"KEEP BUSTIN'."

VERN Watches ON DEADLY GROUND With MR. SHOW At The Olympia Film Festival!!

SPOILER ALERT !!

Hey, everyone. “Moriarty” here with some Rumblings From The Lab.

Wow. Bob and David are everywhere right now, and it sounds like they’re having a great time. I still don’t know if I’m going to be able to get into the insane benefit show they’re part of in a few weeks, and I missed this. Still, if we had to have anyone cover it for us, thank god Vern was the one who went. You’ll see why when you read this…

Boys–

I know how you feel about film festivals. You’re for them, right? I think one of you said you were. I’ve seen a couple good pictures at the Seattle International Film Festival but that’s about it for me. Until today, when I decided to venture south to the Olympia Film Festival. And I’m real glad I did.

Usually I avoid Olympia. I know it’s our state capital, it once had a fine brewery and they got lots of college kids who brag because the rock band Sleater-Kinney was named after a street they still have near there. But I mean come on. The street isn’t even that good. In the downtown area the buildings are too far apart, and everything is closed. At least on Sunday. Anyway today they finally got a reason for me to go there: ON DEADLY GROUND.

On Deadly GroundNow if you know me, you know I wasn’t gonna miss ON DEADLY GROUND showing in a film festival, even if it was on the other side of the god damn planet. ON DEADLY GROUND is a unique specimen among ’90s action movies, with an admirable spirit of cornball politics you don’t usually see anymore, if you ever did. I think of it as a loose remake of BILLY JACK, transported to an oil rig in Alaska, and without all the hippie girls strumming guitars. The protagonist, Forrest Taft, is an ex-CIA badass who puts out fires for an oil company. Like Billy Jack, he is a white guy who has appointed himself as the defender of Native American culture and dignity, and he preaches non-violence but always finds himself having to throw guys through windows and shit. The movie also has BILLY JACK-like unruly town meeting scenes where natives angrily yell about various outrages, but to quote Senator Robert Byrd, they “might as well be talking to the ocean.” And like Billy Jack, Forrest Taft is injured and taken in by Native American healers who perform a ritual with him and tell him what his spirit animal is. But in this case they are eskimos and – here’s the twist – instead of a snake, he’s a bear.

See, that makes it totally different. Also there’s a scene where he gets bit in the balls by a dog.

The villain of the piece is Academy Award Winner Michael Caine as an evil oil executive in the style of Dick Cheney. The supporting cast includes acclaimed director Joan Chen as an Ignuit activist and Academy Award winning writer Billy Bob Thornton as a henchman. This was pre-SLINGBLADE but he actually tries to deliver a performance and develop a character in the three parts where he has lines.

R. Lee Ermey also appears as a mercenary hunting Taft, and he gets a couple ridiculous lines about how badass Taft is, in the tradition of the character Colonel Trautman in FIRST BLOOD saying, “He’s trained to eat things that’ll make a billygoat puke.”

But the real attraction here is first-time director Steven Seagal, who also stars as Taft. I don’t know if you boys are familiar with Mr. Seagal’s other work, such as MARKED FOR DEATH and ABOVE THE LAW and OUT FOR JUSTICE and other movies with those same type of titles. He fights in what I call a Dolemite style, which means that he’s kinda fat and slow but they pretend he’s beating everybody anyway. He doesn’t rhyme like Dolemite does, which is the main reason why he is as not as respected, but he does play guitar in some of his movies and he sells mystical oils on the internet.

You know who he is Harry, he was the guy in EXIT WOUNDS. Not DMX – the guy with the pony tail. I think he was the main guy. Anyway ON DEADLY GROUND is his best and most personal work to date. Unfortunately I didn’t get to see it on its original release. Because of personal troubles in my life, I was not available at that time. So I was pretty excited to see it on the big screen, on film, for the first time. Turns out for this screening they were projecting off a dvd, but here’s why. The picture was presented by three guys, David Cross, Bob Oedenkirk and another gentleman whose name I did not catch, who introduced himself as “legitimately a Steven Seagal fan” and later pointed out, “We know that he is concerned with Native American issues, because of his jacket.” These gentlemen, I’m not sure if they are film historians or what, I guess they’re on a cable program called “Mr. Show.” I didn’t catch which one was Mr. Show, I think it was the bald guy. Anyway they did a running commentary throughout the show, pausing to make comments, rewinding the good parts to watch them again and fast forwarding through the boring parts where helicopters land and shit.

Needless to say if you’ve seen this before, there was alot of rewinding during the scene where Seagal humiliates Mike Starr in a bar and then asks him, “What does it take to change the essence of a man?”

Later he asks Michael Caine, “How much is enough?” (referring to money) and later “What do you say to a man with no conscience?” So this is a movie that asks the important questions, in a very direct manner.

Now to be frankly honest, I felt that Cross and Oedenkirk were not completely respectful of Seagal’s picture. In a way, I think they were making fun of it, in my opinion. During most of the vision quest sequence, for example, Oedenkirk was buckled over laughing, and he paused it just to say, “I haven’t seen anything that funny in a long, long time.”

