Thursday, March 15, 2007

black snake moan

black snake moan, the new film from craig brewer (hustle & flow), feels like a pulpy, almost-exploitation film, with a budget. however, it emphasizes the importance of human connection and the possibilities for salvation. the film begins with rae (christina ricci) and ronnie (justin timberlake) spending their last moments together before ronnie leaves for military training. it is hinted at briefly in this scene that ronnie has some sort of anxiety issues and that rae seems to calm him. once ronnie leaves, we see that rae has issues of her own; being that she is essentially a nymphomaniac, and without ronnie there, she sleeps with several different men and abuses drugs and alcohol, seemingly to deal with the fact that she misses him so much. simultaneously, we are shown lazarus (samuel l. jackson), a man who’s wife is leaving him for his brother. both his wife and brother attempt to make peace with him but being a strongly religious man, lazarus will not accept their apologies for their adultery. cross cutting between scenes, we watch lazarus get drunk at home and throw out much of his wife’s belongings and rae attends a party where she ends up taking too many drugs and drinking too much. after the party, rae is beaten and left in the middle of the road near lazarus’ house and he finds her the next morning. wanting only to help her, lazarus takes rae in to let her sleep and sober up. she remains for a few days and wakes up to find that she’s been chained to the radiator because, as lazarus explains, she’s been having fever-induced dreams that cause her to run around the fields surrounding his home. but his intentions are also to cure rae of her “evil ways”. the relationship is tense at first as rae is held against her will but eventually the two develop a friendship of dependency, as both are in need of companionship and help. we see rae’s flashbacks of abuse from her childhood and her angry interactions with her mother who works at a store in town. blues music plays an important role in the film; lazarus used to play guitar and sing at a local bar and rae finds it soothing when she plays for him. when ronnie returns, he finds out that rae had been sleeping with other men and when he finds her and lazarus together, he assumes that they are involved sexually. once all is made clear, rae and ronnie realize that they need each other to stay sane and healthy. the plot, which sounds odd whenever i explain it, actually worked for me inside the aesthetic of the film and the soundtrack. i found that even the opening credits won me over by being, for lack of a better word, cool. the acting was strong by all the main characters, particularly ricci, who does white trash really effectively. i’d also heard criticism that this film was misogynist, but i think that would be an over simplification of brewer’s images in the film. granted, ricci spends most of the film in short shorts and a cut off shirt, but i didn’t feel that he was trying to objectify her character; we are aligned with lazarus and he doesn’t look at rae with sexual intentions. nor do i think that just because brewer has a woman chained to a radiator in his film, that this would indicate that he hates women. if we were to subscribe to this reductive logic of filmmaking, we’d be forced to reexamine many films that have dealt with sexism, racism, homophobia, etc. i thought brewer used all of these components to give the film a particular mood and aesthetic that is constant throughout.

watch the trailer