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Equilibrium
(2002)
Writer/Director: Kurt Wimmer
Cast: Christian Bale, Emily Watson, Sean Bean, Taye Diggs
Special guest review!
By Jason Alt
What happens when The
Matrix and Fahrenheit 451
get drunk and careless at a party? You probably
end up with something like Equilibrium. This film, pulled from distribution at the last
conceivable
minute and hardly seen by anyone
anywhere, cannot
be recommended highly enough.
In the tradition of such Dark Horse hits as
Boondock Saints and Office
Space,
Equilibrium goes
out of its way to prove that just because a
movie might not clean up (Or even appear) at the
box office doesn’t mean it won’t surprise people
with how well it sells once the DVD’s hit the
shelves.
Equilibrium did
not come out in a theater near me. I did not
hear anything about it for months. Then, all of
a sudden, the internet exploded with reviews;
reviews which either franticly praised, or
viciously condemned the film. This was my cue to
go out and track a copy down. I decided to rent
it and watch it with my girlfriend. I made one
mistake; I watched it right after I saw
The Matrix: Reloaded for the first time.
I was not expecting too much from the film, I
just wanted to be entertained for a few hours.
Honestly I was going to get it out of the way so
I could say “So that’s what all the fuss was
about” (Because I say things like that all the
time).
I was surprised! I was
shocked! I forgot about the $13 late fee my
parents racked up on our Blockbuster account and
left for me to pay! I immediately made it my
business to find a copy of my own. I very nearly
paid the $30 they tried to charge me at both
Suncoast and Barnes & Noble. That is a testament
to this movies’ greatness. Normally I would balk
at paying $30, even for two movies, but
Equilibrium was too good for me not to
be able to watch it whenever I wanted. I lucked
out and snagged a used copy for 15 bucks. Let’s
be honest; 30 dollars is just too damn much for
a DVD with virtually no special features.
But enough about my quest to
own the film, I need to tell you about watching
it. I mentioned that I had expected little from
this movie. I also said I was pleasantly
surprised. Pleasantly surprised is an
understatement. I was as “pleasantly surprised”
as someone who wins $50,000 and a boat because
his neighbor filled out a raffle ticket in his
name and forgot to tell him.
The best way to do it (if you
still have a chance (most people won’t)) is to
do things in this precise order;
1) See The Matrix
for the first time
2) See Equilibrium
for the first time
3) See The Matrix:
Reloaded for the first time
Now, many people, having seen
the second Matrix movie don’t have this luxury.
If you have been in a coma or in prison for the
past 6 months, you can still see
Equilibrium before the brilliant sequel
to The Matrix. Equilibrium
will change your life the way the “Matrix”
movies did. That assumes you liked those movies.
If not, rent Final Destination 2.
You’d be much better off watching a movie on
Carson Daly’s recommendation.
I realize that I have been
anything but subtle in my comparing
Equilibrium and The Matrix.
This is deliberate. If Ray Bradbury had tried to
copy The Matrix he would have
written something very similar to
Equilibrium. They both contain all the
essential elements demanded by their target
audience (horny teenage males). These essential
elements include guns, 'splosions and boobies. I
don’t make the rules; I just shell out $10 for
X2 so I can see Famke Janssen in a form-fitting
body suit.
Christian Bale plays John
Preston, a special unit of law enforcement
referred to as a “Gramaton Cleric”. It is the
duty of the Clerics to dispose of “Sense
offenders”; anyone who has stopped taking their
special, feeling-suppressing medication called “Prozium”.
Every citizen of “Libria” is required to take
their Prozium on a regular interval to keep them
from feeling anything because those in power
believe that in this way they can stamp out war
and hate crime forever.
The job of the Gramaton
Cleric is simple: find and detain sense
offenders, kill sense offenders who resist
arrest, and destroy anything that has been
declared “EC-10” and might trigger emotion. EC
apparently stands for “Emotional Content”.
Everything is EC-10 for the most part. In an
early scene, Preston stumbles upon a cache of
paintings, including the Mona Lisa. In a scene
heavily reminiscent of Fahrenheit 451,
he gives the command “Burn it.” The most famous
painting in all the world and countless others
are evaporated by industrial flame throwers as
Preston turns his back and walks away.
I didn’t love this movie so
much because of the plot. I love the work of Ray
Bradbury and other similar science fiction
writers,
but
the plot is not by far the best
part of this film.
The action scenes steal the
thunder from the plot-heavy dialogue scenes. The
clerics are taught “Gun Kata’s”, wherein they
memorize a series
of predetermined movements
wielding their guns much like a student of
karate might wield sai’s. The back story is that
thousands of gun battles were studied, and the
probabilities of the locations of antagonists
and
vectors of probable return fire were determined.
