It takes a ‘Village’
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ALLEN MacDONALD
At one point mid-way through M. Night Shyamalan’s excellent new film,
“The Village,” elder Edward Walker (William Hurt) escorts his blind
daughter Ivy (Bryce Dallas Howard) down to a heavily locked cottage
that the village children have always been forbidden to enter. Before
unlocking the door he instructs her delicately, “Please do your very
best not to scream.”
This moment encapsulates why Shyamalan is such a master of
suspense. The mere suggestion that we’re about to see something
horrific sends a chill rocketing down the spine. We play it out in
our own heads, which is why seeing his films is often comparable to
reading a book.
“The Village” tells the story of a small community of people that
have chosen to live outside the mainstream society. They have cut
themselves off from the local towns and cities where corruption and
violence has touched each of the elders at one time in their lives,
driving them away to this place of solitude where they can live in
egalitarian harmony.
But they have become barricaded within their borders by the
presence of mystical creatures that lurk in the nearby forests. You
can hear them cackle and shift in the meadows, watching and waiting.
They are violent, dangerous, carnivorous creatures if provoked,
but the village struck a truce with them long ago: if the villagers
stay out of their forest, the monsters will respect the boundaries of
the village.
The younger generation, however, represented here by Ivy and the
young man that has loved her since youth, Lucius Hunt (Joaquin
Phoenix), are restlessly testing those borders, uncomfortable being
confined.
One of the trade-offs of being cut off from the world is they are
denied access to medicine, and that has resulted in the deaths of
several village children who likely could’ve been saved in a city
hospital. Lucius continually petitions to walk through the forest to
reach town and return with medications, convinced that the creatures
will sense his pure heart and allow him safe passage. The Elders
aren’t so sure.
What I loved about this film was the way that it continually
surprised me with its plot twists.
Shyamalan is a writer who knows to propel the plot with fleshed
out characters who’s desires and motivations, both good and evil,
inform every turn.
Many times while viewing “The Village,” I was convinced it would
collapse under its own narrative weight, but every time it proved me
wrong.
On three separate occasions I thought to myself, “Oh, you can’t do
that.” But I was glad that the movie did. I like to be surprised. I
like to be caught off guard, and the story has been so well thought
out, that it not only makes sense, but has been set up from the
start. Just when you get comfortable and think you know where “The
Village” is heading, the carpet gets pulled out from under you -- and
isn’t that the whole point of going to see a movie? With all of his
films, Shyamalan infuses his characters with heart, but there’s a
striking minimalism to his approach. He uses long takes in his film,
meaning he uses a single shot for nearly an entire scene without
cutting to a different angle. It’s a refreshing counterpoint to the
MTV mentality of 100 edits every 30 seconds. He’s rediscovered the
lost art of sound design: most movies like to be noisy, Shyamalan
builds his suspense with silence, and different variations thereof.
Cracking branches, wind rustling trees, thrown rocks and creaking
wood needle our every last nerve. Silence provokes intense
anticipation.
The use of color in all Shyamalan’s films (“The Sixth Sense,”
“Unbreakable” and “Signs”) is also very clever and informs his
minimalist style. The cinematography prefers muted tones that suggest
an approaching winter, so that when the characters explain that the
color red is forbidden in the village because it attracts the
monsters, our brain’s are being hard-wired to tense the body whenever
something red appears on the screen. It creates a Pavlovian reaction:
red means brace yourself because bad things are about to happen.
Strong performances dominate the movie. Joaquin Phoenix and Adrien
Brody give understated weight to their characters, especially since
neither is particularly good at communicating, or even speaking for
that matter. But it’s Bryce Dallas Howard who gives “The Village” a
luminous central character.
In her first starring role, Howard brings a quiet grace to Ivy.
There isn’t a hint of self-pity in her voice. She is fierce, strong
and independent, and represents everything that is good and bad about
their closed community. Sigourney Weaver and Hurt bring their own
gravity to the story, but, unfortunately, feel wasted by the film’s
end. Weaver especially. If she was given anything substantial to do,
it’s probably still on the cutting room floor. The attraction Hurt
and Weaver’s characters feel for one and other is one of the few
loose ends left unattended by the time the credits roll. I think
Shyamalan thinks he tied it up, but it feels anticlimactic.
