Sequel doesn’t ‘Kill’ like original
- Share via
TRICIA BEHLE
In “Kill Bill Vol. 2,” the Bride (Uma Thurman) continues to hunt down
her former colleagues.
In Vol. 1, the Bride dispatched Vernita Green and O-Ren Ishii. Now
in Vol. 2, she moves on to Budd (Michael Madsen) and Elle Driver
(Daryl Hannah), with her ultimate goal being to kill Bill (David
Carradine), her former boss.
Director and writer Quentin Tarantino provides more back story and
motivations for the Bride and Bill in Vol. 2, but he spends too much
time doing so. Consequently, the pacing is much slower in Vol. 2.
There are also fewer fight scenes in Vol. 2 than in Vol. 1 and a
lot more talking. Too much talking, really.
Still, there are parts of Vol. 2 that are definitely worth waiting
for. Every scene with Elle Driver is fantastic. Who knew Daryl Hannah
could play evil so well?
There is also one intense sequence done with the screen either
completely black or just lighted by the light of a flashlight that
practically makes the whole movie.
Tarantino has fun with technical elements in Vol. 2 just like he
did in Vol. 1. He switches between black and white, color and grainy
color for different parts of the film to very good effect. He also
switches between different movie styles like westerns and old kung fu
films for different sections.
Unfortunately, Tarantino has some technical flaws too. There are a
couple scenes in the film that are frustrating because it is very
difficult to understand what the actors are saying. One scene with
Budd and one with Esteban could really use subtitles even though the
dialogue is in English. The best-written lines won’t work if the
audience can’t figure out what the actors are saying.
“Kill Bill Vol. 2” doesn’t deliver quite the visceral thrill that
Vol. 1 did, but it still offers enough to make it worth watching.
This ‘Adam’ is in need of more than just a fig leaf
When I was asked to review “Young Adam” this past weekend, I
hadn’t heard anything about it except that it carries an NC-17 rating
and features star Ewan McGregor in a full-frontal glimpse of his, er,
light saber. I thought, well, he’s pretty cute and has made some
interesting films -- so how bad can it be?
Well, I’m here to warn you: there is nothing -- I repeat, nothing
-- that will impress you favorably in this movie except how
resoundingly dreary it is. This film, directed and adapted by David
McKenzie, is much like its main character -- a young man with no
redeeming social value whatsoever. The best thing going for it is
David Byrne’s moody score.
The opening shot is of Joe (McGregor) spotting the body of a young
woman floating in the river. He and Les (Peter Mullan) fish her out
of the water and call the police. As he gazes upon this poor woman,
Joe tenderly lays a hand on the woman’s back. He seems quite affected
by her and even imagines her final moments out loud with all the
soulfulness of a poet.
Who is this guy? He seems much too literate to work on a rusty old
coal barge run by Les, his wife Ella and their young son. Young
Adam’s vision of post-war Scotland is certainly no Garden of Eden.
Ella (Tilda Swinton) is worn out, used up and fed up with her
husband, who doesn’t seem to have much use for her. But evidently Joe
does, as he quietly attempts to seduce her at the dinner table.
I felt like I was chugging through this movie much like that
barge, trying to figure out the point. It turns out that Joe is a
failure as a writer and a human being. He has no genuine regard for
other people, especially women. Even his acts of “passion” (and you
see plenty of them) are quite joyless and impersonal. One scene of
Joe and a girlfriend is particularly shocking and cruel. These women
must not think much of themselves, either, for their choices are just
as pathetic.
With the mystery of the drowned woman revealed in disjointed
flashbacks, I felt a great sense of dread over the misery this man
caused some already pretty miserable people. I do not know what the
movie’s title refers to (except the book of the same name), but I can
tell you, this “Adam” was in dire need of a lot more than just a fig
leaf!
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.