Showing posts with label films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label films. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Review: 'Hello Herman' (2012)

When I take a liking to an actor who already has an established body of work, I like to go back and watch it. This used to be extremely difficult - not only were you reliant on magazines to find an actor's filmography, the local video shop probably wouldn't have anything older than a couple of years and you would either have to shell out and buy a copy, not knowing whether the film was any good or not, or trawl the Radio Times each week as I did, hoping one of the four (later five) main terrestrial channels would be showing it. These days, you can have an actor's entire filmography in front of you in a matter of seconds and be watching something from it moments later, thanks to "on demand" and streaming services like Netflix. Or you can ask your mate "Nigel (1)". In addition, there's YouTube and other video sharing sites. Sometimes you have to put up with appalling quality, or sound, or watch a film in ten or so separate instalments. Occasionally you come across a good quality one - in full... and have to put up with Spanish subtitles. It was in this latter capacity that I watched 'Hello Herman'.

'Hello Herman' stars The Walking Dead's Norman Reedus. And, I confess, that was my primary motivation for watching it. There's a few things of his I would like to watch, but the vast majority of his back catalogue isn't available through any of the legitimate streaming services I subscribe to. Perhaps due to the fact they are mainly independent films which had a limited enough release when they were new. His appearances in the more mainstream films which are available through those services tend to be brief - sometimes limited to one scene - although I haven't regretted watching any of those films because of that (2).

In 'Hello Herman' he takes a leading role. He plays a journalist, Lax, who is invited by the titular Herman to tell his side of the story: in which he burst into his high school and shot a number of his fellow students. As Lax interviews Herman through his video camera, we are shown a series of flashbacks depicting the events in Herman's life that led up to the shooting and the lengths that it appears Lax is willing to go to for a good story. These little insights raise a lot of questions... and we are given very few answers.

'Hello Herman' garnered some terrible reviews. It's a rotten tomato (3). Most of the bad reviews seem to focus on the fact the film doesn't offer answers to the difficult questions it poses, although even these tend to praise both Reedus' performance and that of Garrett Backstrom, who plays Herman. This is not a negative review. I loved it.

Vanity Fair's Sam Kashner called it "a powerful and important work, a darkly brilliant tone poem about America's tango with violence and fame." Danny Miller of MSN movies described it as "a powerful film that should be required viewing for adolescents everywhere". 'Hello Herman' reminded me of two other equally controversial films - albeit ones with significantly better ratings on the tomato-ometer - which addressed similar subject matters, namely 'We Need to Talk About Kevin (2011) and American History X (1998). I've spent a little time trawling through the reviews for all three and it has struck me that much of the criticism levied at 'Hello Herman' was hurled at these two films as well - that they're just controversial, that they don't really explain the characters' motivations, that they fail to reach any sort of satisfactory conclusion. I think the reviewers who say this have missed the point. The point of films like this, isn't to offer answers - fuck, if a film could offer us the answers to problems like this we'd be laughing! That's not the role of films like this, their job is merely to get us to think about the problem, to ask the questions that we don't dare to, not to provide the answers.

The director of 'Hello Herman', Michelle Danner, responded to its critics on the film's official website, explaining that her motivation for making the film was "to start the conversation". She noted that, after each school shooting that America endures, "nothing changes."

Another film 'Hello Herman' reminded me of was 'Bowling for Columbine' (2002), Michael Moore's compelling documentary about the Columbine High School massacre in 1999. The thing which has stuck with me the most about that film is simple numbers: America has the highest level of gun violence in the world, but likes to blame anything but the prevalence of guns for this. Some recent stories that have resulted in me agreeing with Piers Morgan (4) include:






And in the midst of all this, Donald Trump suggested that the victims of the Charlie Hebdo shootings in France - which has strict gun control - might "have had a fighting chance" if they'd had guns... twat (5).

'Hello Herman' doesn't take an anti-gun stance. It doesn't seek to blame bullying, video games, the Internet or any of the other things that seem to have led up to Herman's violent, fatal outburst. It presents them as pieces of the bigger picture that so many who have seen it and spoken so negatively about it seem to have missed. But, as I said, even they recognised that incredible performance by Norman Reedus.

