Pages

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Review: The Purge

by Trevor Kirkendall
zero stars


Its 2022, only nine years from today. Unemployment is down to an astonishing 1%. Crime has nearly vanished. All this thanks to something known as The Purge. One night a year for twelve hours, all emergency services are suspended and all crime – including murder – is legal. The Purge helps to cleanse and purify Americans. No one feels the need to commit any crimes since its legal once a year for an entire night. Its never really explained how the unemployment is affected by this. I guess because the next day, hundreds if not thousands of people are probably needed to clean up the mess from the night before.

All this is made possible by a new political party called the New Founding Fathers, who in the not too distant future will be elected into all wings of our government and will concoct this asinine idea in an attempt to restore America’s greatness in the world.

Those who can afford to lock themselves in their homes at night do so every year and ride out The Purge. Those who can’t end up being Purge victims. Those opposed to The Purge say that this is nothing more than a government controlled mechanism to weed out and exterminate the poor and those who do not contribute to society. Sound like familiar banter on all of today’s cable news networks?

Ethan Hawke plays James Sandin and he sells those high priced security systems. He lives in a gated community with the rest of the smiling and happy Stepford families. He’s made a fortune off of these security systems. All his work for the year comes down to tonight, for its time for The Purge. He had his wife Mary (Lena Headey) are locking everything down for the night with their two kids Zoey (Adelaide Kane) and Charlie (Max Burkholder).

Shortly after lockdown, Charlie sees a bloody stranger (Edwin Hodge) running through the neighborhood streets crying for help. Feeling sympathetic – and downright stupid – he disarms the system and lets him inside. During the subsequent confusion after he’s entered, he disappears into the house. It is, after all, a gigantic house and he’s hard to locate. Remember, the Sandin’s are ‘haves’ and therefore can afford a massive security system on their massive house.

It doesn’t take too long for a group of people to show up at their house looking for this man. He’s their target for tonight’s Purge and they want him back. The group is lead by a really handsome young man who looks like he stepped out of an Ivy League yacht club (Rhys Wakefield). He’s even got the long blonde hair, the plaid tie and the prep school jacket complete with the school’s seal on it. It could not be anymore embarrassingly contrived than that.

Written and directed by James DeMonaco (who also wrote Francis Ford Coppola’s 1996 stinker “Jack”), “The Purge” is nothing more than a massive delusion and dream of how he thinks the world should probably work in order for America to regain its standing within the world.

The argument can be made that this is merely a satire on our current social and political state. Anyone who flips on the TV today can tell there’s a rift in our social landscape between those who have and those who don’t have. Unemployment is at a consistently high number that contributes to the escalation of crime in many areas. The role of how of guns in our society has been repeatedly called into question over the past year.

The whole presence of the New Founding Fathers political party in this movie leads us to believe that a new political stronghold will rise up amongst the voters soon. Once in Washington, they will use their power to legislate this perverse idea. Draw your own conclusions as to which party you think DeMonaco is trying to implicate with this analogy.

The fact is, DeMonaco has not provided any kind of social satire on our current state, which is what he was clearly attempting. He’s taken a very shallow look at the issues of today and has come up with this sick view of what’s to come. A satire should mock the situation and maybe provide some kind of alternative solution. Not “The Purge.” No, what we have here is DeMonaco’s disgusting fantasy of something he’d like to see play out in his lifetime.

It’s almost as bad as the so-called ‘torture porn’ films that saturated the film market in the early-to-mid-2000’s. Films like “Hostel” and “Saw” and later taking it to the extreme with “The Human Centipede.” These are films that severed absolutely no purpose whatsoever other than to showcase the depraved nature of their filmmakers’ deepest and darkest fantasies.

If you can’t torture someone for real, then why not make a movie about it so you can live out your dream? Not to worry, Hollywood is full of twisted people who are just willing to line up and make it happen. Especially if you’re trying to make some kind of commentary that continues to deepen the societal rift between the haves and the have-nots.

While “The Purge” doesn’t really come off as a horror movie in the likes of “Hostel” and “Saw” which showed the physical torture of a person, it does come across as a thriller meaning to show the emotional torture one family has to endure. Their torture is not carried out by those who are personally standing at their front door with guns and knives, but by the very government that allowed this to happen. It’s pretty damn offensive. 

3 comments:

  1. I haven't seen this yet but the reason I won't in the future is because they took an original premise with great satirical potential and make it a home invasion movie. WTF, they could have done so much more with this film. I wouldn't mind seeing a smart satire on our political sensibilities but home invasion movies are a dime a dozen and not something I personally find suspenseful or entertaining.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It may have had a suspenseful moment or two but nothing worth mentioning. It was not good. I don't blame you for avoiding it. A better home invasion film is "Funny Game" by Michael Haneke from 1997. Haneke remade the film in English 10 years later, but the Austrian version is better. Check it out. Some good social commentary in there as well.

      Thanks for reading!!

      Delete
    2. correction: that's "Funny GAMES"...with an 's'.

      Delete