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Everyone Has Something to Hide On Cronenberg's A History of Violence Two of the largest influences on postwar American life were the virtual invention of the teenager and self-help. Something for nothing underlies the idea behind each development. In the first instance, teens are promised that they can retain their innocence while gathering experience; the booty of adulthood with none of the burdens. In the second, a fresh start restores a kind of innocence, with goodness a corollary to self-improvement.
From the opening, A History of Violence announces itself as a combination of the absurd and the grisly. Two sleazy guys emerge from the sort of sleazy roadside motel that always spells trouble in American cinema, one to settle the bill, the other to drive the ten feet in their sky-blue convertible to pick him up, their dialogue establishing them as near-parodies of noir villains. But there's nothing amusing about the slaughter of the chambermaid and manager they've perpetrated, nor about their subsequent cold-blooded killing of a pre-schooler too shocked to do more than whimper. In a terrific match-cut, the gun that kills her becomes the shriek of another little girl, Sarah Stall (Heidi Hayes), who's convinced there are monsters in her room. The gruesome part of this joke is that by the film's end the monster turns out to be Dad.
When the two villains make a hit on Tom's place, he takes them out with a professionalism that seems born of his goodness: because they're evil and he's not, he appears possessed of special powers. He's celebrated locally and on television, the taciturn, modest hero. It turns out that his prowess is less of a knack than a skill, one he practiced long before he recast himself as Tom Stall. On the surface a sometimes hamfisted action story, A History of Violence is in its details a withering comment on modern America's need to see itself as the normative reality. The acting and dialogue convey these details, stylized and borrowed from cowboy and noir films, full of the white-hat/black-hat conventions that need no explanation. The townspeople are good, the intruders are not and must be driven out.
But in the two sex scenes of the film, Edie's clothes suddenly take on a whole different meaning. In the first, she arranges for the children to be gone and surprises her husband by dressing up as a cheerleader to make up, she explains, for the fact that their romance came later in life. The ensuing soixante-neuf session is like the opposite of watching children dress up to act the part in their parents' clothes, Tom and Edie's eagerness to create a mutual innocence that never was becomes a form of denial. This puts the lie to their post-coital spooning a return to the idealized version of married life we get from ads and television when Tom declares himself "the luckiest son of a bitch," as Edie tells him he's "the best man I've ever known."
The need to restore the veneer of the everyday asserts itself at the end, when the family finally sit down to a meal together. Edie, Jack, and Sarah sit over meat, potatoes, peas, and carrots, Tom having gone away to finally resolve (and literally kill off) his past. The scene has an almost religious feel and plays with no dialogue, only the lush and slightly ecclesiastical score. When Tom comes in, there's a moment of extreme tension and then Sarah makes him welcome, the family member who is no longer afraid of monsters and can accept him. To read A History of Violence simply for its plot and content is to miss the black-on-black comedy of this film. Like Michael Haneke's Caché, Cronenberg's film questions the costs of comfortable societies, built as they are on the individual and collective heads of the people that had to be oppressed to create them. In both films, a seemingly perfect life is rudely interrupted by reality, and a return to an insensate state is impossible.
February 2006 | Issue 51 ACCESS: A History of Violence is not available on DVD yet at this writing. Check the film's IMDB entry for more information. ALSO: More reviews |
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Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
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Robert Wise
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Michael Haneke
Allie Light
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The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
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on Orson Welles