"Killer Films" ~ Vigilante movies, then and now

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KILLER FILMS

Why the new vigilante movies are a lot like the old vigilante movies.


(from Slate.com, Sept. 13)

Revenge: Where would the movies be without it? The hero's quest for personal justice has fueled plenty of high drama and even more lowbrow cinema. This is especially true of 1970s vigilante films. In these movies, an individual at odds with "the system" does what that system cannot: take revenge on specific criminals or crime in general for the wrongs done to him (occasionally her), his family, his community. This means mustering rage and weaponry, from socks stuffed with quarters to .32 revolvers to grenade launchers (and that's just in the Death Wish series).

In recent years, a similar body of films has emerged. This trend includes modern day B-movies (A Man Apart, Four Brothers), comic-book adaptations (The Punisher, Batman Begins), remakes (Man on Fire, Walking Tall), and even Oscar-bait (Munich). Reaching a brutal climax in the last few weeks with the releases of Death Sentence and The Brave One, this cycle proves that vengeance is back with, well, a vengeance, and that the two eras parallel each other like twin dark alleys in the American imagination.

The "classic" vigilante films—a roster that includes Billy Jack, Dirty Harry, Walking Tall, Death Wish, and Taxi Driver—were made possible when Hollywood's self-censorship became less stringent. Following Bonnie and Clyde's release in 1967, violence became more graphic, more extreme, and, in a word, more. (Martin Scorsese was forced to desaturate the colors of Taxi Driver's rampage to avoid an X rating, but the title character of The Exterminator, a 1980 film that Roger Ebert calls "a small, unclean exercise in shame," did get to feed a villain to an industrial meat grinder.)

These films bubbled up from the country's toxic domestic scene: inflation, an energy crisis, the implosion of a presidency, and rising crime rates. "There was a sense that things were falling apart," says criminologist Gregg Barak. Before Richard Nixon's presidency, Barak argues, "There was always the notion that you could reform someone …" but with the upheavals of the 1960s and the unease of the 1970s, many felt "we had gone too far in liberalizing things." Hence the public's enthusiasm for Nixon's "law and order" campaign platform, and later, for Hollywood's vigilante daydreams.

The seminal vigilante film of the era—or any era—is Michael Winner's Death Wish (1974), based on Brian Garfield's novel. The movie immortalized Charles Bronson as Paul Kersey, an everyman who responds to the brutalization of his wife and daughter by obsessively smiting muggers and other "freaks" (as the credits bill his family's attackers). This is far from where Kersey began: a progressive raised to hate guns, and a wartime conscientious objector. Of course, Kersey's liberalism exists only so it can be corrected later. Liberals are similarly "reformed" in the new Jodie Foster movie, The Brave One, as well as in Vigilante, Death Wish 3, and The Enforcer, in which a cop's widow makes the point, "It's a war, isn't it? I guess I never really understood that."

This war is between the civilized and the savage—a conflict drawn from the Western. The period's vigilante films actually uphold the Western mythos more reliably than its Westerns do. The Wild Bunch, Ulzana's Raid, and others depict the Western as morally confused, even bankrupt. Meanwhile, Dirty Harry, Death Wish, and similar action yarns ultimately embrace the gunfighter's moral clarity.

This is why Garfield denounced the film version of Death Wish. The novel's point, he insists, is that vigilantism is an attractive fantasy, but if it were ever acted upon, the real violence would be to society and to the soul. (Garfield even petitioned the FCC to force CBS to either cancel a broadcast of Death Wish or to strongly warn viewers about the film's violence.) In 1975, he published a sequel, Death Sentence, as "penance" for the film, giving his characters pointed—and lengthy—anti-vigilante speeches. Although the current film version of Death Sentence shares nothing with the book but the title, Garfield seems satisfied: "After thirty-five years, they finally got it right."

