|
Review by MrBrown
3 stars out of 4
_Kill_Bill_ is probably the film Quentin Tarantino was born to
make. The film finds the long-in-hibernation writer-director at his most
fiercely cinematic yet, being more giddily creative with the camera and
overall visual style. At the same time, though, the film shows his more
literary-skewing tendencies coming out in even stronger force than usual,
from generous use of expository voiceover narration and text cards to
literal chapter divisions. And, in that off-kilter Tarantino sensibility,
all of these tricks are deployed in service of a story that is--and I mean
this in the best way--pure pulp trash.
But note that I say _Kill_Bill_ and *not* _Kill_Bill_Vol._1_ which
is the film--or, should I say, *half* a film--that is seeing release (to
quote the original teaser trailer) "in the year 2003." Tarantino and
Miramax's decision to split what had been written and shot as a single--if
rather lengthy--piece into two separate features was questionable from the
get-go, and seeing the risky move in practice it is apparent just how wrong
it is for a Tarantino picture in particular. While the story he's telling
here--quite simply, an assassin known only as The Bride (Uma Thurman) seeks
bloody revenge against the former allies who tried to kill her--is in a
90-minute exploitation cinema mold, his famously non-linear storytelling
style really does not lend itself to being cut in half like a grindhouse
serial. As such, while his work is has historically moment-to-moment
watchable and entertaining, what pushes his previous films into something
far beyond was the excitement of watching the larger, clearer, deeper, even
more fascinating picture gradually unfold--usually by jumping back and
forth through time to reveal the key information and back story when it
provided optimal dramatic punch--and assemble into something greater in the
end. The forced split robs this installment or the next one of any such
satisfaction. Imagine _Reservoir_Dogs_ split in two; that hypothetical
_Vol._1_, for whatever virtues it would have, would feel woefully
incomplete--and so goes the case of _Kill_Bill_Vol._1_.
Of course, some would argue that _Vol._1_ would feel like half a
movie since the decision to split was made well into post-production.
However, the filmmakers have gone on record to say that they want the film
to be seen as separate entities (and, yes, that means no re-combined DVD
edition) --and at least as far as _Vol._1_ is concerned, it not only
doesn't quite stand on its own narratively, there's no good reason (and I
don't count the "there are no three-hour grindhouse flicks" excuse as one)
for this to be a big screen miniseries. That the cut-off point makes for a
fairly painless break is deceiving; considering the story is told out of
sequence, not to mention this first half features a number of digressions
from/tangents away from the main story of The Bride--namely an extended
anime sequence centering on a supporting character--after the surface
delights wear off, one is left to question what exactly is there is of
substance to hang onto in _Vol._1_.
Without a doubt, making the most substantial impact is Thurman.
While she has proven her versatility over the years, her work as The Bride
shows that her talent is matched by her fearlessness. It goes without
saying that it was rather jarring to see a steely-eyed, snarling, samurai
sword-wielding, Bruce Lee-in-_Game_of_Death_-tracksuit-sporting Thurman
cutting down hordes of Yakuza goons in the teaser trailer, but what makes
the sight even more stunning in context is how something so seemingly
unlikely feels not only natural but right. But she is more than simply up
to the arduous physical requirements of the role; whether a scene calls for
a knowing, tongue-in-cheek reading of particularly over-the-top dialogue or
a genuine emotional display, Thurman is always on point.
Hence it's all the more dismaying that, as presented in _Vol._1_,
The Bride is a veritable cipher. The audience learns that her code name was
Black Mamba, that she was pregnant when her fellow members of the Deadly
Viper Assassination Squad--under the leadership of the titular Bill (David
Carradine, who is heard but virtually unseen in this half)--beat her to
near-death on her wedding day, and that after waking up from a
four-year-long coma she's out for the blood of her attackers, with Bill the
last of the "death list five." All we know about her is purely surface, and
while such thinness is perhaps in keeping with exploitation film spirit,
Tarantino quite obviously was aiming for something deeper; witness the
lengthy, novelistic tangent following in rather powerful detail the
background of one of the "death list five," O-Ren Ishii, code named
Cottonmouth (Lucy Liu). Given Tarantino's penchant for time-fractured,
nonlinear storytelling, perhaps it's safe to presume that the real meat and
background of her character will be delved into in _Vol._2_--but if we're
to look at each film as a separate being, that leaves an undernourished
center to _Vol._1_.
However, there's no deficiency as far as thrills in _Vol._1_.
Right from the opening ShawScope logo card and a grainy "Our Feature
Presentation" clip straight from the '70s, it's clear that Tarantino is
having a ball revisiting and paying elaborate homage to the genre cinema on
which he grew up. Every note plays perfectly, in both a literal
sense--again, Tarantino makes inspired and often unexpected music choices,
from Nancy Sinatra's opening "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" to original
music by The RZA to a sirens-blaring sample of Quincy Jones's _Ironside_
theme song--and figuratively. He also convincingly adopts the visual
language of the milieu, from the facial zoom-ins whenever The Bride first
glimpses her prey to the outrageously overwrought, blood-spewing violence.
Undoubtedly the latter touch will be a source of controversy--and, for
some, outright repulsion--but I say those who object are overly sensitive;
when the people onscreen have (as Tarantino puts it) "garden hoses for
veins," the exaggeration can only be taken in a cheekily cartoonish way.
But there's more to Tarantino's work here than mere carbon
copying; in picking through and mixing various elements from those films,
he has come up with a stylized pastiche that is made all the more
entertaining when filtered through his distinct sensibility--though in an
unexpected way. When Tarantino broke through in 1994 with _Pulp_Fiction_,
it was highly amusing how some media and moviegoers pegged him an action
director (remember all that thinking aloud of him perhaps being the ideal
hypothetical candidate to jumpstart the James Bond franchise,
pre-_GoldenEye_?) when his films were essentially talk-fests with only
sporadic action. With _Kill_Bill_, he turns that idea on its ear; beyond
the first screen "chapter," little of his trademark witty wordplay is in
evidence and the film turns into more or less pure action pulp cinema.
Aided in no small part by the superb choreography by Asian action cinema
legends Sonny Chiba (who has a supporting role) and Yuen Wo-Ping, Tarantino
shows that he is indeed a natural with action as he is with the spoken
word. Not only does the climactic sequence, a huge samurai sword/martial
arts free-for-all in a teahouse followed by an almost-serene duel in a snow
garden, deliver the appropriately frenzied adrenaline rush, it also
generates palpable suspense--quite a feat since the outcome is in even less
doubt than the action movie norm (after all, The Bride has to live to kill
Bill).
Yet it's these considerable virtues that makes _Kill_Bill_Vol._1_
frustrating when all is said and done--or, rather, not said and not done.
That Tarantino does such a bang-up, kick-ass job with so much in
_Kill_Bill_Vol._1_ ultimately works somewhat against it; all the pieces are
in place for potential greatness, but in willingly keeping the picture
incomplete, Tarantino keeps his wild, whacked-out, and thoroughly
compelling vision from reaching that point. Perhaps it would be exhausting
to sit through three full hours of _Kill_Bill_, but wouldn't that be
all-too appropriate, truly giving the audience the subjective experience of
The Bride and all she has to endure? But such questions are moot at this
point, not to mention they presume that what awaits in _Vol._2_ is on the
level of _Vol._1_--and all anyone knows right now is that
_Kill_Bill_Vol._1_ is one entertaining and stylish thrill ride, no more, no
less.
|