Hub_89 by Unknown

Hub_89 by Unknown

Author:Unknown
Language: eng
Format: mobi


FEATURES

by alasdair stuart

2. Dark City

‘Now you’re getting it, John. Maybe one day I’ll be working for you.’ There are a thousand stories in the naked city, and each one of them will be lived by it’s inhabitants over and over again. The mean streets shift and warp, names change, streets change but the Shell Beach Express never changes and the Shell Beach Express never stops. Welcome to Dark City, leave everything at the door. Including yourself.

Alex Proyas’ film is as mutable as the city it describes, a story that steals the wallets of film noir and Golden Age science fiction whilst they’re not looking and creates something entirely new, entirely different. It’s Bosch with better urban planning, the story of a lonely man walking down the mean streets who may very well be mean himself.

The story, the world itself in fact, is a puzzle and as a result individual will is second to what roles the characters are obligated to play. John Murdoch is not so much Rufus Sewell’s character as the name he wears to enter the world of the city, as vital and as irrelevant as the clothes he’s wearing. He’s not just a murderer but The Murderer, the boogeyman robbed of everything but his name and no longer sure he’s prepared to accept his role in society. Murdoch is a character in search of a different story and the people he encounters are either stereotypes or on the verge of stepping out into the light. The Doomed Hooker, the Lunatic Who Knows The Truth, the Friendly Relative, the Penitent Wife, the Dogged Cop all take their turn in the spotlight and even the lesser characters aren’t ignored. Murdoch’s belligerent landlord becomes a friendly news vendor, a poor couple become millionaires overnight and the City itself shifts and alters, always growing, always changing, always there. Identity is irrelvant and unncessary, because the City and what lies beneath it is too big, too elemental. This isn’t so much a story about the mean streets as it is one exploring why they’re mean and the end result is a dizzying sprint through and behind the scenes of a story that is flimsy and deliberately so.

The opening narration manages to almost completely negate this atmosphere, as Kiefer Sutherand, doing his best Peter Lorre impersonation as Doctor Schrieber lays the plot out. The film, certainly on a first viewing, is infinitely more rewarding if this is skipped past and it’s no accident that the director’s cut removes it.

Regardless, the world that Murdoch and Schrieber inhabit, essentially alone, is one straight out of nightmare, a World’s Fair that’s curdled and stagnated leaving a trail of empty automats and narrow streets behind it. Proyas lets himself run wild as buildings sprout like plants, staircases expand and at one point Murdoch escapes the Strangers on a rapidly growing chimney. The world is a stage and Murdoch and Schrieber are the only two actors who’ve seen a script. Even Richard O’Brien’s Mr Hand, the Stranger who



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.