Friday, April 28, 2006

(movie review: R-POINT)

Point not taken
By David Hontiveros


R-Point is Asian horror by way of Korea. Directed by Kong Soo-Chang from a screenplay he co-wrote with Phil Young-Woo, R-Point is set in 1972 during the Vietnam war and tells the story of 1st Lieutenant Choi Tae-In (Kam Woo-Seong), who must lead a group of eight men to uncover the fates of the missing soldiers from Battalion 53, their last known position six months ago, somewhere in the middle of R-Point, designated a “non-combat zone” in military jargon, but considered sacred ground by the Vietnamese.

Despite the welcome change of setting for an Asian horror film, sadly, R-Point doesn’t really show us anything new and also lacks any sort of real tension in its story and pacing. And though it tries to give us tiny character notes on each member of the squad to make them more than just mere cannon fodder, this is a tactic used in all war films, a convention of the genre, really, and thus, nothing new, either.

Liberated as we are from the usual urban or rural setting of the standard Asian horror film, it’s sad that the Vietnam setting isn’t exploited well at all. Adrian Lyne’s brilliant Jacob’s Ladder manages to do more in a single Vietnam sequence than R-Point does in an entire feature-length film. It’s unfortunate that Kong and his fellow scriptwriter didn’t pick up on the rich potential of distilling the true horror of the Vietnam conflict and transposing it onto the ghost story template. There isn’t even a hint of the idea of War as Death, as the ultimate faceless spectre which consumes lives indiscriminately, cutting them off short, possibly leaving hordes of restless souls in its wake.

The arenas of horror and dark fantasy have always been rich and interesting places from which to tell stories that reflect back upon the real world. An indie horror film like The Ghosts of Edendale, an allegory on the price of success and the difficulties of making it in Hollywood, is a good example of using the template to tell multi-layered stories. And though The Ghosts of Edendale was far from perfect and wasn’t really all that scary, it did have something it wanted to say. R-Point is a straight-forward ghost story with no discernible layers to it, which is, in and of itself, not necessarily a bad thing; but then, if it’s a ghost story that isn’t particularly scary in the first place, then what is it, in the final analysis?

There are, to make matters worse, plot holes that weaken the film even further. Was the Lieutenant that preoccupied that he didn’t even make a headcount? Is a battalion that big that a member of it wouldn’t even recognize a fellow comrade? (Of course, I’ve never been in a war myself, so maybe these are natural enough mistakes, but somehow, they just seem like conveniences to set up the film’s latest “scare.”) And the leaps of logic Lt. Choi makes in the final set piece—which seems terribly derivative of a similar scene in John Carpenter’s astounding remake of The Thing—are stupefying, to say the least.

By the film’s climax, the truth of R-Point is as much of a mystery as it was at the beginning, which may have been the idea, but such as it is, it’s a dissatisfied feeling I have coming away from the movie. At a time when the Asian horror film bubble is showing signs of strain, I had high hopes for R-Point, but it just doesn’t deliver.

Not particularly noteworthy as a war film or a horror film, R-Point doesn’t have all that much going for it, save for a couple of creepy moments. It feels rather like one of those ghost stories told to you by a friend or acquaintance: no real flair in the tale-telling, and the scares seem generic and tired.

With Asian horror films practically a dime a dozen these days, and where even the not-particularly-good ones are being gobbled up by the Hollywood remake machine, it’s only the exceptional ones that truly deserve our attention. The quiet, subtle horror of Fruit Chan’s Dumplings was way ahead of last year’s pack, including Takashi Miike’s One Missed Call. And ultimately, as far ahead as Dumplings is from One Missed Call, so is One Missed Call from R-Point. Though some might think One Missed Call is derivative of films like Ringu and Ju-On, it at least was saying something and was scary as well; R-Point is just limp and wan, an anemic entry in the Asian horror film scene, at a time when we need films with hot, boiling blood in their celluloid veins to keep the movement vital and alive.
Stale blood, rusty Blade
By David Hontiveros

Okay. First, score card.

Based on the adventures of the Marvel comic book vampire hunter, Blade was written by David Goyer and directed (using the term very loosely here) by Steve Norrington; for my money, the only saving graces of the film were Udo Kier and Stephen Dorff.

Then, Blade II came along, and Goyer seemed to understand (as he didn’t seem to on his first go-around) that a Blade film should be a Wesley Snipes action vehicle—let the man do what he does best. Well, Blade II was that. What’s more, as film is a director’s medium, a Blade film, like any other, needs a director; and Guillermo Del Toro (Cronos, and El Espinazo Del Diablo or The Devil’s Backbone) fit that role admirably, crafting a popcorn horror film smothered in butter, blood, and adrenaline. Top that off with key design people like comic book artist Mike Mignola (whom Del Toro would work with again on the film adaptation of Hellboy), and Tim Bradstreet (an artist who has made a name for himself doing art for, among other things, a role-playing game called Vampire: The Masquerade), who did “vampire design,” and you’ve pretty much got a kick-butt vampire movie.