In plain English, they figured out where you
should stand if you don’t want to get shot. A
series of predetermined arm movements point the
guns at the probable locations of antagonists;
all that is left for the cleric to do is pull
the trigger. The body moves very little, and the
head does not move at all; the movement is all
in the arms. These techniques are so effective
that Preston dispatches about 10 armed suspects
in a pitch-black room and receives no return
fire.
Each action scene showcases a
different aspect of the training a cleric
receives; there are sword fights, gun fights,
even a gun/sword fight. The guns are used almost
as daggers; parrying an opponents’ gun with your
own so you avoid taking a bullet. Guns are taken
away and used against their owners and even as
bludgeons. Nearly every conceivable use of a gun
is explored in the unique and original action
scenes which pepper this film. Occasionally a
gun is used to shoot someone as well. The action
does not get boring because each scene is
different and has its own unique quirks.
Have we learned nothing from
The Matrix? I think everyone
everywhere would agree; stuff looks cooler when
you slow it way down. This technique was not
used nearly enough in Equilibrium.
Very few times was the action slowed down so
that the viewer might catch everything, and have
time to say to his friends “Did you SEE that?”
Most of the time in this film, the answer would
be “No.” The rewind button comes in handy while
watching Equilibrium. I rewound
quite a few times to clarify what had happened
in the action scenes. Plus, a lot of the things
that happen are worth seeing again (Or maybe it
is just me; I watched the 4 seconds of
Goodfellas where Joe Pesci is killed
about 100 times before someone took the remote
control away from me. Caffeine was involved.)
It would have definitely added to the film if
more of the breath-taking action sequences had
been slowed down so that they could be savored.
The scenes were not as hard to follow as those
in say, Daredevil (Whose genius
idea was it to illuminate every fight scene in
that movie with a strobe light?), but they could
definitely have benefited from some slow-motion
photography.
The acting in the film was
phenomenal. First of all, Sean Bean can do
absolutely no wrong by me. I have seen him in a
handful of movies (Goldeneye,
Ronin, Lord of the Rings,
and Equilibrium) and I have
learned two things about this actor.
1) His character will
probably not be in the second half of the movie
2) He will turn in an
excellent performance
He is probably one of the
most underrated actors in recent memory. He gets
my vote for the “Phillip Seymour Hoffman award
for actors who will most likely never get the
lead role in a movie anywhere other than
Sundance.” Yet he always entertains, and was an
excellent choice to play Errol Partridge in
Equilibrium. It was either him or
Phillip Seymour Hoffman.
Then you have Christian Bale.
What can I say about him without sounding like a
stalker? I’d better leave it at that. Christian
is a very consistent actor, and he keeps a
straight face in moments in the film where he is
required to and most others would not have been
able to. Lots of critics really bashed his
performance in this movie, but they said the
same thing about Ron Livingston in Office
Space and his career took off after that
film. I guess the best thing we can say about
Christian Bale in this film is that he does
about what you would expect from Christian Bale.
He is the quiet guy who starts yelling at the
end of his movies. Rent Swing Kids.
The rest of the cast does a
great job as well. If someone had turned in a
sub-par performance, I would let you know. No
one did. Emily
Watson has a kind of eerie charm
that lends her a sort of strange attractiveness
beyond physical beauty. Taye Diggs is….American.
Thank God they put at least one American in this
movie. Angus MacFayden is…. angry. But he usually
is. Good old passive/aggressive Angus.
This movie is not, however,
without shortcomings. It is not going to be a
candidate for a golden globe or an academy
award. But damn, it’s entertaining! I loved it,
so who cares if the critics didn’t? Gun fights
and a decent plot. The plot is not an excuse for
the violence, nor is it a means of ferrying the
character from one fight scene to the next. It
is the biggest part of the film, and draws
elements from many of the great science fiction
novels of the 20th century. There are
some plot holes. I can’t list them without
giving major plot events or the outcome of the
film away. If you find some, remind yourself
that it is just a movie. There aren’t continuity
errors by any means. All in all, it was a superb
film, and I have thoroughly enjoyed multiple
screenings in a week’s period. It is a movie one
can watch again and again. Unless you hate it,
in which case you can return it to the video
store and drink strong coffee to wash the taste
out of your mouth. It isn’t for everyone, but
one the other hand, it isn’t another
Zombie vs. Ninja, and that has to count
for something.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)See also:
Death Machine,
Omega Doom,
Robotrix
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