'Hello Herman' was shot in 2011 whilst Reedus was on a break from filming The Walking Dead. He said that the film's subject matter "struck a chord" with him as the father of a then ten-year-old son. His performance is beautifully understated and naturalistic. Now, I've read an interview in which Reedus implies he took acting lessons before starting work on this film - Michelle Danner is also an acting coach (6). If I hadn't already watched his debut. 'Floating' (1997) earlier in the day, I might have just believed that he did perhaps need them given that, prior to seeing these two films, the only film I'd watched where he'd had anything like that substantial a role was the lamentable 'Messengers 2' (2009) (7). I did have to laugh at one review though. It said "he's given many opportunities to squint and look troubled," which reminded me of something Reedus said himself: "when I first started acting, I was really insecure. I glared at a lot of people... somehow that scowl has turned into an acting career." Start as you mean to go on, they say. If it ain't broke don't fix it, they say. His performance - debut performance - in 'Floating' is similarly understated. It's a lovely little film and, whilst it doesn't have anything new to say about teenage angst that wasn't said in every film about teenage angst that preceded it, it handles the (unsurprising) revelation of one character's homosexuality particularly deftly, with a subtlety that very few of those other films did.

I digress. 'Hello Herman' struck a chord with me. One review I read said it's the sort of film that stays with you and I have been thinking about it pretty much constantly since I saw it. It's not just the subject matter, it's not Norman Reedus' performance - Garrett Backstrom as Herman is simply mesmerising and Michelle Danner's turn as his mother is also very good. The film is set "in the not too distant future" and the interview footage and flashbacks are interspersed with satirical news footage, which reminded me of 'Starship Troopers' (1997), which is also severely misunderstood and lambasted as a result (8). The soundtrack is also rather fabulous, with Olivia Faye's 'You Didn't See Me' and Adam Whittington's 'Make the World Love Again' catchy exit music earworms both conveying the film's anti-bullying message in a sweet, positive way that - perhaps surprisingly - doesn't feel at odds with the otherwise dark tone of the film they close out.

In doing the little bit of background research that I did for this post, I discovered the film was a total box office bomb. That's a shame. I hope it develops a cult following. It might take years for people to properly 'get' it, like it did 'Starship Troopers', but it deserves to. Despite the lack of answers, the anti-bullying message is clear. It's the sort of film that should be shown in schools to make kids think about the potential impact of their behaviour on their peers, but I have a sneaking suspicion the people in charge of deciding such things will decide that it's too violent, too controversial, that our children aren't capable of seeing it as a thinkpiece and will just go out and copy it. Those are probably the same people who blamed Marilyn Manson for Columbine. Manson was asked by Michael Moore what he would say to the Columbine shooters if he had the chance. He said "I wouldn't... I would listen to what they have to say, and that's what no-one did." There's a wonderful sequence in 'Hello Herman' where Herman is describing his favourite film, 'Kids' (1995), to Lax. It was an equally controversial film featuring a group of young people doing the sort of thing parents don't want (or, as Herman points out, don't want to know) their kids do, like have unprotected sex and do drugs. He comments that that's "really what it's like". Lax reminds him the film was set in the 1990s and Herman says that "kids are like that all over... we always do what you think we're incapable of doing until you notice us" - the film's other obvious message is that parent's need to connect with their children. For me, that's not about telling kids what to do, or what not to do. It's about listening to what they have to say. 'Hello Herman' is a film that has something to say and it's definitely worth listening to.




Note:

I don't do star ratings or marks out of ten. I have tried to rate films in this way in the past. I found myself having to go back and change them all the fucking time as I watched ones that eclipsed all those I'd seen previously either in terms of brilliance or sheer fucking awfulness. It now feels wrong to me to compare things that are completely different in terms of tone and content on the same arbitrary sliding scale. Whilst I may draw comparisons to other films I have seen it's solely to point out similarities, not to judge quality.


