Here's the latest movie column for Our Sunday Visitor--please don't reprint 
until after July 21 (it's OK to forward this to friends). 

I'm off to England on Saturday for ten days; will meet up with my husband, 
Fr. Gregory, who has been in Romania for 2 weeks leading a mission team; they 
put on a camp for at-risk teens. We plan to rent a car and roam around the 
country sightseeing, but the middle of our time is at the C S Lewis 
Conference which runs two weeks, one at Oxford and one at Cambridge. I'll be 
speaking at the Oxford event, on July 18. It's also our daughter Megan's due 
date :-( and I sure wish I could be with her for the birth. We're still 
hoping Adam will decide to show up a little early, or else a little late. 

***
One thing the makers of "Men in Black II" want you to know: this movie does 
not take place in the future. It's happening right now, today; a title at the 
beginning of the film announces "July 2002" and any viewers who checked their 
watches right then would feel pleasantly punctual. Of course that title will 
soon make the film feel dated, but that didn't dissuade the filmmakers. In a 
sea of movies set in the nebulous near future, they wanted to stress the 
presence of unseen realities, right here, right now. 

It might seem like a stretch to read metaphysical implications into a 
two-word title. But that is the central joke of the "Men in Black" movies: 
things you'd never suspect are all around us, had we but eyes to see. And if 
we could perceive these mysteries, we'd be surprised at how truly dumb they 
are. Aliens dwell among us, all right, but only after they've gone though the 
alien immigration bureau. There they are supplied with wigs and given advice 
like, "Do not go out during the day. If you must go out, make it the East 
Village." There a tall creature in red feathers and a beaky nose scrutinizes 
a form, while nearby a portly, pasty alien kid spills french-fries on the 
counter. It could be the Motor Vehicle Administration, except that some of 
the clients have gills. 

As in the first "Men in Black" (1997), the title refers to the bureaucrats 
tending this federal agency, who wear black suits that would be the envy of 
any funeral director. While the aliens look like tourists everywhere, the 
feds policing them are square-headed bureaucrats right out of "Dragnet." No 
dashing intergalactic swashbucklers here; the Men in Black are just doin' 
their job, ma'am. 

The sequel has been faulted for lack of originality, and that's an 
unavoidable problem; the first "MiB" proposed a delightful new concept, and 
any movie that utilizes the same concept is bound to have an echo. In the 
original, Agent Kay (Tommy Lee Jones) recruits street tough Will Smith (who 
becomes Agent Jay) to join him in combating a renegade giant cockroach. At 
the end, Kay decides to retire and has his own memory erased-he's 
"neuralyzed." In the new film, Agent Jay must locate Agent Kay in retirement, 
"deneuralyze" him, and ask his help in combating a renegade multi-headed 
giant worm (which usually takes the more convenient shape of Lara Flynn 
Boyle). 

Given those plot constraints the second film must inevitably follow the 
footsteps of the first. Thanks to the playful charge between Smith and Jones, 
however, none of the fun is lost. These two seem to have been born to work 
together. Though Smith is provided a love interest (luminous-eyed Rosario 
Dawson) and dutifully hankers over her, there's more crackle on the screen 
when he's tossing one-liners with ever-deadpan Jones. While some laughs are 
lukewarm, enough succeed that the film rolls merrily along. 

As audiences roll merrily out the doors they haven't been given anything 
weighty to chew on, except perhaps that initial proposition that there is 
more to life than meets the eye, that magic may be surrounding us unseen. 
This film offers a playful answer to a deepset human longing to believe that 
there are elves in the cupboard and fairies in the forest, or at least aliens 
in the post office. In fact, that hunger to find something wonderful in the 
midst of everyday life is not at all alien. God planted that hunger in every 
human being, because he had a plan to make it come true. 
***
Years ago a friend observed to me, "What if someone could have killed Hitler 
before he came to power? If they'd stopped him in time, he wouldn't have 
taken a single life." I said, "Then that person would have been guilty of 
murdering an innocent man. He would have been more guilty than Hitler." 

That's the moral dilemma posed by Spielberg's latest, "Minority Report," 
based on a fifty-year-old short story by Phillip K. Dick. This film is 
definitely set in the future, but it attempts to combine sci-fi aesthetics of 
two different ages. I haven't read the original story, but it still seemed to 
me that the two elements are imperfectly joined; those parts that (I think) 
are original have classic mid-century charm; those parts that (I suspect) are 
contemporary updates are ugly, gratuitous and distracting. 

The basic plot is a good one, and though it has some holes, it keeps zipping 
along. In the year 2046 the city of Washington, DC, became the site of a 
daring experiment. Three clairvoyants have been found who can see violent 
crimes before they have been committed. They are kept resting in a 
semi-conscious state in a water tank, where their insights are electronically 
recorded and conveyed to the Precrime Unit of the city police, who must 
intercept the murderer before the deed is done. The "trial" takes place at 
the time the visions are received, and the would-be criminal is locked away 
immediately upon apprehension, which prompts questions among characters about 
justice and even theology. Things heat up when the chief of Precrime, John 
Anderton (Tom Cruise), is accused of the future murder of a man he doesn't 
know, and must escape his police colleagues and clear his name. 

All this has the kick of a classic murder mystery. But there is no plot 
reason for Anderton to blindly bite into a rancid sandwich, then wash it down 
with ancient green milk, then spew both over the floor. There is no excuse 
for repeated close-ups of bloody eyeballs in a baggie. The film falls prey to 
a contemporary fallacy, that for things to be "real" they must be ugly. Every 
one of the last four movies I've reviewed has had a vomit scene-it seems to 
have become a requirement--but "Minority Report"'s is the most spectacular. 
While "Men in Black II" is determinedly set in the present, "Minority Report" 
is the future twice-baked. The bottom layer, the basic story, has a 
fascinating aroma. The top layer, unfortunately, is a bit flaky. 

Dog Days of Summer: For something completely different, try "Best in Show," a 
comic fake documentary by Christopher Guest (who got his start with this sort 
of thing in "This is Spinal Tap"). Guest and his collaborator, Eugene Levy, 
dreamed up a story about hopefuls converging on the fictitious Mayflower Dog 
Show in Philadelphia. They recruited actors, briefed them on the story and 
the exaggerated characters they were to play, and turned on the cameras. This 
mostly-improvised film is consistently funny and contains no discernible 
aliens. 

********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com

Reply via email to