|
Prison
(1988)
Director: Renny Harlin
Cast: Lane Smith, Viggo Mortensen, Chelsea Field
If you are an aspiring filmmaker, but the film industry in your country is
run by government bureaucrats who don't understand that culture includes popular
culture, and instead believe that every movie should be chock-full of high art,
what should you do? Meekly go along? Fight the bureaucracy? Struggle to make
your movie by yourself with limited funds and resources?
No - the correct answer
is to humiliate the bureaucrats by moving to Hollywood and becoming successful
making real movies. Thanks to people like James Cameron, Canadians really
are kings of the world when it comes to their humiliation of the filmmaking
environment they decided they couldn't work under (though even after decades of
this, the Canadian government is still mighty slow to catch on.) But it does
occasionally happen with individuals from other countries. For example, the
Dutch-born Paul Verhoeven (Robocop) packed up and left after years
of frustrating battles with his government. Then there is the Finnish-born Renny
Harlin. After struggling a long time to make a real movie (the
Finnish/U.S. Born American), and the reaction of his government to
the finished product (they banned it), Harlin understandably gave up on Finland
and moved to Hollywood. Within several years, he was on the Hollywood A-list
with movies like Die Hard 2 and Cliffhanger. Of
course, he had to start at a lower level than that; his first Hollywood effort
was in fact the low-budget independent horror movie Prison. The
strange thing is despite its unfancy pedigree (including the fact it was
produced by Charles Band), it happens to be one of Harlin's best efforts to date.
Since you have probably figured out where the
movie takes place, on with the description of
the plot. Overcrowding and cutbacks to the
Wyoming prison program forces the state's prison
board to reopen the old Creedmore penitentiary,
shut down twenty years earlier. Appointed to run
the reopened penitentiary is Sharpe (Smith,
Lois And Clark), a
hard-lined warden who used to be a guard at Creedmore years earlier. Walker (Field), a
reform-minded member of the prison board,
objects to Sharpe's posting, not just because of
his archaic ways, but that she suspects that he
hides much more than he allows to be revealed -
something that fearful and newly-arrived lifer
prisoner Cresus (Lincoln Kilpatrick, Matt
Houston) seems to agree with for reasons of
his own, having been in Creedmore years earlier
with Sharpe. On the other hand, the other
newly-arrived prisoners - including professional
car thief Burke (Mortensen, The Lord Of
The Rings), proud Italian-American
"Lasagna" (Ivan Kane, Platoon),
and hulking giant "Tiny" (former wrestler Tom
"Tiny" Lister) - are more concerned with
adjusting to the horrendous condition of the
prison as well as the harsh disciplinary
environment Sharpe has put into effect. But they
soon find themselves involved in something more
pressing; immediately after the old execution
chamber is unsealed, unnatural (and deadly)
things immediately start plaguing the prison,
with no one seemingly safe from it all. And it
all seems tied to that secret Sharpe and Cresus
share...
Although Prison can unarguably be
called a horror movie, there is actually a lot
of effort put into elements that are not of a
horrific nature. That is, at least, horrific
in
the ways we normally associate with horror
movies. Instead of bombarding the viewer with
relentless efforts to shock, the movie goes to
the trouble to show us how horrifying the prison
setting is even when these mysterious things are
not happening. Shot on the grounds of an actual
abandoned penitentiary, there is immediately a
degree of authenticity to be felt in the movie.
The production wisely didn't clean things up
before shooting, and sights such as the
weed-choked exercise yard and the filthy cold
concrete cells the prisoners are crammed in make
the setting a true hell on earth. It seems to be
a place that any man could find themselves in
with a wrong decision or even a little bad luck.
Unlike other prison movies that are filled with
young and muscular convicts, the hundreds of
prisoners milling around in the background of
this movie are a mixture of different types; the
young and old, the hairy and balding, the fat
and thin, and some wearing eyeglasses. Much more
believable. They wearily go from place to place,
clearly worn out from so much hard time and
being without free choice for so long. The
prison guards that order them around are also
clearly worn from their stint in the prison
system. They are too tired and downbeat to be
the stereotypical sneering and
nightstick-beating stereotype. Most of them have
a hatred for the convicts, but they only have
the energy to be cruel to them by throwing
insults.
The background atmosphere given to Prison
makes the title spot a great and somehow
appropriate place to set a horror movie. It's
actually the previously mentioned characters
that really carry the story along, though the
construction of the characters and the
performances of the actors who play them has
somewhat mixed results. First, the positive.
Every prison movie needs a tough warden (at
least the ones that at least flirt with
exploitation), and Smith gives such an intense
performance that it should become a standard. He
is incredibly menacing as the warden; when you
see the angry look on his face when he grabs the
collar of a prisoner who tried to escape, you
are certain that he is going to commit murder.