Footnotes:

(1) Unless you are Nigel... naughty Nigel....

(2) With the exception of Pandorum. It's fucking shit.





(7) I don't mean to be overly critical of Norman Reedus' performance in this film - I'd slap anyone who tried suggest he must've used Cuprinol instead of aftershave - but it's nevertheless an utter turd of a film and his best efforts in its better moments can't stop him being dragged back into the shitty abyss by the next ridiculous scene. It somehow feels horribly disloyal to say that but the other four films I've seen since (including the two I've mentioned above) have proved to me that this was an inexplicable blip on an otherwise impressive CV, which includes his brief turn in '8MM' (1999) where he owns the screen whilst Nicolas Cage just stands there like part of the scenery.

Friday, 16 January 2015

Don't Read - Spoilers Inside!*

*Unless you are fully up-to-date with The Walking Dead on TV.

This is a post in which I try to explain why I love The Walking Dead so much, and why I agonised for such a long time over whether to read the comic book its based on.

Let me start by saying I love horror films. Even the really bad, horribly cliched, terribly acted ones. It's my favourite film genre. If a film has vampires, zombies or a dozen increasingly more gory death scenes, chances are I'm going to like it. I don't tend to be scared by horror films; I find the odd one unsettling, some might make me feel a bit queasy and there's the odd one that gets me with a good jump scare (1). I've been watching horror films from quite a young age, thanks to my mother allowing me to watch such things as Alien (1979) when they were shown on TV. One of the reasons that film has never really scared me is because I'd already seen Spaceballs (1987) (2). It was watching horror films that got me interested in special effects, in particular, special effects make-up. My mum bought me a children's encyclopedia that came as a part-work and one entry was all about this stuff. It described how the special effects in The Exorcist (1973) had been done and it sounded like incredible stuff. Due to the 1984 Video Recordings Act, I didn't actually get to see them until the film was re-released in cinemas in 1998....

One of my favourite 'zombie' films is 28 Days Later. The opening scenes are simply incredible: The film's protagonist, Jim, wakes up from a coma in a London hospital. He finds the place - and the city - completely deserted, and it's evident something has gone very, very wrong. He stumbles across and is attacked by a group of what appear to be zombies - ones that can run very fucking fast - but is rescued. His rescuers explain to a confused Jim what's happened whilst he was in his coma, and that the group were "infected" with a virus called "Rage".

When I sat down to watch the pilot episode of The Walking Dead back in 2010, I knew very little about it other than it was about zombies. I expected I'd like it just for that reason though. I didn't get very far in. Rick wakes up from a coma - just like Jim, in a hospital - just like Jim, starts stumbling around - just like Jim, and find the world has apparently gone to shit - just like Jim. I turned that rip-off off. When Sophia's fate was revealed in Season Two, I remember my friends who have been fans of The Walking Dead since the beginning, were surprised to learn that I wasn't watching it. I never planned to, based on how I'd felt watching that pilot episode. Things changed.


Towards the end of last year, we got TiVo. Home alone and bored one day, with nothing I felt like watching showing on any channel I decided to look for something to watch 'On Demand'. When I brought up the menu the suggestion in the bottom left-hand corner was The Walking Dead. This was completely random, because the box was brand new - we hadn't given anything the 'thumbs up' yet so it wasn't based on what we liked to watch. I was vaguely aware that the fifth series was due to start soon, and given there were only four to catch up on if I liked it this time, I figured I'd give it another go. Whilst the similarity of those opening scenes in the pilot episode to those of 28 Days Later still struck me, for some inexplicable reason, it didn't anger me the way it had before; I saw it as an homage. I kept watching. By the end of that pilot episode I was hooked, and I just had to find out what was going to happen next.

When I say "I was hooked," I mean I was literally glued to the screen - I couldn't take my eyes off it. Usually when I'm watching TV I've got one eye on something else - Twitter, Candy Crush, a book or magazine... this blog. With The Walking Dead, I couldn't bring myself to look away. I didn't want to. I still don't. It's the only TV programme I've ever watched that has consistently managed to keep my undivided attention. Even now I'm watching old episodes back with my husband so he can get caught up, I find it difficult to focus on anything else. Since I've been watching Season Five, I've had to deal with ad-breaks, which seem to occur far too frequently and at the most inconvenient moments - that's when I do my live-tweeting of the show.


