Date: Fri 10-May-1996
Date: Fri 10-May-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Quick Words:
Playing-12-Monkeys-Willis
Full Text:
(Now Playing on "12 Monkeys," 5/10/96)
Now Playing-
`Jane Eyre' To `12 Monkeys:' We Cover Past, Present & Future
By Trey Paul Alexander II
My apologies go out to the Bethel Cinema: I had planned to run a column this
week on Jane Eyre , director Franco Zeffirelli's take on the beloved novel by
Charlotte Bronte, but circumstances conspired against me and I was unable to
screen it before press time. Hopefully a review of the film, which opens May
10 at the Bethel Cinema, will be seen here next Friday.
In the meantime, the motion picture that takes center stage this week is 12
Monkeys , which opens at the Edmond Town Hall Theatre in Newtown May 17 (the
movie playing this week is Fargo , which was reviewed last month). This
intensely mesmerizing and oddly eccentric offering is a curious mix of
high-minded science fiction and affecting, stylized performances.
Director Terry Gilliam ( Brazil , The Fisher King ) unveils a tale of a barren
earth, circa 2035, on which humans have wiped out most of the planet's
population in 1997. In this future, a tribunal of ruling powers collects
convicts and uses them for time-travel jaunts in the hope these travelers will
be able to collect some valuable data from the past (prior to the key
outbreak) that will help the world's top minds develop a toxin that can allow
mankind to resurface.
The pivotal player in this scenario is James Cole (Bruce Willis), the latest
criminal to be subjected to this chrono-jumping. The dazed Cole is given
strict instructions on how to carry about his business (he is to seek out
information on the Army of the 12 Monkeys, a guerrilla group believed to be
responsible for the plague), but the effects of time travel include a
hallucinatory, disorienting state, and Cole gets himself into trouble when he
arrives in the 1990s. He eventually lands in the loony bin when he tries to
explain to the authorities he is from the future.
12 Monkeys is absorbingly complex and its plot could not be done justice here.
Suffice to say it covers all kinds of genres, from trippy sci-fi to virus
polemic to nail-biting, chase thriller. While many films fail to keep their
focus while navigating one genre, 12 Monkeys is surprisingly taut and balanced
when juggling several.
As Cole begins to realize his journeys are not placing him at the precise
destination he has been expecting (sometimes it's 1990, other times it is
1996), he theorizes he may be able to take matters into his own hands. Two
individuals that will loom large in his plans are an unbalanced inmate (Brad
Pitt) whom Cole encounters while in the asylum, and a noted psychiatrist
(Madeleine Stowe) who takes some intense convincing before she believes Cole
to be anything but a raving lunatic.
Although 12 Monkeys can be enjoyed purely as a diverting thriller, it is chock
full of bizarre quirks that give it a distinction all its own. My personal
favorites are a sly allusion to Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo , and a wonderful
cameo by Frank Gorshin (the Riddler of TV's "Batman") in a serious, caustic
turn.
Among the leads, Stowe is solid as always, and Pitt (who garnered an Oscar
nomination for this part) is good, though it is a showy role that allows for
hammy histrionics. Most impressive is Willis, who shows surprising range and
little reliance on his "Moonlighting," wise-guy smirk. In fact, one of Willis'
most splendid achievements comes in a small scene in which Cole, holed up in
the shrink's automobile, sits in amazement as her car radio blares out the
latest pop tunes. The emotions washing over Willis' face will convince you
this is a guy who has never enjoyed the sound of music.
12 Monkeys is rated R profanity, mild violence and nudity (shots of Cole being
scrubbed down and prepped for time travel).
