Monthly Archives: March 2011

Jack Ketchum’s and Lucky McKee’s Movie The Woman Released in May

This movie was presented in the 2011 Sundance Festival to some degree of critical acclaim.  From Sundance previews in early February, some of the general public found the film offensive and repulsive for its gruesome and abusive displays. The movie stars Carlie Baker as Genevieve Raton, the Woman of the both the novel and the movie.  She is animalistic but very beautiful, and a country lawyer of the name of Chris Cleek, played by Sean Bridgers, and his family attempt to civilize this volatile Woman in their cellar.  In some ways, this movie and novel resembles Jack Ketchum’s The Girl Next Door, but this time, the victim is more than capable of striking back.  This movie is co-written and directed by Lucky McKee.

The paperback novel of The Woman is scheduled to be released on May 2, 2011, and the movie is scheduled to coincide with the paperback release.  Those with Amazon‘s Kindle e-book reader, however, already has access to this novel, and it is definitely much more different than The Girl Next Door.  The novel is told in the view of both the Woman and the members of the Cleek family.  I am nearly halfway through the novel, and it has been a solid read.

Sucker Punch Movie Review

This is an original movie based by Zach Snyder that is not based on any graphic novels like Watchmen or 300.  Although thetrailers of the movie portrayed the movie as more of an action film, I would not perceive this movie in that manner.  In more ways than one, it is more like Inception combined with Japanese anime and 300-style effects.

Now to the movie review:

 

Sucker Punch

Cast

The movie stars many beautiful women including Emily Browning as Baby Doll, Abbie Cornish as Sweet Pea, Jena Malone as Rocket (Sweet Pea’s sister), Vanessa Hudgens as Blondie, and Jamie Yung as Amber Jones.  Carla Gugino, as Dr. Vera Gorski, plays as their mentor, and Scott Glenn plays the Wise Man/Bus Driver. The main antagonist is Oscar Isaac as Blue Jones, and the secondary antagonist is High Roller/The Doctor who is played by Jonn Hamm. Lastly, Malcolm Scott plays the Cook, and Gerard Plunkett is Baby Doll’s stepfather.

Plot Synopsis

Baby Doll’s mother dies, and since her mother, presumably wealthy, distributes the inheritance to her daughters, Baby Doll and her sister.  In a fit, Baby Doll’s stepfather attacks both Baby Doll and her sister.  Unfortunately, Baby Doll shoots at her stepfather but misses and kills her sister instead.  Her stepfather brings Baby Doll to Lennox Manor for the Insane whereby she and four other inmates decide to find a way to escape.  In the facility, Baby Doll and her companions find a way to escape through breaking with reality in fantasies choreographed with rock music.

In the first dream sequence, Baby Doll obtains her weapons, a Japanese sword and a pistol.  She fights off three giant samurai, but in reality, it is her dancing in real life.  This dream sequence is her manner of dealing with reality.  She is also told by the Wise Man to obtain five items: a map, fire, a knife, a key and a mystery item.  The second action sequence involves landing in steampunk Nazi Germany to obtain the map of the facility.  It was an intriguing sequence to say the least.  The next dream sequence involves fighting against a dragon to obtain fire, or a lighter in real life from the mayor.  The fourth and last sequence involves obtaining the knife from the Cook.  Baby Doll dreams that she and her comrades were deactivating and airlifting a bomb.  After obtaining the last item, the key from Blue, she and Sweet Pea find their way out of the facility.  However, not to spoil it, one of them won’t be able to escape.  Much of these action sequences are triggered by rock music which Baby Doll loves dancing to and helps her comrades do what they must in real life.

Special Effects

This is Zach Snyder’s bread and butter.  Much of the movie includes effects from 300 with oversaturated film and slow-motion effects from Watchmen.  Much of it is not new to who have watched Snyder movies.

Recommendations

This movie is a great date movie since it does have a slight feminist bent to it, and the movie is a solid action movie for those craving it.  Although it has received negative reviews from movie critics, they may have misinterpreted the movie.  The movie is a fantasy movie, without Harry Potter, flowers and rainbows. Instead, it is replaced by giant samurai, steampunk Nazi soldiers and metallic robots.  Remember first of all, this movie is from Baby Doll’s point of view.  To survive in her reality and in ours, we already have the weapons available at our disposal.  We simply need to use them to ultimately win life’s battles.

