‘The Interpreter’ elucidates distrust
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PEGGY J. ROGERS
On the surface, “The Interpreter” is about preventing the
assassination of a foreign government leader visiting the United
Nations. At a deeper level, the suspense drama explores the social
and emotional choices people confront when senseless acts robs them
of people they love.
Loss of trust and its consequences is at the core of the film’s
every plot line: loss of trust in politicians, in government
protection agencies and in people in general. It is the result of
unexpected and sudden personal losses experienced by its leading
characters.
The plot to murder African leader Edmund Zuwanie on U.S. soil is
discovered by an interpreter (Silvia, played by Nicole Kidman) at the
United Nations. After Silvia reports the plot to federal agents, she
becomes a suspect in the conspiracy.
Once the feds reveal their distrust of Silvia, everything she does
is seen by the audience from the agents’ perspective. Once Silvia
realizes she is a suspect, not a witness, her ability to trust them
vanishes.
Federal Agent Tobin (Sean Penn), heads the task force to stop the
assassination, and has enough previous experience with witnesses to
justify his lack of trust in Silvia. Whether Tobin is correct about
her remains in play throughout the story. It is one of the stronger
and more entertaining plot lines in “The Interpreter.”
However, the two adversaries, Silvia and Tobin, discover they have
both experienced the senseless death of close family members. Tobin’s
loss is quite recent. The loss of Silvia’s family when she was a
child continues to affect her as an adult.
Talking about their grief is the common ground where trust begins
to develop and build between them. Tobin looks to Silvia to help him
cope and find a way to mourn yet move on.
Director Sydney Pollack (“The Firm,” “Out of Africa”) surrounds
the intimate journey of sorrow between Silvia and Tobin with plots
revolving around genocide and terrorism. “The Interpreter,” however,
skates along the edge of making a connection between genocide and
terrorists. The terrorists in the film are people whose lives and
families have been torn apart by acts of genocide. The message being
sent is that genocide breeds hate and revenge in an endless cycle of
death and grief. The terrorists exhibit the greatest loss of trust by
killing strangers or equals in the name of revenge.
Politics in movies can have the effect of bringing the nightly
news into the movie theater. If, however, political thrillers are
measured by how squeamish the audience becomes, then “The
Interpreter” ranks near the top. As a post-9/11 film, Pollack has
ingeniously weaved in plot lines throughout the tight security
measures in place at the United Nations. And yet, there is the
day-to-day detail that has the ability to undermine the best of
intentions.
Kidman and Penn are the best reasons for seeing “The Interpreter.”
Their ability to create real-life characters draws the audience in so
deep that by film’s end, they will be missed.
It is also an action-packed drama. Every scene reveals something
about the characters and/or moves the story forward.
“The Interpreter” is a good movie to take someone to so you can
ask for their interpretation of the film.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
Don’t get “Hustle”-d
to go see this movie
“Kung Fu Hustle” bills itself as being “a new comedy unlike
anything you have seen before.” If only this were true. I have no
clue how this movie was deemed worthy of all of the hype it has
received. This is just another low budget, B-grade, martial arts
movie that normally wouldn’t be shown in most U.S. theaters.
Back in the mid ‘80s, the USA Network had a show on Sunday
mornings called, “Kung Fu Theater.” It featured really bad Chinese
martial arts movies with some completely absurd story lines. Thinking
about what I saw on that show makes me believe that somewhere in
China, people are watching a kung fu version of “Lord of the Rings.”
“Kung Fu Hustle” would have been a perfect fit for “Kung Fu
Theater.” There’s nothing in this movie that makes it worth seeing,
unless you really love terrible martial arts movies.
The story follows the formula of a town being attacked by
gangsters, and defended by kung fu masters. The gangsters are a group
known as the Ax Gang, who carry axes and have ax tattoos. When two
bumbling idiots come to town pretending to be gang members, it
creates the conflict that starts the war between the gang and the
town.
The fighting continues to escalate each time the gang hires new
kung fu hitmen to attack the town. There’s a lot of computer
animation to show new forms of kung fu that include loud scream fu
and Chinese autoharp fu. Most of the action and the jokes rely
completely on computer animation that’s not especially convincing.
The combination of the flashbacks, disjointed subplots and a lack
of a strong leading character makes “Kung Fu Hustle” feel
directionless and confused. Heroes and villains who become central to
the story come and go very quickly, leaving you wondering whose story
is being told.
The characters are two-dimensional good guys and bad guys, which
works just fine for slapstick comedy if the characters remain
predictable. These characters are so inconsistent that the movie
becomes a mess. Watching them triumph and stumble isn’t especially
funny.
To do a great kung fu comedy, the fight scenes have to be
spectacular. “Kung Fu Hustle” doesn’t have anyone in the cast who can
perform on the level of Jackie Chan. There’s no one with Chan’s
athleticism or charisma.
In movies like “Rumble in the Bronx,” Chan showed the ability to
combine the physical comedy of Harold Lloyd with the martial arts
mastery of Bruce Lee. There’s nothing in “Kung Fu Hustle” that comes
close to the dazzling moves that are the stock and trade of China’s
best martial arts movies.
I walked away from “Kung Fu Hustle” wondering how and why it was
deemed worthy of a wide release. If you spend any time at the Newport
Beach Film Festival, you’ll see that there are tons of terrific
movies just begging to be shown in theaters, most of which don’t have
a prayer of getting U.S. distribution.
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
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