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(1998) rt: 117m **
Director: Tony Kaye
Starring: Edward Norton, Edward Furlong, Beverly D'Angelo, Fairuza
Balk, Stacey Keach, Elliott Gould
Tagline: Some legacies must end. (Some movies must end)
What do you get when you mix an angry skinhead
with cliched dialogue and a ridiculous plot that has no place in
a 90's film? You get an overrated melodramatic film that only got
positive reviews because people were afraid to say it sucked. First
problem: the film is set in Los Angeles. I lived in LA for seventeen
years and don't remember a huge skinhead, cross-burning element
-- gangbangers, yes, but not many white supremacists. There's also
a scene in the movie straight out of the silly pagan ritual scene
in Dragnet (yes, with Dan Akroyd), also set in some mysterious
country setting presumably outside of LA somewhere. Also, are we
supposed to be scared of Ed Norton with his incredibly fake looking
swastika tattoo and menacing glare? I can't help but think that
Edward Furlong took a sack of Valium before heading to the set as
he moped and dragged himself through his scenes. There's a message
hiding somewhere in this film but, unfortunately, it's hidden by
overtly racist headings, as every black person in the movie has
a gang affiliation or is in prison. To make up for this, the filmmakers
made the one unincarcerated or gang initiated black male, an omnipresent,
overeducated high school principal who somehow has pull with everyone
in the world from the chief of police, to the California prison
board, to the leader of the white supremacist movement himself.
It's also nice to see Stacey Keach back in action even if he did
look ridiculous as Cameron Alexander, the head of the white power
movement, with his bad wig and fake glasses. [videotape, MF]
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