In fairness, Death Wish is somewhat more ambiguous than many recognized in 1974. Kersey's obsessions shuttle him toward self-destruction—which, of course, they must. To dramatize obsession is to implicitly or explicitly critique it (although this was probably lost on the moviegoers who Garfield recalls shouting, "Kill that mother!"). The Brave One and Death Sentence have inherited this ambivalence, albeit unequally. There is no surprise here. After all, one is directed by the filmmaker of The Crying Game, while the other is by the guy who did Saw.

In Death Sentence, Kevin Bacon plays Nick Hume, a business executive and suburbanite. After the chance killing of Nick's son, the bereaved father and the gang avenge themselves on each other with escalating stakes. For his final act of retribution, Nick goes on a Taxi Driver-inspired rampage in the gang's lair (an abandoned mental hospital where literally, and now figuratively, the hope of regaining sanity is gone). Also bearing Taxi Driver's influence is Nick's battle preparation: a ritualistic montage in which he masters his arsenal, shaves his head, and purifies himself with pain.

This season's other vigilante film, The Brave One, has a more literal connection to Taxi Driver: Jodie Foster, for whom Travis Bickle was not only a savior, but also, it turns out, a mentor. But an even better referent is Death Wish. Like the attack on Paul Kersey's family (and later Nick Hume's), the attack on Foster's Erica Bain is a chance one that hardens a bleeding heart. The liberal-turned-gunslinger arc further cements The Brave One as another throwback to 1970s vigilante lore.

At the same time, Erica dedicates much of her vigilantism to shooting random predators, which puts the film somewhat out of step with the current cycle. Today, we are less afraid of the random punk than we are of the sleeper cell. Shadowy networks and evil syndicates are the new muggers and rapists, as seen in a number of films—Batman Begins, Munich, Man on Fire, The Punisher, and Death Sentence among them. In fact, Brian Garfield says that the most outdated aspect of his novel Death Sentence—and hence one of the first things to be jettisoned in adapting it—was the prevalence of muggers. This explains the film's violent methamphetamine outfit, a decidedly more "today" villain.

Warner Bros. has positioned The Brave One as a serious-minded drama. Death Sentence, a more straightforward genre piece, is also surprisingly sober. Still, neither film is as ambivalent as Steven Spielberg's Munich. Despite Munich's exhaustive running time (and the lead assassin being recruited because he is not "a sabra Charles Bronson"), the film reduces the vigilante ethos to its troubled core. While the film is ostensibly a period piece chronicling the revenge Israel exacted for the 1972 killings of its Olympic athletes, many saw Munich's use of Israel's 30-year-old vendetta as a stand-in for today's "war on terror."

But Munich (nominated for five Academy Awards) can also be seen as continuing a dialogue begun in Death Wish (nominated for none). When Bronson asks, "What do you call people who, when they're faced with a condition of fear, do nothing about it?" his son-in-law replies, "Civilized." Thirty years later, the exchange continues, but it's not Bronson who answers, it's Golda Meir: "Some people say we can't afford to be civilized."

It's easy to imagine that in a post-9/11 America, vengeance occupies more of our national imagination than before. Maybe it does. But today's vigilante movies channel many of the same frustrations that their predecessors did. Today, as in the '70s, America faces economic, environmental, and energy-related crises. In both generations, Americans wrestle with political powerlessness, on fronts ranging from their own health care to the country's role on the global stage. (America's invasion of Iraq, unsanctioned by the U.N. and launched by a president happy to be seen as a "cowboy"—or more accurately, a gunfighter—could be seen as a vigilante war.) And both generations of Americans watch as the executive branch flouts its accountability to the public and to the law, proves unable to "win" an increasingly unpopular war, and refuses to acknowledge the reality of the war's downward spiral.