I didn't realise The Walking Dead was based on a comic book at first. Ordinarily, I like to read the book before I watch something because, if I do it the other way around, I tend to find that not only do I not enjoy the book but I end up liking the film a little less. This happened with Jackie Brown, The Shining and LA Confidential, although the latter still remains one of my all-time favourite non-horror films. A notable exception to this is Sin City. Seeing that film prompted me to read the graphic novel and I absolutely fell in love with it. It was obvious the book had been used as a ready-made storyboard and I think the way every single frame had been so faithfully recreated for the film is what made me adore them both. 

I was wary about reading The Walking Dead comic book because I knew some significant changes had been made and I was concerned this might affect my enjoyment of them both - I didn't want to end up hating a programme I loved. So I decided I wouldn't read it.

Two of the things I like the most about The Walking Dead are Greg Nicotero's incredible special effects make-up and the character Daryl Dixon. He doesn't appear in the comics. I read that Norman Reedus originally auditioned for the part of Merle and didn't get it, but they liked him that much they actually wrote the character of Daryl for him. That's awesome - but the absence of my favourite character was another thing that put me off reading the comic book.

I didn't actually like Daryl to begin with - I felt he acted like a petulant child in the first series, like a grumpy teenager in the second. He started to change towards the end of Season Two and, by the mid-way point of Season Three, he'd matured a lot and I started to like him a lot more. The turning point was when it was revealed he had been a victim of child abuse - so was I. This aspect of Daryl's past is something he'd never come to terms with, and it's only in Season Five that it looks like he's finally ready to confront it. This is something I identify with, having never really come to terms with my own abuse, and watching him go through it has been cathartic. I do feel a very strong connection to the character. It could be this, or it could be something about Norman Reedus' face, or just because it's somehow more upsetting to see a man cry, but I always burst into tears every time Daryl cries!


I came across an article online which was asking fans of The Walking Dead who they thought would make the best new villain following the demise of The Governor. There seemed to be a lot of comments from people who thought it should be Negan, and a lot saying it shouldn't because they wouldn't be able to do the character justice on TV. Because I had decided I wouldn't ever read the comic book, and because I knew that anything I read that was a potential spoiler wasn't necessarily one due to the fact some huge changes had already been made (3), and especially given there were major characters in the TV programme that weren't in the comic book, I decided to read up on Negan: he's a foul-mouthed sociopath who, in the comics, beats Glen to death with a baseball bat wrapped in barbed wire whilst cracking jokes. Hmm... maybe it's not possible to bring him to life on TV! A trivia note at the end of the article I read noted that the character was based on a particular actor but that Robert Kirkman refused to say who in case that actor wasn't able to play him if they ever did include him in the show. I thought of Henry Rollins for some reason - I'm assuming it's because of how bad-ass he was in Wrong Turn 2 (2007), and because some of the artwork I'd seen of the character reminded me vaguely of him.

Season Five contains some of the most shocking violence I've ever seen on TV. The opening episode, 'No Sanctuary', contains some horrifying, graphic scenes reminiscent of Hostel (2005). Episode two, 'Strangers', ends with one of the most disturbing scenes I've ever seen on television. The third episode, 'Four Walls and a Roof' includes an execution so shocking and violent it makes some horror films look tame! Bringing Negan in didn't seem quite so impossible. I started contemplating reading the comic book.

I thought about other adaptations I've seen where I loved both book and film equally. Perhaps the best example is The Shawshank Redemption (1994). The Stephen King novella upon which it is based is one of the best things I've ever read. I was hugely excited about seeing the film. There are some fairly significant differences between book and film, but they didn't bother me whilst I was watching it at all - I found it simply captivating. Even the ending is slightly different - and I didn't care. There's a fade to black right at the point where the book ends and I'd already started to get up to leave, but that scene continues and I ended up sitting back down again, in floods of tears: it was beautiful. The Shawshank Redemption was adapted for the screen by Frank Darabont... who is responsible for developing The Walking Dead for television.