Yet the screenplay - and Smith, for that matter
- refuses to make the warden a one-note
stereotype. There are several scenes when Sharpe
is alone and lets down his guard so we can see
there is more going on in his head than rage.
One scene where he's alone in the execution
chamber seems to suggest he feels some deep
guilt about something that happened. Also, we
see that he is genuinely frightened about what
is going on in his prison, so it's more
understandable why Sharpe seems to become more
berserk as the movie progresses. Another
excellent performance comes from Kilpatrick as
the prisoner who shares Sharpe's secret, and
gives off the same feeling of fear and dread. He
has the bonus of playing a somewhat familiar
part with a few eccentricities (being addicted
to Lysol, for example), and has a great
monologue where he tiredly pleads with newcomer
Burke to straighten his life.
Burke, played by Mortensen, on the other hand
isn't as memorable a character, despite the fact
that he more or less becomes the hero of the
movie. Judging from his performance here, it's
hard to believe Mortensen managed to work his
way up to a high class project like Lord
Of The Rings.
He is incredibly vanilla
bland, whether he's being confronted by a
Bubba-like prisoner, or trying to escape from
the evil wraith that has enveloped the prison.
His unemotional state ends up transforming him
into some kind of holier-than-thou snot, making
him quite an annoying hero. It doesn't seem to
then make sense why this guy then occasionally
breaks out of his seemingly selfishness to help
someone. In his defense, Mortensen's character
is just as blandly sketched by the screenplay,
revealing to him as well as us virtually nothing
about this guy Burke. Having an even more
thankless role to play is Field, as the prison
board member who starts investigating the
strange events and history of the prison. Field
does give it a good shot, but she is limited by
the fact her character is more of a plot device
than an actual character. About the only thing
positive about the way this character has been
written is that it totally avoids the expected
subplot of her falling in love with this
handsome bland prisoner. She only seems to be
there mainly so the movie can do what it seems
it can't do on its own - provide a way to
explain the wraith plaguing the prison and how it
ties in with the warden's secret.
The only other use Field's character seems to
have in Prison is in a couple of
ridiculous sequences when the macabre wraith
contacts her in cryptic ways in her motel room
in order to give her a few clues - which doesn't
make sense when you think about it. How could
this wraith track her down to her motel room, and
why did it decide to contact this woman? For
that matter, why would such a malevolent force
bother to tell someone what's going on and what
is going to happen? Equally silly is the final
minute of the movie, where the evil force
finally reveals its actual physical being in a
sequence that supposed to be a big shock - but
it looks so silly in its physical state that you
can only laugh at the sight of it. But aside
from those three moments, the movie is actually
pretty successful in delivering the chills, even
managing to be genuinely frightening at times.
Though Harlin was working with a low budget,
there are a few amazing effects sequences that I
simply cannot figure out how he did, the most
memorable being when the door and walls of the
solitary cell an unlucky prisoner is in turn
bright red with intense heat in a matter of
seconds. The make-up effects are also
convincing; though the body count of the movie
is actually nowhere as high as you might think
(the first victim of the wraith finally happens
after about half an hour has passed), the
quality of these victims is at the top of
the class, with burned and mangled bodies on
display that look so utterly disgusting that I
wouldn't be surprised if they had to do some
trimming in order to get an R rating.
Though the effects are great, what really makes
the movie good and creepy are a number of
low-tech ways Harlin uses to suggest horror and
build a genuinely creepy feeling. Instead of
complicated special effects, the force of the
wraith and its
feeling
of it drawing near is more easily depicted by
the use of tones on the soundtrack slowly
building in volume, mixed in with more familiar
noises like crashings and grindings, and
lighting the sets at the right moments with
spotlights shining colors of a striking hue.
This may not sound so spectacular described here
in writing, but it works onscreen, probably
because Harlin displays it without any sense of
irony or humorous viewpoint. And the reactions
of the actors facing this horror display the
same seriousness; these characters really do
seem to be genuinely frightened at times. Since
the horror in this movie is displayed with the
utmost seriousness, it's much more frightening
than it could be in another movie, because here
it almost seems as if it could happen.
After all, the most frightening personal
experiences we remember don't seem to have
anything cheesy or jokey about them - they are
more "real" to us than even our most pleasant
memories. It's also an explanation as to why
Prison stuck in my head for so long
after I first saw it, while all those other
horror movies lighter in tone I saw at the same
time soon became a hazy memory.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
See also:
Destroyer, The
Sender,
Slaughterhouse Rock
|