The only minor criticism of the film lies in Baby Doll’s origin of Japanese fiction in her dream sequences.  It was never explained although quite possibly there was a deleted scene or two in the beginning where her affection for all things Japan.  However that should not deter one from watching the film.

Overall, it is a solid 7.5 to 8 out of 10 for me.

Jack Ketchum’s The Girl Next Door: Comparative Analysis of the Movie and the Book

Recently, I have read the novel Jack Ketchum‘s The Girl Next Door, and I have seen the movie of the same name.  This book was more graphic in terms of the scenes of torture of Meg Loughlin by Ruth Chandler and her family and friends than the movie ever could be.  Comparing the two, the movie stuck close to the novel surprisingly.  There was little change between the book and the movie until the final closings of the movie.  Lastly, there are minor differences between both, described below.  However, both were inspired by a true story of a young female boarder who was subjected to this abuse and torture in the basement of the house.

David Moran

In the movie, as an adult, he is played by William Atherton and as a child, played by David Manche. Like the book, the adult narrates in the beginning, how his two divorces were caused by the trauma of this incident, and at parts throughout the movie.  Astonishingly, the narrative follows the book nearly to the letter. 

Meg Loughlin

In the book, she is portrayed as a statuesque redhead, but in the movie, she is played by Blythe Auffarth who unfortunately was a statuesque brunette.  However, in the movie as in the book, she underwent abuse and torture by Donny Chandler, played by Benjamin Ross Kaplan, Ralphie “Woofer” Chandler, played by Austin Williams, Eddie, played by Michael Zegen, William Chandler Jr., played by Graham Patrick Martin, and their female friends Cheryl Robinson, played by Gabrielle Horwath and Denise Crocker, played by Spencer Leigh.

Meg Loughlin, as portrayed in the movie, was an innocent girl who got caught in The Game, an abusive game invented by the Dead End Kids, consisting of David, Ralphie, Donny, Eddie, William and their two female friends.  One of the Dead End kids was “it” and the Commando.  He or she was assigned to take out a platoon of Troops, the rest of the kids, by pegging them with apples from the orchard.  Unfortunately, the Commando never won, and he or she was tied up, blindfolded and gagged to a tree and subject to the abuse by the rest of the kids.  This included stripping, beatings or lashings as the Troops saw fit.

Meg, as in the book and the movie, when she rebelled against her aunt Ruth Chandler.  From the idea of The Game, suggested by her children, tied Meg up in the basement of her house and subjected her to beatings, lashings, burnings, rape by Eddie and Donny and ultimately death.  The book was infinitely more explicit than the movie, as some parts of the torture in the movie were tamed down for American audiences.

Differences Between the Book and the Movie

  • Described previously, Meg is portrayed as a brunette instead of a redhead.
  • The opening scene of the movie of David Moran and the homeless man being killed by a car on Wall Street was never in the book.
  • The burning of the cigarettes by Ruth Chandler near the end of the book was never portrayed in the movie.  It may have been suggested but never actually seen.
  • The actual burning of the tire iron on Meg’s vagina was suggested, and the movie cut off the actual display of that torture.  It was graphic and intense in the book and it would have shocked American audiences for that kind of gruesome display.
  • The fire incident in the last part of the movie was not extended as in the book.  In the book, David, Meg and Susan were ultimately overrun by Ruth Chandler and her family, and David had to stay another night until their escape.
  • In the movie, Ruth’s death was caused by David swinging a tire iron at Ruth when the fire incident began.  Then David’s family and Officer Jennings, played by Kevin Chamberlin, came down the stairs and rescued them.  In the novel, however, Ruth’s death was caused by herself as she took a swing at David while walking up the stairs and fell down the stairs.  She snapped her neck as she tumbled, and that was the cause of her death.
  • In the movie, Meg’s death was observed after David cuddled with Meg for one last time while Officer Jennings and David’s family watched on.  This brought closure for the audience and not quite as disturbing perhaps as the book.  In the book, Meg’s death was brought on by her clawing her way out after the fire incident failed for David, Susan and Meg.  In the novel, she died alone on the floor after showing some humanity in a weak smile to Susan and David.