Still, they made some good points. As many times as I’ve seen this movie, I don’t think it ever occurred to me that this company flies in the CIA trained expert on a helicopter just to come in and push a button. Or that one of the guys Seagal beats up during the bar scene looks like he’s about 70 years old.

Oedenkirk also presented a good theory about why Seagal is an interestng figure. He says that most people think making it in Hollywood is all about politics, connections, who you know. He gave examples of how people ask him who he knew at HBO to get a show, or if he had to audition, etc. But he feels that the entertainment industry is just like any other business, that there is some of that going on but mostly if you get really good at what you do and build a reputation then you get jobs, and there are a million people in Hollywood who know somebody and pass them their crappy script but they don’t get jack shit out of it, because their script sucks. But Seagal, he says, really IS that cliche – he was Mike Ovitz’s Aikido trainer, and Ovitz called in some favors to get him an action movie, and next thing you know Seagal is considered an official movie star so he makes lots of money and gets to make movies every year and pretends he used to be in the CIA.

They passed out some literature for more background on Seagal. I didn’t get a copy but I know one of them was the recent Vanity Fair article, which is great. There is an anecdote in there about somebody finding Seagal in his trailer crying.

“What’s wrong Steven?”

“Oh, I was just reading the most beautiful script I’ve ever read.”

“Really? Who wrote it?”

“I did.”

The article doesn’t say which script he was reading, but it does mention that he wrote a movie about AIDS, and how the CIA invented it to kill blacks and gays. For some reason, none of the Hollywood studios were interested. But that sort of sums up what is cool about Steven Seagal, and about this movie. Yeah, I know, he’s a corny asshole with a pony tail, who co-opts other cultures to give himself an exotic image, who can’t really fight all that great, who says he is the reincarnation of a buddhist monk named Rinpoche, and who makes laughable movies. And as laughable as his movies are they’re never as interesting as Van Damme’s surrealist period with Tsui Hark (DOUBLE TEAM (1997), KNOCK OFF (1998).) Some of them are kind of boring.

But I mean, who else in Hollywood would try to make an action movie about AIDS as a CIA plot? Or, on a less insane level, who would make an action movie where at the end the hero makes a speech about the environment and the need for alternative fuel sources? You don’t even see that in arthouse movies. As Mr. Cross pointed out, “The sad thing is, he’s basically right. But he’s this idiotic, retarded clown.”

I really enjoyed this showing, it was a once in a lifetime event that I will always cherish. I hope Criterion will see fit to get these individuals to contribute a commentary track if and when they are able to put together a special edition of this classic enviro-actioner. Harry maybe you could use your clout to demand this from Criterion, that would be good thanks.

thanks again boys,

VERN

Awesome. Just awesome. You are the king, Vern.

“Moriarty” out.

Originally published at Ain’t-It-Cool-News: http://www.aintitcool.com/node/13561

View the archived Ain't-It-Cool-News Talkback
This entry was posted on Monday, October 14th, 2002 at 9:37 am and is filed under Action, AICN, Reviews, Seagal, Thriller. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

9 Responses to “VERN Watches ON DEADLY GROUND With MR. SHOW At The Olympia Film Festival!!”

  1. Everything in its right place.

    Hopefully Vern won’t sue me, but I’m going to plagiarize & paraphrase here, taking generously from the ON DEADLY GROUND chapter of SEAGALOGY without proper citations, because I think I might be able to make a major breakthrough in the field of scholarly filmatic criticism.

    THE TREE OF LIFE is to Malick’s filmography what ON DEADLY GROUND is to Seagalogy and what FEMME FATALE is to Brian DePalma’s filmography. It takes all the classic Malick motifs and themes and throws them into overdrive. Like the over-the-top Seagalian touches in ON DEADLY GROUND, the super-charged Malick-times-ten feel in this one is a godsend for serious scholars of Malick’s works, but it can be offputting for the uninitiated. In fact, this movie probably marks the point when even more of the mainstream audience will turn on Malick. He’s wearing his heart on his sleeve, putting himself out there, and that’s not always a gamble that pays off. A lot of people will laugh at the idea of putting this sort of message in a Brad Pitt movie (and a lot of people, unfortunately, will have a reaction that leads to things like this: http://leitch.tumblr.com/post/6849859584/staggering-yet-also-handy-via-nextprojection ).

    The framing concept of THE TREE OF LIFE, as voiced over in the beginning, is “the way of nature” versus “the way of grace.” Though the ideas are not necessarily in conflict with each other, I think this refers to [not just human] life’s eternal struggle to transcend the brutish nastiness of instinct & selfish desire and be more like that which is Divine. This is obviously fancy talk for “What does it take to change the essence of a man?”

