Saw it a coupel weeks ago and liked it. Here's my review from Friday's paper:
Mel Gibson has said that wanting to film a great foot chase was what started him on the path that led to the creation of his new epic feature, "Apocalypto."
It's a simple, populist idea, doing for bipeds what "The French Connection" and "Ronin" did for cars.
So one wonders how the troubled actor-director came to select the movie's key framework - completely unknown actors, dozens of graphic killings, a setting in a quixotic, extinct culture and the use of subtitles over native Mayan dialogue - to set up his auteuristic fetish.
It's a fair question. That's a lot of hurdles for the average popcorn muncher to surmount on the way into the cineplex. But what matters most is that it's worth it.
That's not surprising, because once the film gets rolling it follows - with its distinctive flair - the virtuous hero-vs.-empire story line that earned Gibson an Oscar in 1996 for "Braveheart" and got similar results in 2001 for Ridley Scott and "Gladiator."
Simply put, Gibson's done this period action movie thing before. Because he's walking well-trodden ground, the quirky choices end up helping "Apocalypto," transporting it into a realm where it escapes all but the most basic trappings of the genre.
Most important is the hero, Jaguar Paw (played by Rudy Youngblood), a young father who lives in a jungle village in Central America, away from a comparatively modernized but declining Mayan empire that sees human sacrifice as the key to appeasing the gods and changing its fortune.
Jaguar Paw's village winds up on the hit list of a band of Mayan marauders - we know this because they're much more heavily tattooed and pierced and look mean, like any decent marauder should.
Striking early in the morning, the Mayans lay waste to the village, killing some and imprisoning most for transport back to the temples for sacrifice.
Jaguar Paw suffers the same fate after hiding his pregnant wife and son in a deep natural well, and joins the rest of his villagers on a trail of tears march toward a then unknown fate.
Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" got lots of ink for its incredibly graphic violence, but anyone who saw "Braveheart" knows the guy doesn't hold back on gore and "Apocalypto" is no different.
The laundry list of killings here includes decapitations, mauling, stabbings, impalings, poisoning, slit throats and wrists, bludgeonings and whatever the shorthand is for getting your heart cut out before being thrown down a couple hundred temple steps.
It's on those temple steps where the movie draws a contemporary link, with an overblown emperor (presidential?) type who preaches that the sacrifices are necessary for society to move forward and help the Mayans become "masters of our time."
A foreshadowed omen spares Jaguar Paw as he's on the chopping block, putting him on the chase home to rescue his family, with head hunter Zero Wolf (Raoul Trujillo) leading a pack of adversaries close behind him.
The south Mexican jungle used for filming lets Gibson put a great wrinkle in his ambitious chase, one where the beautiful setting is also an equal-opportunity adversary that's full of danger at every step.
The taut chase scenes let Youngblood shine most, combining believable grief, pride and desperation against the mercenary and unrelenting but honorable hunter of Trujillo.
The body language and eye contact of the actors - with great direction and cinematography - make the fretted-over subtitles pretty much unnecessary for the last third of the movie, where the chase is all that matters and action becomes the universal language.
One scene where it's key, though, finds Jaguar Paw yelling to his pursuers from the bottom of a waterfall, "This is my jungle!"
It's this film's conceit to the "Freedom!" moment in "Braveheart" - and a reminder that even with all the unorthodox window dressing, we've been here before and this is the stuff Gibson does best.
_________________ Kwame Kilpatrick texted to his mistress: "NEXT TIME, JUST TELL ME TO SIT DOWN, SHUT UP, and DO YOUR THING! I'm fucked up now!"
|