![]() |
|
||||||
| Home |
News |
Sports |
Business |
Entertainment |
Classifieds | ||||||
| Columnists | Autos | Homes | Careers | Lifestyles | Ebert | Search | ||||||
| mobile | email edition | printer friendly | email article | ||||||
Current reviews Film buffs calendar Great movies Interviews, essays Movie Answer Man One minute reviews Search Email Answer Man Archive Books Calendar of Events Galleries Gaming Music Dining Roger Ebert Movies Television Stage Delacoma DeRogatis Ebert Feder Grochowski Kisor Pearlman Rosenthal Sachs Weiss Zwecker ![]() |
February 21, 2003
David Gale: Kevin Spacey Universal Pictures and Intermedia Films present a film directed by Alan
Parker. Written by Charles Randolph. Running time: 130 minutes. Rated R
(for violent images, nudity, language and sexuality).
BY ROGER EBERT
"The Life of David Gale" tells the story of a famous opponent of
capital punishment who, in what he must find an absurdly ironic
development, finds himself on Death Row in Texas, charged with the murder
of a woman who was also opposed to capital punishment. This is a plot, if
ever there was one, to illustrate King Lear's complaint, "As flies to
wanton boys, are we to the gods; They kill us for their sport." I am aware
this is the second time in two weeks I have been compelled to quote Lear,
but there are times when Eminem simply will not do.
David Gale is an understandably bitter man, played by Kevin Spacey, who
protests his innocence to a reporter named Bitsey Bloom (Kate Winslet),
whom he has summoned to Texas for that purpose. He claims to have been
framed by right-wing supporters of capital punishment because his death
would provide such poetic irony in support of the noose, the gas or the
chair. Far from killing Constance Harraway (Laura Linney), he says, he had
every reason not to, and he explains that to Bitsey in flashbacks that
make up about half of the story.
Bitsey becomes convinced of David's innocence. She is joined in her
investigation by the eager and sexy intern Zack (Gabriel Mann), and they
become aware that they are being followed everywhere in a pickup truck by
a gaunt-faced fellow in a cowboy hat, who is either a right-wing
death-penalty supporter who really killed the dead woman, or somebody
else. If he is somebody else, then he is obviously following them around
with the MacGuffin, in this case a videotape suggesting disturbing aspects
of the death of Constance.
The man in the cowboy hat illustrates my recently renamed Principle of
the Unassigned Character, formerly known less elegantly as the Law of
Economy of Character Development. This principle teaches us that the
prominent character who seems to be extraneous to the action will probably
hold the key to it. The cowboy lives in one of those tumble-down shacks
filled with flies and peanut butter, with old calendars on the walls. The
yard has more bedsprings than the house has beds.
The acting in "The Life of David Gale" is splendidly done but serves a
meretricious cause. The direction is by the British director Alan Parker,
who at one point had never made a movie I wholly disapproved of. Now has
he ever. The secrets of the plot must remain unrevealed by me, so that you
can be offended by them yourself, but let it be said this movie is about
as corrupt, intellectually bankrupt and morally dishonest as it could
possibly be without David Gale actually hiring himself out as a joker at
the court of Saddam Hussein.
I am sure the filmmakers believe their film is against the death
penalty. I believe it supports it and hopes to discredit the opponents of
the penalty as unprincipled fraudsters. What I do not understand is the
final revelation on the videotape. Surely David Gale knows that Bitsey
Bloom cannot keep it private without violating the ethics of journalism
and sacrificing the biggest story of her career. So it serves no
functional purpose except to give a cheap thrill to the audience
slackjaws. It is shameful.
One of the things that annoys me is that the story is set in Texas and
not just in any old state--a state like Arkansas, for example, where the
1996 documentary "Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills"
convincingly explains why three innocent kids are in prison because they
wore black and listened to heavy metal, while the likely killer keeps
pushing himself onscreen and wildly signaling his guilt. Nor is it set in
our own state of Illinois, where Death Row was run so shabbily that former
Gov. George Ryan finally threw up his hands and declared the whole system
rotten.
No, the movie is set in Texas, which in a good year all by itself
carries out half the executions in America. Death Row in Texas is like the
Roach Motel: Roach checks in, doesn't check out. When George W. Bush was
Texas governor, he claimed to carefully consider each and every execution,
although a study of his office calendar shows he budgeted 15 minutes per
condemned man (we cannot guess how many of these minutes were devoted to
pouring himself a cup of coffee before settling down to the job). Still,
when you're killing someone every other week and there's an average of 400
more waiting their turn, you have to move right along.
Spacey and Parker are honorable men. Why did they go to Texas and make
this silly movie? The last shot made me want to throw something at the
screen--maybe Spacey and Parker.
You can make movies that support capital punishment ("The Executioner's
Song") or oppose it ("Dead Man Walking") or are conflicted ("In Cold
Blood"). But while Texas continues to warehouse condemned men with a
system involving lawyers who are drunk, asleep or absent; confessions that
are beaten out of the helpless, and juries that overwhelmingly prefer to
execute black defendants instead of white ones, you can't make this movie.
Not in Texas.
Copyright © Chicago Sun-Times Inc.
|
|
|
| ||
News | Sports | Business | Entertainment | Lifestyles | Classifieds Visit our online partners: Daily Southtown Pioneer Press Suburban Chicago Newspapers Post-Tribune Star Newspapers Jerusalem Post Daily Telegraph Copyright 2003, Digital Chicago Inc. |
| |||||