Graphic, novel aren’t understatements for ‘Sin City’
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JIM ERWIN
What does the world look like when you travel beyond the Orange
Curtain? It’s dark, violent and intoxicatingly sexy. It’s “Sin City.”
It’s kind of scary how many Orange County residents really feel
that way about traveling to Los Angeles.
Frank Miller’s “Sin City” is a place that is dripping with
corruption, vice and blood. There’s a lot of blood, and no man is
innocent.
The movie has three different stories, all based on Miller’s
graphic novels “Sin City,” “The Big Fat Kill” and “That Yellow
Bastard.”
A couple decades ago, a number of artists began to look at the
comic book format and experimented with ways to use it to tell more
sophisticated stories than Archie and Jughead. Miller was among the
artists creating graphic (illustrated) novels for adults. His work is
comic book noir. The characters struggle with their personal demons,
while trying to cope with the reality of a world that’s dark, cold,
hostile and frequently violent.
When I discovered Miller’s work, one of the first things I noticed
was the outstanding production values. Every detail was carefully
crafted. The glossy paper stock was much better quality than the
traditional comic book newsprint. The black ink was a deep, rich
black, which connected the artwork to the darkness of the stories.
Visually, the movie “Sin City” is a real treat. It emphasizes
style over substance, but the style is executed perfectly. The film
is black and white, with an occasional high contrast color thrown on
a character for emphasis. Alexis Bledel has beautiful blue eyes,
which bring out her youthful charisma. Jaime King’s golden hair and
ruby red lips radiate fiery sexuality. When these characters are on
the screen, their small splashes of color are the only color images
we see. The rest of the frame is basic black and white.
Morally, “Sin City” is a black and white world. There’s never any
doubt about who’s good and who’s evil. The men are macho and tough.
Life has left them with scars both inside their hearts and on their
faces. The women are flawlessly beautiful and unrepentantly sexual.
The city is always dark. Nothing feels safe.
The movie’s three stories are about men who are protecting people
they love or who seek revenge against those who harmed their loved
ones.
Bruce Willis is an honest cop who is wrongfully jailed for a
heinous crime against a child. Mickey Rourke is determined to avenge
the murder of the only woman to ever treat him with kindness. Clive
Owen is disturbed by the violent way Benicio Del Toro treats women
and wants to make sure that Del Toro never hurts anyone again.
In each story, the situations spiral out of control and become
more and more violent.
This movie’s cast is mind blowing, and the performances are out of
this world. In addition to the stars already mentioned, the men in
this movie include Elijah Wood, Michael Clarke Duncan, Powers Boothe
and Rutger Hauer. The women include Jessica Alba, Brittany Murphy,
Rosario Dawson and Carla Gugino.
It’s obvious all of the performers had a lot of fun making this
movie. No one tips their hand or winks at the camera, but there are
times when the scenes are so intense and over the top that it’s
absurdly funny. If you got paid a dollar for every time Mickey Rourke
spits blood, you’d walk out of the theater money ahead.
“Sin City” is definitely a guy movie. The men in it are strong,
flawed and interesting. The women are mostly two-dimensional, sexual
beings. Almost every woman in the movie is a prostitute.
On one hand, it all seems painfully adolescent, but the characters
of “Sin City” live on the fringes of society. If the stories were
about emotionally centered human-resources executives, it just
wouldn’t be this much fun.
It’s important to remember that these kinds of edgy characters
hadn’t been seen in comic books before Miller and other artists
decided to take a chance and create graphic stories for adults. What
makes “Sin City” the movie unique and special is how the film’s
visual style replicates the emotional power of Miller’s printed work.
This movie is a celebration of an artist who took chances to create
something new and different.
The film’s tagline is that if you walk down the right back alley
in “Sin City,” you can find just about anything. You certainly won’t
have any problem finding a movie that’s worth your ten bucks, because
this one is hot.
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
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