Another book to film adaptation where I like both versions equally is Harry Potter. What's notable about this series is how heavily involved JK Rowling was with the process. The same could be said about the writer of The Walking Dead: Robert Kirkman acts as Executive Producer and has written several episodes.

When I re-read the Negan article recently, I noticed the trivia at the end has been updated to note that Charlie Adlard has confirmed the character is based on Henry Rollins. I'm maybe reading too much into it, but I think that either means he doesn't want to or can't do it, or that the producers have decided they can't make the character work on screen, or it means he's going to play Negan when they introduce his character to the show... that latter possibility got me a little bit excited. It made me want to know more about Negan. It made me want to read about Negan.

I've read that the producers of The Walking Dead have said the comic book has provided them with enough material for twelve seasons and, unlike the writers of Lost, I do get the sense they know exactly where they're going with it. Nothing feels like 'filler' for me - even the slower-paced episodes that focus more on character development keep me just as much on the edge of my seat as the relentless, action-packed ones do. Something tells me Robert Kirkman won't let them mess with his baby too much - he's said he's got an ending in mind, but that it will take time to get there. JK Rowling came up with the idea for Harry Potter in 1990 and said the final chapter of the final book was written that same year. When the first film adaptation was made she hadn't yet written the final books, but her involvement was such to ensure both series ended up in the same place.

I'd already leafed through a couple of issues of The Walking Dead in the comic book shop - yes, I was that person [insert "ashamed" emoji here], I'd seen the incredibly detailed, beautiful artwork and spotted a few frames that had evidently been lifted straight from the page and recreated on the screen, just as they had been in Sin City, but it was the possibility of Negan actually happening that really clinched it for me - what is it about bad guys?

I am still slightly wary of spoilers, but I try to remember how I felt when I was watching The Shawshank Redemption. I completely understood why Darabont had made the changes he had to the book; I hope to understand why The Walking Dead comic book has been changed for its adaptation for television. I will be avoiding Twitter on Sunday nights and throughout Monday as of February though - I don't want to have to go through crap like #RIPBeth again before I've seen the latest episode!

I thought I'd have to start saving up to buy The Walking Dead, but then we rearranged the furniture in the living room:

My birthday is three days after Christmas so people tend to send my birthday cards at the same time they send the Christmas cards and presents. I'd put the cards on a shelf, on top of some DVDs, and had forgotten they were there. We found them when we were moving the shelf. Some contained money from family members who had had no idea what to buy me - I spent it on the first few volumes of the comics. I'm really enjoying them. I'm spotting little things that I suspect were put into the show specifically to keep fans of the comic book happy. Seeing them in the comic book having seen them in the show makes me happy. And I don't miss Daryl.


I'm try not to be too concerned about seeing flaws in the TV version of The Walking Dead the further I get reading the comic book, because of this:

When the comedian Bill Hicks died in 1994, several of his contemporaries and people who knew him took part in a documentary about him entitled 'Just A Ride'. One of those featured was another 'Southern' comedian, Brett Butler. Something she said about Bill has always stuck with me. I'm probably paraphrasing, but she was talking about him being criticised for some of the things he said about the South and she said it didn't mean he didn't love the South. She said, "whenever you love something that much, you see all of its flaws, ten fold." I think that's true - you spend a lot of time focusing on the things you love and when you focus on something its flaws are magnified. It doesn't necessarily change the way you feel about it. I love The Walking Dead. Perhaps that explains why I also love this:






Footnotes:

(1) The Descent (2005) actually made me scream out loud. First time ever that had happened.

(2) http://youtu.be/aVZUVeMtYXc

(3) Sophia is one of the longest-surviving characters in the comic book; she dies part-way through Season Two.




This post was published in its original form on 16/01/2015. I chose to edit it because, well... I thought it was shit. Note to self: write, read, re-write, then publish blog post!