Rampart
(2011, Oren Moverman)
Crooked
cop dramas always have a place in the movie landscape, and it has
been the case for decades already. The police are, after all, the
recipients of both public outrage and praise. They live to serve and
protect, yet occasionally exhibit behaviour so far below the
standards which must be adhered to that it becomes small wonder many
frown upon them. There is a fascination in seeing this duality
develop on screen. Whether said interest rests in the satisfaction
derived by some in seeing the reasons for their hatred of cops
explored on film or merely out of some perverse pleasure in seeing
good people become bad (or bad people pretending to be good under the
guise of a badge and a gun). After working together on 2009's The
Messenger, actor Woody Harrelson and director Oren Moverman join
forces yet again for Rampart, which premiered at last year's
Toronto International Film Festival and has been rolling out since
across the North American market.
The
film is set in 1999, some time after the infamous Rampart scandal
which plagued the Los Angeles police force, Rampart being one of the
district stations around the city. Dave Brown (Woody Harrelson) is a
down and dirty cop in more ways than one. His methods of extracting
information from accused suspects as well as petty criminals on the
run do not respect official protocol. They fly in the face of it.
Physical and mental abuse are his preferred weapons of choice, with
his trusty baton swinging around a bit too often for his own good and
his pistol firing a little more frequently than it should. The police
captain (Robert Wisdom) and one of its chief directors, Joan Confrey
(Sigourney Weaver) are fed up with Dave's inhibitions while
patrolling city streets. Following Dave's fatal beating of an
individual who performed strangely perfectly timed hit and run on his
vehicle, the law enforcer must now face the law itself. Further
complicating Dave's life is that the mounting pressure is threefold:
the investigation into his police methods, his tumultuous
relationship with a criminal lawyer (Robin Wright), and the tension
with pervades at the family
home, where he lives with his two daughters and his two
formers wives (Anne Heche and Cynthia Nixon).
Seeing
how movie review and analysis frequently involves comparative
analysis, it can be argued that the picture Rampart
may be likened with the most is Abel Ferrara's Bad
Lieutenant from 1992,
starring Harvey Keitel. Both provide their star actors with
astonishingly vulgar and violent roles as policeman failing to
perform their duties adequately, giving in to vice, both while on and
off duty. The comparison can be extended to the degree that both
wicked figures experience increasing degrees of pressure as they sway
further and further away from the sensible spot of the moral compass.
Where Rampart
begins to differ from Lieutenant
is
in the atmosphere director Oren Moverman establishes to explore
Dave's troubled behaviour. Lieutenant
ostensibly embellished the ridiculousness of the protagonists
behaviour. Moverman is more interested in keeping the story grounded
in a sense of gritty realism, where Dave's actions have genuine
consequences other having criminals perish at his mercy. The police
force looks bad, public relations people have to work in overdrive
and his family is royally fed up. There is also an effort to develop
Dave's psychology to the extent that the viewer will not leave the
film feeling particularly sympathetic towards the character. As such,
the reasoning behind the officer's erratic behaviour in the face of
protocol is somewhat opaque. Is he racist? Probably, although the
viewer does not know that for sure (yet he sleeps with a black woman)
Is he sexist? Probably, but again, the film refrains from having Dave
ever explicitly utter any hatred towards females. Various scenes
argue otherwise in fact, in which he genuinely wants to reconcile
with members of his family, especially his eldest daughter (Brie
Larson) who has opted to steadfastly shun her father in the face of
his despicable public acts...and other more family-related memories
she would just as well forget. The nuance in Dave is that while he
eschews decency in many instances, he is not a stupid person either,
quite capable of holding his own in a conversation in which he must
defend his actions, even making his naysayers appear more foolish
than himself when the words come out right.
Moverman's
camera control is wonderfully fluid at times while at other moments
very carefully guided by his hand. The majority of Rampart is
visualized via the popular cinema vérité style, which is all the
more interesting when considering that the film is, in truth,
inspired by real embarrassing occurrences within the ranks of the
LAPD during the 1990s, events that haunt the institution's image till
this very day. The frame rarely shakes so much as to confuse the
viewer, a welcomed decision given that the picture does not involve
any significant action pieces, preferring to spend time on the human
drama. There are instances however in which the director will shoot a
scene in a very artistically driven fashion so as to hit home some
critical ideas about the characters. The most memorable instance is
when Dave, Joan Confrey and the district attorney (Steve Buscemi, in
a small but effective role) are arguing about the way to proceed with
the investigation. The emotionally charged discussion leads virtually
nowhere, with the two men merely blowing off steam, with Sigourney
Weaver's character caught in the middle of the shouting, all the
while the camera, set at the centre point amongst the trio, spins
around slowly. As the tone between the speakers heats up, the camera
continues to twirl, emphasizing the point that their very
conversation is but spinning in circles. For some, this is an eye
rolling technique for its overtness, an example of a director falling
prey to heavy-handedness. Sure enough, the visual style feels organic
to the situation at hand.
Director
Oren Moverman certainly plays his part in creating a smarter and
deeper than expected film in Rampart, but the anchor which
holds everything together is actor Woody Harrelson, unequivocally.
Seeing him portray crooked cop Dave Brown is a reminder of just how
good an actor Harrelson can be. It feels as if once the 1990s faded
so did Harrelson's stardom. The last decade or so has seen him either
take on roles in very small pictures (Transsiberian) or small
roles in very big yet poor films (2012 being a perfect
example). In essence, he is not a name mentioned very often when the
topic of great actors comes up. Rampart is an opportunity to
take the spotlight yet again as he did so many year ago. It
unfortunately is not a movie that received much of a release. In
fact, much of the buzz has emanated from the festival circuit, but
one can hope that Harrelson is hired for more noticeable films in the
foreseeable future. Writing and direction can only do so much for a
character in the case of most films. Bringing to fruition as complex
a character as Dave requires an actor of high calibre. He can bring
the menace, he can bring the intelligence, and he can bring the
ambiguity that lies at the heart of the role.
Those
hoping for a psychotic decent into hell as in Bad Lieutenant might
want to leave their expectations at the door. Moverman and Harrelson
play around in far murkier territory, creating a movie which will
makes no apologies for hits protagonist, but never goes so far as to
dehumanize him either. In the end, when the villain appears as human
as possible, that can be the most frightened thing of all.
3 comments:
wow, this sounds like something i wanna see!
It should be something you want to see Candice, it's a great film with excellent performances (especially Harrelson).
Moverman's writing and directing, too, is impressive. The studio really did a poor job of distributing this.
Yeah, I'm not sure what the hesitancy is towards releasing this a bit wider. I would think that Harrelson's performance should be enough to get people to see it, but it looks as though it's main life span will have been limited to festivals. Maybe DVD if it gets lucky.
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