he says, "the populist part of it has fallen away."

Sayles wears his own populism on his sleeve. His films distinguish themselves from more mainstream productions by their willingness to take us to local zoning meetings; and there as elsewhere, the confrontation of good and evil is rarely far from the surface. With its sprawling cast and stingingly funny ironies, Sunshine State bears some resemblance to a Robert Altman film, but Sayles lacks Altman's whimsy. He doesn't sufficiently enjoy the merry spectacle of cravenness and greed; he's more judgmental than Altman, and more didactic. Sayles doesn't mind turning his film into a history lesson, whether showing us a scrapbook of pictures from black debutante cotillions of a bygone era or simply reciting the brutal facts of Florida's economic past, its cotton plantations and turpentine turpentine, yellow to brown semifluid oleoresin exuded from the sapwood of pines, firs, and other conifers. It is made up of two principal components, an essential oil and a type of resin that is called rosin.  camps and pulp mills, its planters, fugitives, and slaves. "You've got history to burn," enthuses Steenburgen's husband, fatuously fat·u·ous  
adj.
1. Vacuously, smugly, and unconsciously foolish. See Synonyms at foolish.

2. Delusive; unreal: fatuous hopes.
 praising her for her Buccaneer Days. "Yup," she sighs. "Mass murder, rape, and slavery."

Characters in Sayles's movies have a habit of fessing up like that, and there's nothing subtle about the points scored in Sunshine State, right down to developers speaking the language of war--huddling over maps while plotting to attack the "hostile native population" in the "soft underbelly of the island." The enemy is corporate America, busy bulldozing nature and authentic local culture, turning Florida--like everywhere else--into a place where even Mom's fried chicken turns out to be from KFC KFC Kentucky Fried Chicken (restaurant chain)
KFC Kenya Flower Council
KFC Kitchen Fresh Chicken (Kentucky Fried Chicken motto)
KFC Kung Fu Cult (Cinema)
KFC Kitchen Fixed Charge
. Sayles's vision is one of ethnography determined by economy; his view of America is pessimistic and conspiratorial. "There's a handful of people who run the whole deal," says a former college football star and local hero hired to hoodwink hood·wink  
tr.v. hood·winked, hood·wink·ing, hood·winks
1. To take in by deceptive means; deceive. See Synonyms at deceive.

2. Archaic To blindfold.

3. Obsolete To conceal.
 the black owners out of their homes, "and then there's the rest of us."

Sayles began as a fiction writer, and like many of his movies, Sunshine State seems notably literary--packed with dialogue, visually plain, and driven by ideas in a way that makes it finally more thought-provoking than entirely satisfying as cinematic experience. I was grateful for some fine acting turns, especially Edie Falco who's terrific as the motel-owning Marly Temple, her toughness laced with dissatisfaction and desire. "I saw a manatee in here once," she drawls while out canoeing through the mangroves with Hutton. "Like a big old fat lady at the bath house. I felt guilty for watching." Sayles makes you wish for more lines like that--for characters speaking off the grid of politics and class, in a film you yourself might feel more guilty about watching this summer, and not quite so virtuous.

But for that there's always Austin Powers. Yeah, baby!
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Author:Cooper, Rand Richards
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Aug 16, 2002
Words:1478
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