Wednesday 18 December 2013

Falling Down [1993]


Falling Down was a strong diatribe against facets that have come to represent the flip side of the American Dream – nationalistic jingoism, latent racial prejudice, patronizing attitude towards foreigners, chasm between haves and have-nots, cold and heartless corporatization, broken families, and so forth. Replace night in Scorsese’s After Hours with day, and black comedy with a more serious tone, and you have a fair idea about this film. Set in LA, the day starts on a bad note with William Foster (Michael Douglas), a seemingly average American man in white shirt and tie, getting stuck in a monstrous traffic jam, and the nightmarish day – easily the worst in his life – progressively goes from bad to worse. He wants to meet his kid daughter on her birthday, but his paranoid ex-wife is against it. And, to make matters worse, he is harangued by an uncooperative Korean shopkeeper, Mexican hoodlums, a hungry mendicant, the pompous employees of a fast-food restaurant, and his former wife trying to shoo him away, with the sight of a man who is declared “not economically viable” by a bank striking a deep chord with him. And the combination of these causes psychological meltdown of this angry, frustrated and emotionally unstable man, leading to bad consequences for all. Meanwhile, a cop (Robert Duvall), on the last day of his job, inadvertently becomes the investigator. Douglas gave a top-drawer performance, managing to underline his character with a strong layer of tragedy and poignancy. The film, by the way, wasn’t without its pitfalls and broad-strokes, and the aspect of celebrity-hood too could have been touched upon to add a further layer of dark irony.








Director: Joel Schumacher
Genre: Thriller/Psychological Thriller
Language: English
Country: US

4 comments:

  1. jervaise brooke hamster26 December 2013 at 07:37

    I want to bugger Barbara Hershey (as the bird was in 1966 when the bird was 18, not as the bird is now obviously).

    ReplyDelete
  2. jervaise brooke hamster26 December 2013 at 07:39

    I want to bugger Rachel Ticotin (as the bird was in 1976 when the bird was 18, not as the bird is now obviously).

    ReplyDelete
  3. jervaise brooke hamster26 December 2013 at 07:40

    I want to bugger Tuesday Weld (as the bird was in 1961 when the bird was 18, not as the bird is now obviously).

    ReplyDelete
  4. jervaise brooke hamster26 December 2013 at 07:43

    I want to bugger Dedee Pfeiffer (as the bird was in 1982 when the bird was 18, not as the bird is now obviously).

    ReplyDelete