Fundamentally, both eras also share an anxiety about the government's ability to keep them safe. As Barak notes, vigilante fantasies of the 1970s stemmed less from actual crime than from the feeling that the criminal justice system was ineffective. Although crime rates fell steadily between 1994 and 2005, we still face a similar unease about trusting our safety to "the system." New Orleans is a perfect example. When Hurricane Katrina struck, it was not the storm but the design of the levees and FEMA's response that caused so much destruction and misery. This is the one-two punch we now fear: the calamity, and then the realization that help from our institutions is not on the way.

Enter the vigilante. In a pop culture of tumultuous times, he is a steadying presence, a recognizable archetype. At such moments, vigilante movies offer gut-level reassurance, as if saying, "There's good news and bad news. The bad news is that we lost habeas corpus; the good news is that the Twinkie defense also just became moot."

In the case of The Brave One, this is why the film's most important question is not the one it seems to pose most often: "What is Erica becoming?" Instead, the film's most important question is raised just once, and by a minor character. Against the jungle of a park in the middle of the night, a girl Erica has freed from a particularly scummy tormentor awakens from a daze to ask the question we all could ask:
"Is this still America?"

Is it ever.
 
I loved the Chuck Bronson movies, in fact "Death Wish" was one of the first R-rated movies I snuck in to see.

Why does Jodie Foster get off on playing these victim roles? How many times do we need to see her raped and terrorized in a movie? She's like the high-end Jennifer Jason Leigh.
 
America has always loved the Vigilante. That's what the Western is all about--the lone gunslinger who will take the law into his own hands, do what the sheriff cannot (or will not) and rid the town of evil doers. Batman is that in a cape and tights, a modern day gunslinger (sic) bringing law to lawless Gotham.

Obviously, we all have revenge fantasies, especially when we hear about things that piss us off, injustices that should be righted within the system and are not (how many of us would like to shot the guy suing over his ruined pair of pants, right?). The article makes an interesting point that although crime has gone down, Americans don't feel safe. It's a point that "Bowling for Colombine" makes as well. The American media--and the internet come to that--soars on stories of criminals getting away, justice being undermined, deadly predators on the lose, ineffective law enforcement and/or a justice system with a revolving door that can't keep criminals behind bars.

We are, in short, made to feel as if we still live in the lawless old west and only by having a gun at our side can we protect ourselves. And YET....

The Vigilante is fascinatingly two-sided in that respect. While it feeds our personal revenge fantasies and fears, it's also emblematic, I think, of our own laziness. We don't dream of ourselves shooting these people so much as we dream of someone ELSE finally taking up the gun for us and being judge, jury and executioner for us. We want someone else to tidy up this chaos and give us the order and safety we crave.

Of course, from a writer's perspective, the most annoying element of these vigilante films, old and new, is that the person who heads out to right wrongs always has to have a PERSONAL stake in it. I don't mind this now and again, but is there no one out there who is willing to right wrongs just because it's right...not because their best friend/partner/s.o/parents/siblings were killed? Surely, some of us, if not all of us, can relate to wanting safety and order for safety and order's sake, not just because we've personally suffered from it's lack. Why does it always have to be *personal* before the vigilante is not only born, but willing to go after the bad guy? :confused:
 
3113 said:
America has always loved the Vigilante. That's what the Western is all about--the lone gunslinger who will take the law into his own hands, do what the sheriff cannot (or will not) and rid the town of evil doers. Batman is that in a cape and tights, a modern day gunslinger (sic) bringing law to lawless Gotham.

Obviously, we all have revenge fantasies, especially when we hear about things that piss us off, injustices that should be righted within the system and are not (how many of us would like to shot the guy suing over his ruined pair of pants, right?). The article makes an interesting point that although crime has gone down, Americans don't feel safe. It's a point that "Bowling for Colombine" makes as well. The American media--and the internet come to that--soars on stories of criminals getting away, justice being undermined, deadly predators on the lose, ineffective law enforcement and/or a justice system with a revolving door that can't keep criminals behind bars.

We are, in short, made to feel as if we still live in the lawless old west and only by having a gun at our side can we protect ourselves. And YET....

