Friday, June 6, 2008

Save Speed Racer




... or just save it as much as you can by watching it now if it's still playing. By missing this movie, even if it isn't a great film, you might have just missed a truly good movie there.

By now, if you had not seen Speed Racer, you'd probably know that it's a big box office flop. Reportedly made by Wachowski Brothers who made The Matrix films for a budget of over 100 million (typical for a summer blockbuster type), it has only grossed a puny $40 million so far in US. Not to mention the usual negative bashing towards the film and its makers. Which is too bad, because this is a genuinely good film that deserve more.

Now, before I start defending this film and The Wachowski Brothers, I'm not going to be like other apologists who keeps overpraising this film as great or perfect because this movie isn't. This films has its flaws. Actually, its only flaw is its overly complicated story and running length. The Wachowskis clearly intended this film for kids and to be watched with the family with its unapologetically cartoonish (in a good way) visuals; however, they should have the common sense not to make a plot so convoluted that it encompasses over 2 hours (and the kids won't understand the corporate manipulation and betrayal anyway). The Wachowskis should have just simply made a simple good guy vs bad guy story with a strong identifiable villain which the movie lacks.

But besides that, I don't understand some of the hatred regarding this film. When the first trailer come out, I was impressed by its unapologetically cartoonish and colourful visuals as well as the outrageous and but wacky fast racing action that recalls video games like F-Zero series and Mario Kart series; I thought it was great and revolutionary and it could to to anime what Sin City did to its comic book counterpart. But alas, it wasn't to be. Although I never experience it for myself, I'm aware that there are strong reactions against the visuals. again, if people can embrace Sin City, why can't they embrace this?

Sometimes I can't help but think that some people are just against The Wachowski for some reasons. It probably started since The 2nd and 3rd Matrix films (which are admittedly flawed and polarizing) and it continues on to V For Vendetta (and to lesser extent, last year's The Invasion). People have been waiting for this Schadenfreude moment to come and of all time, it has come for this movie. I'm not sure why Wachowskis brothers are hated. Sure, they're eccentric (on of them had sex change operation) and mysterious (almost never does publicity). But after seeing this movie, I'm convinced that they're one of the better filmmakers today who not only make films with distinct and boundary pushing visuals, but most importantly also know how to tell a story. It'd be sad if they lose total creative control because this movie flopped.

Take for example the opening race scene. It was a gorgeous, fast paced scene, where we see Speed in a race, it's intercut with crowd, commentaries and scenes from Speed's childhood where we see that he's close with his older brother, Rex. Speed easily leads the race, but he's chasing against a "ghost" red car - his brother's car. As more flashbacks appear, we know that his brother would meet a tragic fate later, and at the same time, we finally know that Speed's goal for this race wasn't only to win it, but beat his brother's record. and when he finally reached the finished line, he did something that really revealed a lot about his character. It was just so elegant and exciting, with no Michael Bay style rotating camera bullshit, with fast cuts - but not distracting, which is refreshing, if you think about it, because Wachowskis have reputation as visual director, but they still care about plot and character development.

Then, there's writing and acting. Yes, the plot was unnecessarily convoluted, but when it comes to emotional scenes, the wachowskis really hit home run. There are 2 scenes where first, the older brother left the family and has his last talk with the dad and a similar scene years later when Speed tries to do the same. It was simple, to the point and yet poignant. The actors are also great in this one. When you have good serious actors like Susan Sarandon, John Goodman, Christina Ricci and Emile Hirsch doing a cartoonish movie like this, it usually ends more often bad than good. But thankfully, the actors know the material really well enough to strike the right tone for the characters. Emile Hirsch was particularly not as bad as I thought he would be after I saw his wooden performance in the trailer. But the best surprise come from John Goodman; I remember seeing him in a lot of movies in the 90s and he somewhat disappeared since early 2000s but it's really good to see him back here with a strong performance. Oh, and then, there's the korean superstar Rain, he's okay, his english is not surprisingly accented, but he definitely doesn't ruin the movie.

At the end of the day, it's normal to hear people complain that summer movies aren't what it used to be, that they're rubbish made for the dumbed down teenage audiences, and yet when the right movie come along that has good fun and and good story for the whole family, it gets ignored. Speed Racer, is one of those movies, and you definitely owe it to yourself not to miss it.

Rating: 3.5 /5

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