Recommendation of the Book and the Movie

The novel by Jack Ketchum is definitely a 10 out of 10.  However, this novel won’t settle well for those with strict morals or prone to nightmares.  As described by Ketchum, this book is one of conflicting morality, especially it is seen from the eyes of a young boy in David Moran.  This is the first book that I have read by Jack Ketchum, and he is a terse and suspenseful author.  In some ways, he is the horror version of J.D. Salinger.

The movie deserved an 8 out of 10, in as much as the movie stayed close to the novel.  However, it lacked the intensity of the book.  Lastly, the ending although comforting did not follow the novel.  However, both the book and the movie portrayed the same social issue — the ignorance of torture and abuse within the confines of suburbia.

More on the social issue on abuse and torture within suburbia later…

(On a side note, Jack Ketchum’s The Woman is being made right now.  I am currently reading this novel, and it will undergo the same analysis once the movie has been watched.)

Androids Can Dream of Electric Sheep, Part III: The Evolution in Terminator

Terminator as a movie series and the television series The Sarah Connor Chronicles detailed how artificial intelligence brought the apocalypse. Unlike The Matrix, this artificial intelligence only desired to subjugate humanity upon its knowledge of a single aspect of humanity, war.  In Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, John Henry, proto-Skynet on a Terminator chassis, was fixated on that subject.  He had more semblance to B4 in the movie Star Trek: Nemesis in that he was learning to be human, and like B4, at that point, he lacked sufficient programming to become human. Unfortunately, The Sarah Connor Chronicles television series was canceled before the public could see where the show might have been heading.

Terminator: The Shadow of Ourselves

In the future of the Terminator timeline whether it be in the movies series or the short-lived television series Sarah Connor Chronicles, it always ends up at the same point: Skynet builds Terminators, android human replicas, to eradicate humanity.  These Terminators were designed for infiltration and eradicating humanity by copying human voice, speak naturally and even produce sweat, smell and bleed.  There were different models, but the Terminator models that acted and resembled human were built on the T-800 chassis.  The T-X from the third Terminator movie came close. Furthermore,  the liquid poly-alloy T-1000, more specifically the female T-1001 from The Sarah Connor Chronicles, had the capability to blend into human society with ease.  Like The Second Renaissance in The Animatrix, some of these machines became sentient — like Arnold Schwartzenegger’s T-800 in the first Terminator movie and the T-888 Cameron in The Sarah Connor Chronicles.  These machines overcame their programming by Skynet and learned to be human.  In short, they became what Data aspired to be in The Star Trek series.

Skynet: Humans Create God that Creates Human Imitations

Human aspiration to create artificial intelligence ultimately created Skynet.  With the forerunner in the Turk, a chess program like IBM‘s Deep Blue, Skynet was conceived.  Unfortunately, with both Watson and Deep Blue in real life as forerunners, science fiction could potentially become science fact. Despite the advances in technology over the past three or four decades with leaps and bounds in processing power, both Watson and Deep Blue are still bound by their limitations in their limited (although powerful) programming. Skynet’s original purpose by Cyberdyne Systems was to speed up military response to attacks, but once it became self-aware, it saw humanity as its limitation and thus sent missiles directly at humanity.  Ironically, Skynet built replicas of its creators in order to destroy it.  Humans built God with an efficient electronic brain only to have God break down the last few walls of Jericho that remain with human puppets. 

Terminators: The Human Aspiration and the Human War Machine

These Terminators did not seek God like the Twelve in Battlestar Galactica.  They ultimately sought out confrontations to end human existence, but a few limited models did evolve beyond their programming to being human.  This technology is still far away.  Japanese models have mannequins that can express emotion within limited algorithms, and the United States have developed militarized drones and robots for military purposes.  However, neither nation have combined their technologies quite yet to create a Terminator or a humanoid war machine.  Terminator may be science fiction, but the series was somewhat grounded in reality.  Can Terminators be created in our lifetime?  Not quite yet.  Can Skynet be created in our lifetime?  Quite the possibility, given the creation of Deep Blue and Watson so far.  Can Terminators aspire to be human?  We can wish that whatever artificial intelligence we create someday to have such aspirations, but technological limitations in the 21st century still keeps it out of reach.

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