Now, we’ve got Blade: Trinity, with Goyer not just returning as scriptwriter, but now also as director.

“In the movies, Dracula wears a cape, and some old English guy always manages to save the day at the last minute with crosses and holy water. But everybody knows the movies are full of sh*t.”
-- Hannibal King


That little bit of voice-over opens Blade: Trinity, and ironically enough, truer words were never spoken. The plot (such as there is) involves a group of vampires led by Parker Posey’s Danica Talos, who have just discovered the progenitor vampire (TV’s John Doe, Dominic Purcell, currently on Prison Break) who has gone by many names in his long existence, including… Dracula.

They’ve woken him up from his self-induced slumber to, 1) hunt and kill Blade (the raison d’etre of the Bloodpack in Blade II), and 2) perhaps make them able to walk abroad in daylight as well (Deacon Frost’s motivation for hunting Blade in the first movie).

Kick-starting their anti-Blade campaign by framing the vampire hunter for a crime he mistakenly commits, Posey and her Fang Gang manage to place Blade in a dangerous position, where even the government and local authorities are actively seeking him out as a menace to society. This might have been an intriguing angle from which to approach the story, if it hadn’t turned out to be a mere plot device to introduce Hannibal King (Ryan Reynolds from the TV series that began life as Two Guys, A Girl, and a Pizza Place) and his Nightstalkers, most of whom, predictably enough, turn out not to be characters at all, but rather, motivation for Abigail (Whistler’s daughter, played by Jessica Biel, from TV’s Seventh Heaven) to continue her vampire hunting.

Thus armed with a script that freely ransacks elements from his own closet of already-produced ideas, Goyer ends up giving us a film that serves generic, by-the-numbers action, when it should be knocking our proverbial socks off. There is no sense of the frenetic movement Del Toro brought to Blade II here in Trinity, and even the action sequences, normally a trademark of a Blade film, seem half-hearted, as if they’re there precisely because they’re a trademark, because they’re required, and not because there’s anything particularly new or even worthwhile to put on display.

Additionally, any film of this sort needs a good, charismatic villain. We had that in Blade II’s Damaskinos (Thomas Kretschmann, from The Pianist and recently, King Kong) and Nomak (Luke Goss), and as I mentioned earlier, Blade’s only good points were Kier and Dorff as baddies. Trinity’s Drake hardly registers as a character, much less an antagonist to be fearfully respected, or the ages-old bloodthirsty creature he’s supposed to be. He’s simply there, and it’s not just the performance that’s lacking; the script really doesn’t give him any sort of presence. As it is, Posey’s Danica is a more amusing villain to watch, thus making Drake’s final confrontation with Blade obligatory, rather than something the audience looks forward to with anticipation. Even Wesley Snipes, who has always brought a raw physicality to the role of Blade, seems abstracted here, as if he’s not all there, as if his heart really isn’t in it this time out.

To be perfectly honest, after having seen the not-too-thrilling Trinity trailer, my biggest motivation for actually watching it boiled down to Parker Posey. (What can I say? I love her.) Even then, we hardly see enough of her in the film, as a significant portion of screen time is handed over to Biel’s Abigail, the oh-so-cool-I-listen-to-hip-music-on-my-iPod-while-vampire-slaying hunter whom Marvel is hoping will beget a spin-off, as Jennifer Garner’s Elektra did from another woeful Marvel production, Daredevil.

Having mentioned Posey, it’s interesting to note that it took two of indie film’s best and brightest, Posey and Natasha Lyonne—who plays blind Nightstalker Sommerfield—to offset one WWE superstar (Triple H, as vampire Jarko Grimwood, who follows in the footsteps of fellow wrestlers The Rock and Rob Van Damme, in making a bid for big screen stardom). Two-to-one. Sad, but true.

Ultimately, Blade: Trinity joins two of my personal lists. It settles snugly beside Scream 3 and Josie and the Pussycats, on my list of Films Where Parker Posey Is One Of The Few Saving Graces, and joins the ranks of Bad Comic Book Films, where I’ve relegated recent Marvel movies like Daredevil and The Hulk. To make matters worse, Trinity is also a step back for vampire films as well.

As it is, it may take a while for me to wash the taste of stale blood out of my mouth.

Monday, April 10, 2006

TAKOD, reviewed in Sunday Inquirer Magazine
http://news.inq7.net/sunday/index.php?index=1&story_id=72181

“Takod” by David Hontiveros, Visual Print Enterprises

SOMETHING’S rotten in what was once the little settlement of Mapayapa. And now, years later, Mike Lasombra returns to this place from his past with a curious pendant around his neck. After encountering a wizened old woman who knows more than she’s letting on, Mike will discover the throbbing dark secret of Mapayapa. The bloody, frightening shadow behind Mapayapa will require more of Mike than he ever imagined. All this, in straightforward horror and in allegorical manner, is stuffed into Hontiveros’s compact and creepy novella. RSDV