|

Firecracker
Dikenga Films, 2005
Director: Steve Balderson
by Jeremy Knox
When the camera
pans across the landscape Im reminded of what William Burroughs
once said about America. America is not a young land: it is
old and dirty and evil before the settlers, before the Indians.
The evil is there waiting. Wamego Kansas is no worse or better
a place than anywhere else in the world, but I bet that if you squint
just right on a lonely desolate night you can peer through the veil
of reality and see this ancient evil Burroughs was talking about,
and Id bet that it would be just like looking into a mirror.
Firecracker is one of the few genuinely horrific
films Ive seen.
Its hard for modern people to fathom, but
around the early sixties, the time Firecracker takes place, it was
literally possible to never see anything outside of the place you
were born in. This was a time where television wasnt in every
house yet, where phones were common, but again not everywhere, where
reading and writing were not mandatory for a job. So if you were
a poor sap who flunked school in the fourth grade the odds were
slim that you would ever see anything other than what youd
already seen before. You were trapped.
And being trapped is something that the White
family knows intimately. The father seems to have Alzheimers
and is slowly fading away into dementia, the older brother David
(Mike Patton) is a sociopathic drunk, the younger brother Jimmy
(Jak Kendall) is a mess of ticks and twitches and budding insanity;
and the mother Eleanor (Karen Black) tries to find solace in prayer,
ignoring the horror around her because she cant deal with
reality anymore. Leave it to Beaver this is not.
So when the carnival comes to town on the 4th
of July, as it does every year, it brings delusions of a different
life for both White brothers. Dave, like a man-eating flytrap, wants
to draw someone new in. Jimmy, like a rabbit, wants to escape.
Carnivals tended to be dingy, dirty hideouts
for criminals back in those days. More like a traveling Times Square
porn theatre than anything wondrous and magical; but compared to
their existence in 1964 era Wamego it must have seemed like a vision
of heaven to the Whites. Director Steve Balderson illustrates this
with one of the films most unique techniques. The town is shot in
dreary black and white, but the carnival is in vibrant over saturated
colors. I dont know what impressed me more: the technique
itself, or the fact that its completely transparent and doesnt
call attention to itself at all. Either way, it works.
So on that first night, Dave and Jimmy both head
for the carnival. There they each have a faithful meeting with Sandra,
the main signing attraction (Karen Black in a dual role).
Daves meeting doesnt go so well.
Sandra knows him, and they have a love/hate going. He tells her
that he loves her in a way that means he feels anything but. Her
reaction to him can be kindly described as restrained terror.
Using Karen Black as both Eleanor and Sandra was a brilliant move.
The obvious Oedipus complex chills you to your very soul because
it gives you a very nasty idea of why mother White is so terrified
of her oldest son.
Sandra tries to shake Dave off with some false
bravado, but we can see right through it. She may be more outgoing
than Eleanor, but her resemblance to Daves mother doesnt
end with her looks. Shes as much in denial about what she
wants to do and how she feels about him as mom. Even more so since
if she really wanted to be rid of the boy, all she has to do is
tell her Boss/Lover Frank (Mike Patton again) and the Dave White
problem would just go away, if you get my drift. Because
if Sandra is an exaggerated and stylized version of what Dave wishes
his mother was, then Frank is Dave without the mask of civility;
Brutal, bold, crazy, fearless.
Jimmy has a better meeting with Sandra, at first
anyway. She takes a motherly liking to him and tells him things
that we sense his mother might, if she could. As they chat, he makes
a timid suggestion that they could run away together. He likes to
play the piano and maybe he could accompany her as she sings. Shes
touched by his innocence, having probably not seen someone like
him in a long time.
They might talk more, but Dave interrupts. Hes
come back to stalk Sandra some more, hes drunk and mean as
hell. He finds Jimmy and
well I cant tell you, but what
youre thinking is going to happen isnt what happens.
Its truly unexpected and horrific.
The next day, to our complete lack of surprise,
the oldest White brother has disappeared. But what exactly happened
the night before? The genius of Baldersons movie is that he
only shows us what the White family is willing to admit to themselves,
nothing more, and this is where Firecracker makes a radical shift
from other films of its genre; because it uses an understanding
of family dysfunction to drive the plot.
In a lesser film Jimmy and his family would hate
Dave, but here they dont. They love him. They hate how he
acts, but they desperately need to love him so they can be the happy
family they think they are. Their need is as frightening as his
violence.
In a lesser film Daves worst sin towards
his family would be his verbal and physical abuse, but here its
his constant omnipresence thats the true torment. The minute
they think theyre alone, hes still there.
Steve Balderson is so on the money with this
stuff that its scary. Were not watching some geeks off
the Jerry Springer show here, but what looks like recreations of
real people. Not only that, but these scenes advance the plot, theyre
not just thrown in there.
This is no less than a Masterpiece.
I would say that Firecracker reminds me of The
Last Picture Show directed by David Lynch and written by the Coen
Brothers, but that would be incredibly unfair to this film. Its
so much more than that. However, I stand by comparing Baldersons
script with Larry McMurtys work, its as rich and alive
as anything McMurtrys done.
So
hows Mike Patton? Thats
the big question isnt it? Well, its funny. In the role
of Dave White, hes excellent. Truly a great performance, he
plays Dave as a coiled snake who knows hes wrong, but is so
filled with rage and hate and a sense of entitlement to do anything
he wants that its made him a monster with a smile. However,
as Frank the Carnival owner hes just the slightest bit hammy.
Nothing horrible, its just noticeable compared to his note
perfect David.
The rest of the cast is impeccable; everyone
from first timers like Jak Kendall to old pros like Karen Black.
I just cant say enough good things about the film. I walked
out of the screening exhilarated that there was still hope for American
movies, and any film that can do that to someone as cynical as me
has got to be reckoned with.
----------------------------------------
Film
Threat - 2005
Click here to return to
the articles page.
site by imagemakers
hosting by

|