The Vigilante is fascinatingly two-sided in that respect. While it feeds our personal revenge fantasies and fears, it's also emblematic, I think, of our own laziness. We don't dream of ourselves shooting these people so much as we dream of someone ELSE finally taking up the gun for us and being judge, jury and executioner for us. We want someone else to tidy up this chaos and give us the order and safety we crave.

Of course, from a writer's perspective, the most annoying element of these vigilante films, old and new, is that the person who heads out to right wrongs always has to have a PERSONAL stake in it. I don't mind this now and again, but is there no one out there who is willing to right wrongs just because it's right...not because their best friend/partner/s.o/parents/siblings were killed? Surely, some of us, if not all of us, can relate to wanting safety and order for safety and order's sake, not just because we've personally suffered from it's lack. Why does it always have to be *personal* before the vigilante is not only born, but willing to go after the bad guy? :confused:

Being a vigilante is a dangerous thing, especially as an individual. In "Death Wish" the protag. used himself as bait, and was seriously injured. People would almost have to have a personal stake in order to take the risks, and operate generally outside the law, the way that vigilantes do.
 
Seattle Zack said:
She's like the high-end Jennifer Jason Leigh.

Ouch!

:D

I hadn't thought about it...Jodie Foster's Victim Roles, I mean.

Maybe she was influenced by having someone shoot the president for her as a way of saying, "Let's go steady." How embarrassing would that be?

The article overlooked the more sensitive, early 90's version of the Vigilante Film: "Falling Down."

I remember sympathizing with Michael Douglas' character because of the opening scene: stuck in a traffic jam on a hot day, forced to stare at another driver's hideously grinning Garfield-the-Cat doll. Who wouldn't snap?

I don't like vigilante movies, but I liked that one. Michael Douglas' breakdown was relatively non-violent, and there was a sympathetic cop played by Robert Duvall who wanted to save Douglas' life.

No foreboding in this set-up, nossir: Good-Guy Cop Must Survive Only One More Day On the Job Before His Retirement Party.

Uh-oh...
 
Love me some vigilante movies. Bronson was so badass in the Death Wish films it was almost comical. And am the only one who finds Jodie Foster strangely attractive, even though there's a good possibility that she's a lesbian?

And I LOVED Falling Down. I don't know if it's considered a cult classic but it should be. I grew up in LA and can definitely sympathize with Douglas snapping the way he did.
 
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3113 said:
Why does it always have to be *personal* before the vigilante is not only born, but willing to go after the bad guy? :confused:

Because the vigilante becomes a bad guy. Outlaw Justice as a heroic act is one of those fictions that can only work if the circumstances are just right. Either we trust the person's judgement as if he were God, and incapable of targeting the wrong person (or invading the wrong country :rolleyes: ) or we give him the benefit of the doubt because he's been pushed beyond reason.

Outside of fiction, can you think of anyone whose judgement you trust so completely, you'd have no reservations about him choosing targets for retribution? Considering that even eye witnesses to a crime often give contradictory accounts, I don't trust myself 100%. Much less anyone else.

Hence, the legal system.

Speaking of Batman, why the leotard? What is it with superheroes and snug jumpsuits?
 
shereads said:
Speaking of Batman, why the leotard? What is it with superheroes and snug jumpsuits?

Because superheroes are modern versions of Greek Gods and must, like the Gods did, encompass physical perfection and you can't tell if someone's muscular if they're wearing a thick sweater. Plus, Wonder Woman looks better in a bikini rather than a business suit.
 
shereads said:
Because the vigilante becomes a bad guy. Outlaw Justice as a heroic act is one of those fictions that can only work if the circumstances are just right. Either we trust the person's judgement as if he were God, and incapable of targeting the wrong person (or invading the wrong country :rolleyes: ) or we give him the benefit of the doubt because he's been pushed beyond reason.