    Just as Forrest Taft goes on a journey to discover his animal spirit and his purpose, turning down a gorgeous naked woman in favor of a, uh, a whatever it was that was down the other fork in the vision’s road that wasn’t the hot naked woman, the chief narrator of TREE OF LIFE goes on a journey of memory to discover that his personal life has a history as deep as that of all life, of all physical being, and that this is the essence of the connection between first creation and his own existence.

    Taft is paid extremely well as an employee of Aegis, but he is expected to ignore the seedy aspects of working for Jennings (Michael Caine). The “way of nature” in terms of capitalism is a perversion of constant growth, to seek & attain wealth by any & all means, and Taft finally rebels against this idea of what Aegis bigwigs consider the natural way of things, asking “How much is enough?” while he dismantles the rig. He discovers & acts upon “the way of grace,” which is the way of restoring land rights to the locals who would live in harmony with the environment. They each presumably have their own animal spirits, and so they combine the best traits of their human intelligence with the best traits of their inner animals, finding a balance that most Christians would equate with mankind’s harmonious concurrent obedience to both God’s law & man’s law.

    Jack O’Brien (Sean Penn) (though there’s no guarantee the name is correct) in THE TREE OF LIFE appears to be a successful architect, but he too needs time to change, and he too experiences wild, violent visions to reconcile his pain, his inner conflict, to change the essence of himself. In his case, instead of fighting a bear and overcoming the temptation of nailing a naked writhing hotty, he grasps & alters the enormity of his pain by undergoing a dreamy trip to the beginning of all creation, and thus he harmonizes the multitudinousness & harsh essential dichotomy within himself, the dichotomy of his father & mother, his creators. Both Taft & O’Brien confront their raw, bare core essence in order to change their understandings of it.

    Where Seagal uses lots of ADR (additional dialogue recording) snippets praising Forrest Taft to emphasize the action (SEAGALOGY, page 78), Malick uses lots of shots looking up the trunks of trees praising the Sky to emphasize his theme of one’s connection to all creation.

    ON DEADLY GROUND ends with peaceful majestic wildlife images and Seagal (no longer Taft at this point, in my opinion) & Joan Chen spotting a bird circling their boat. This bird could be Silook, the Chief who was shot dead by MacGruder (John McGinley), in his heavenly spirit form. THE TREE OF LIFE arguably ends the same way, with Sean Penn finding the people he loves in a kind of a representation of Heaven.

    So, let it be said: With THE TREE OF LIFE, Malick has paid homage to Seagal & ON DEADLY GROUND, except Malick didn’t have the balls to include a lengthy, didactic PowerPoint presentation of his worldview at the end.

    Also, there’s a scene where Brad Pitt plays the hand-slapping game with his son.

  2. Mouth, I have not yet seen THE TREE OF LIFE, but I love the ON DEADLY GROUND comparison. Does Brad Pitt at anytime call his son “cupcake” while playing the hand-slapping game with him?

  3. Your comparison to ON DEADLY GROUND and FEMME FATALE is correct. It really is 100% pure maximum strength Malick. I think from now on I’m going to call it Terrence Malick’s BAD BOYS II.

    That link you posted is great. “The Management regrets if any of our customers were unintentionally exposed to Art. Please be assured that such limited exposure, though uncomfortable, is not dangerous. We encourage our patrons to read up on movies so they can avoid any that are not like every other movie they have seen.”

    Still the no-refund policy seems a bit harsh. I think if you came to see a 1950s coming-of-age film you should be able to get a refund when the first dinosaurs show up.

  4. Vern gets credit for the FEMME FATALE observation (SEAGALOGY, page 81); I just found a newer application for it. But thanks, fellas, for peer-reviewing this important work of esoteric scholarship.

    As for those dumbasses — the ones who can’t handle a movie not based on a standard formula script with traditional narrative structure and clear character arcs — asking for a refund, I have a very special phrase that one of my favorite first-line supervisors in the Army would direct toward me every time I showed a hint of a whisper of a shadow of insubordination:

    “Go fuck yourself, hooah?”

  5. To answer Charles’s earlier question, no, no cupcake call-outs, but there’s a painful scene where Brad Pitt is teaching his sons to fistfight, having them punch his hand and showing them technique, and he ridicules the main kid for not obeying his demand to punch popdukes in the jaw.

    I’d say the little kid is in Big Mike’s position at that point, with Brad Pitt mimicking the Seagal role, and everyone learns that a man needs time to change, but at least the kid doesn’t cry in front of a bunch of Alaskan pub patrons.

  6. Chopper Sullivan

    March 31st, 2013 at 3:13 am

    Patrice O’Neal was a Golden Age Steven Seagal fan!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPAAmyaJyOg

  7. In my opinion I’ve changed some of my views since writing this 12 years ago. Mainly that I wouldn’t compare Seagal’s fighting abilities to Dolemite’s. But I needed time to change.

  8. Aww man the Mr. Show version of this got taken off Vimeo. That’s a bummer.

  9. I guess Bob Odenkirk didn’t want it online so the guy took it down.

Leave a Reply





XHTML: You can use: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>