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Crash


Directed by: Paul Haggis
Starring: Matt Dillon
Genre:
Action/Adventure
Run Time: 113
min.
Release Date:
May 2005
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
The initial dark qualities that surrounded the opening
30 minutes of this film made me wonder whether I wanted to continue
watching it. But I did. And I'm glad I did.
The story is about an interlinking section of lives
between people of varying ethnicity, working backgrounds, and class and
how one little event can effect the lives of those they've never met.
Racism rears its ugly head early and often in the
film, and does so in the bright light of day. Nothing is hidden or
candy-coated for the audience. And all of the characters have depth and
emotion and love and hate and fear and hope balled up inside themselves.
A cop, who cares for his ailing and aging father in a
very loving way, is also a bigot and uses his power as a policeman to
exact revenge on those (i.e. African Americans) he sees as causing many
of his and his father's problems.
A district attorney who gets his SUV car-jacked one
night, tries not to stereotype those black men who stole it, but also
has to deal with what "the black vote" will think when this news comes
out. He also has to handle the sudden panicky fear his wife feels toward
any minorities they meet (including their long-time, Hispanic
housekeeper).
A Hispanic man who installs locks for a living must
deal with the prejudices people feel toward him because of some gang
tatoos that peek out from underneath his clothing. But he's also a
loving father with a little girl at home who fears that something bad
will happen to her; they used to live in a very tough neighborhood where
gunshots were a common sound. The scenes with this father and daughter
never ceased to grip me, especially when some of the girl's fears appear
to be coming true.
A Persian immigrant who owns a store must fight to
understand and to be understood in a land where he feels hatred at every
corner because of the Sept. 11th attacks. And he responds in kind by
buying a gun to protect his store's property, much to the dismay of his
wife and daughter.
...And the list of characters go on, each event
folding over and effecting the others. It's an awesome spectacle to
behold, and the end is like a piece of interpretive art. There's no
definitive message to hang on to other than that we're humans, flawed
and greatness in equal quantities.
The all-star cast was also pretty impressive: Sandra
Bullock (MISS CONGENIALITY), Brendan Frazier (THE MUMMY series), Don Cheadle (HOTEL RWANDA), Matt Dillon (DRUGSTORE COWBOY), Daniel Dae Kim (LOST),
etc.
I've read other reviews that comment on the "sterotyping"
of the racist characters. But that is completely and utterly untrue. The
fact that the characters often knew the stereotypes surrounding them,
and commented on these, helped bring the screenplay to an entirely
different level. And if, as a viewer, you felt offended by the film, you
might want to ask yourself why that is.
Although the film uses race to deliver the message of
hate, fear, and shallowness, the ending is surprisingly up-beat as some
(but not all) of these great characters grow internally.
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Image from Crash

DVD cost: $25.99
Purchase:
BestPrices.com
Film Review Stew
Favorite?
Yes.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
With a budget of only $6
million, director Paul Haggis had to cut costs by using his own house in
certain shots and even his own car in various scenes.
Movie Quote: "You
think you know who you are? You have no idea."
Other Actors/Actresses
from Crash
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