Outside of fiction, can you think of anyone whose judgement you trust so completely, you'd have no reservations about him choosing targets for retribution? Considering that even eye witnesses to a crime often give contradictory accounts, I don't trust myself 100%. Much less anyone else.

Hence, the legal system.

Speaking of Batman, why the leotard? What is it with superheroes and snug jumpsuits?

I don't believe the vigalante is always the bad guy. Batman, for instance, goes into action when he is called on by the cops (the bat signal). Buford Pusser, in "Walking Tall" is actually a lawman. Even in "Death Wish", the only persons killed were criminals who preyed on the citizenry. The protag. always acted in self-defense.

There are a couple of reasons for jump suits. To show off the body (male or female) and to cut down on wind resistance and to avoid snags. I don't know what Batman's cape, or Superman's cape is for. They serve no purpose, except maybe to scare people.
 
Boxlicker101 said:
The protag. always acted in self-defense.
That was the point of my reply. 3113 asked why vigilantes are always motivated by something personal (such as self-defense, murder of loved ones, etc.) The vigilante's strong personal motive is the reason the audience cuts him so much slack.

An example in today's news is O.J. Simpson. We've all been tempted to invade someone's hotel room and threaten him at gunpoint because he had some stuff that belonged to us, but most of us haven't had the courage of our convictions.

O.J., if today's allegations are true, was being a vigilante in the best American tradition. Of course, most movie vigilantes with murdered wives go after the murderers, and not some stolen sports memorabilia. But still.


Edited to add:

Did O.J. wear a jumpsuit and cape during this Vegas sting? Or the same old black sweater-and-stocking-cap getup he wore in Naked Gun?
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Boxlicker101
The protag. always acted in self-defense.


shereads said:
That was the point of my reply. 3113 asked why vigilantes are always motivated by something personal (such as self-defense, murder of loved ones, etc.) The vigilante's strong personal motive is the reason the audience cuts him so much slack.

An example in today's news is O.J. Simpson. We've all been tempted to invade someone's hotel room and threaten him at gunpoint because he had some stuff that belonged to us, but most of us haven't had the courage of our convictions.

O.J., if today's allegations are true, was being a vigilante in the best American tradition. Of course, most movie vigilantes with murdered wives go after the murderers, and not some stolen sports memorabilia. But still.

Actually, in that post, I was disagreeing with you when you said the vig. was always the bad guy. In the movies I have seen, he was always the good guy.
 
Boxlicker101 said:
I don't believe the vigalante is always the bad guy. Batman, for instance, goes into action when he is called on by the cops (the bat signal). Buford Pusser, in "Walking Tall" is actually a lawman. Even in "Death Wish", the only persons killed were criminals who preyed on the citizenry. The protag. always acted in self-defense.

There are a couple of reasons for jump suits. To show off the body (male or female) and to cut down on wind resistance and to avoid snags. I don't know what Batman's cape, or Superman's cape is for. They serve no purpose, except maybe to scare people.

I think the cape is for modesty. Not even Superman/Batman wants to feel as if people are ogling his ass all the time.

For scaring people, I'll bet a lot of things would work better than capes. Steel-toed work boots, Klan hood...
 
Boxlicker101 said:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boxlicker101
The protag. always acted in self-defense.




Actually, in that post, I was disagreeing with you when you said the vig. was always the bad guy. In the movies I have seen, he was always the good guy.

I didn't say that vigilantes are bad guys, or didn't mean to. I meant that vigilantism eventually dooms heros to bad-guy status. Without a personal motive that makes the audience sympathetic.

This is why smart movie vigilantes choose to die in a blaze of glory. Unless they've signed on for sequels, in which case each new script will have to revisit the terrible injustice that motivates our hero - either that, or provide cops who are utterly deplorable.

If Cool Hand Luke had whipped out an Uzi and taken out that prison-camp warden who put him in The Box, we'd have had ourselves no more failuh to communicate.
 
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