“The Village” isn’t a perfect film. It’s a little flimsy at the
start, the pace a little too deliberate. But it rewards the careful
viewer, and I can’t express how well the screenplay was constructed.
I’m still thinking about it two days later and for every question I
pose, I realize there’s a solid answer in the set-up.
Shyamalan thought this story through, anticipated all the
conceivable holes and cinched them closed with a convincing
explanation. The dialogue is off-putting as it bounces with the
formal cadence of the late-nineteenth century dialect. I think some
may feel cheated by Shyamalan’s now eagerly anticipated final twist.
I think it’s a fantastic reveal.
“The Village” is being advertised simply as a monster movie.
That’s a bit misleading. It does provide effect scares, but it is so
much more than that.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 30, recently earned a master’s in screenwriting
from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
‘Village’ entertains, but lacks quality of previous films
I am an admitted fan of M. Night Shyamalan and have been looking
forward to the release of “The Village” since I first saw the trailer
months ago. Prior to seeing the film over the weekend, I was a bit
dismayed to read the very mixed reviews it has received.
Shyamalan is somewhat of a throwback in the movie industry as he
writes, produces and directs his films. This level of creative
control is becoming increasingly unusual and is probably only
possible due to the success of Shyamalan’s previous offerings
including “The Sixth Sense,” the unfairly ignored “Unbreakable” and
“Signs.” While wearing multiple hats allows Shyamalan ultimate
artistic freedom, it also eliminates his ability to deflect any blame
should a project go awry.
“The Village” stands on its own merits, and would be considered a
quality film by most critics if it was written, produced and directed
by persons less well known.
One thing any Shyamalan film has going against it is the
audience’s anticipation of his trademark plot twist. “The Village”
actually has two of them, one of which I easily figured out about 20
minutes into the film. Knowing what was later revealed did not
necessarily diminish my enjoyment of the movie. I suggest viewers
concentrate less on trying to be plot detectives and more on simply
letting the story unfold.
The village referred to in the title is a close-knit community in
a verdant valley surrounded by thick forest. Governed in an
egalitarian style by the elders, the village is self-sustaining and
very communal in nature. Chores, policing and even meals are shared.
However, it soon becomes evident that life in the village is not as
pastoral as it first appears.
The village boundaries end at the edge of the forest wherein dark
forces dwell. The creatures living in the forest are ominously
referred to as “Those We Do Not Speak Of.” It is explained by the
village’s leader Edward Walker (William Hurt) that a truce exists
allowing the two entities to coexist as long as the villagers don’t
enter the forest. While this condition is adhered to, the unseen
creatures don’t enter the valley.
Unfortunately, the village simpleton Noah Percy (Adrien Brody) has
been entering the forest to pick red berries, a color forbidden by
the elders because it is said to attract the creatures. This
intrusion has apparently violated the truce and the mysterious
red-cloaked forest dwellers start invading the village leaving
mutilated animals as proof of their forays.
The cast of “The Village” is excellent. Besides Hurt and Brody,
the cast includes Joaquin Phoenix, Sigourney Weaver, Brendan Gleeson
and Bryce Dallas Howard, daughter of director Ron Howard. Playing the
headstrong blind villager Ivy Walker, Howard is convincing and
compelling and appears to have a bright future.
Viewers will undoubtedly find parallels to the current political
climate. The effect on a society of being threatened from outside
forces will seem familiar.
I enjoyed “The Village” as a pleasant diversion, but do not
consider it to be in the same league as Shyamalan’s other films. I
perceive each of Shyamalan’s films to be declining in quality from
the previous effort. Even Alfred Hitchcock, the so-called “Master of
Suspense” could not sustain a single genre of film his entire career.
I suggest that Shyamalan try something completely different for his
next project lest he be “pigeonholed” and subsequently not allowed to
realize his full potential.
* VAN NOVACK, 50, is the director of institutional research at Cal
State Long Beach and lives in Huntington Beach with his wife
Elizabeth.
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