ELEPHANT
--------
An aerial shot shows a car weaving down a leafy suburban street, bumping
against parked cars. A bleached blonde teenager, John McFarland (John Robinson)
exasperatedly tells his father (Timothy Bottoms) to get out of the car, that
his mother will kill him. Dad's drunk again and John will be late for school,
but this slightly out of the ordinary event may be what saves John's life that
day in Gus van Sant's 2003 Cannes Palme d'Or winner, "Elephant."
Using the same experimental techniques which made his "Gerry" so intriguing,
van Sant achieves startling yet lesser results with "Elephant." Beautiful
images and some moments of stark irony cannot negate the fact that not only do
we know where this story is headed, not necessarily a problem in and of itself,
but that combined with this observant style the film fails to engage the
emotions.
After meeting John (van Sant titles the introduction of each high school
student he will continue to follow), Eli (Elias McConnell) takes the time to
photograph a young punker couple in a park on the way to school. Harris
Savides's ("Gerry") camera stays static, letting Eli walk farther into the high
school's horizon. The camera remains static after a cut to the gymnastic field
where a nerdy girl in a Wildcats sweatshirt (Michelle (Kristen Hicks) is
introduced in her next scene) seems to be trying to identify the music
(Beethoven) that has appeared on the soundtrack before picking up Nathan
(Nathan Tyson) and following him into the school where he passes a group of
three admiring young women (Jordan (Jordan Taylor), Brittany (Brittany
Mountain) and Nicole (Nicole George)) before meeting up with girlfriend Carrie
(Carrie Finklea, whose brief glance at the camera is the only note of
unnaturalness). Acadia (Alicia Miles) leaves class to find John alone, tears
streaming down his face. He says he's OK, then heads out to see if his dad has
wandered from the car where John has left him. Outside, he plays with a dog
(Savides goes slo-mo for this last moment of 'normality') then sees two teens
approaching outfitted for battle. 'What are you guys doing?' he asks. He's
advised to get out of the area, that something heaving is about to go down.
On April 20, 1999 Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold perpetrated the most notorious
school massacre in Columbine, Colorado in what was to become a raft of them.
Van Sant presents his interpretation of multiple looks at what it must have
been like that day by repeating the meeting points of his initial scenes from
different points of view while reaching back or moving forward with each
character or character grouping to fill out the story. Savides's camerawork is
beautiful, gliding along with his subjects, alternately placing them within
their environment or isolating them with shallow focus in hallways that turn
into tunnels of light. Shots of the sky comment upon events. Sound designer
Leslie Shatz's ("Gerry") muted work combined with the use of Beethoven
throughout adds unsettling atmosphere.
Van Sant's idea works strongly in a few scenes. Jordan, Brittany and Nicole
joke about 'living long enough' to obtain a driver's license before all three
vomit up their just eaten lunches in the ladies room. Friendless Michelle
reenters the high school from the track field via an empty basketball court and
her long walk across it presents her as a sitting duck, a target. Eli's
photography takes on a different meaning when one knows what is coming.
However, seeing as Van Sant roughly follows the events of Columbine, he also
makes some questionable choices, presenting the killers, Alex (Alex Frost) and
Eric (Eric Deulen) here, in an ill-defined homosexual relationship. Alex is
clearly the leader ('Is that Hitler?' asks Eric as they both watch Nazi footage
on TV), but Van Sant makes no attempt to delve into their motivations. Is he
suggesting their homosexuality made them the target of abuse (he briefly shows
a student pelting Alex with gunk in class and also shows a Gay Straight
Alliance class under attack)? Another disturbing choice is the introduction of
Benny (Bennie Dixon), the only character we meet after the violence has begun.
He's also the only Black character. Why has Van Sant singled Benny out?
Although Alex may be targeting Blacks in his plan, he distinctly verbalizes
getting jocks, a group Nathan fits into. Van Sant is inadvertently making some
type of comment even as he claims "We didn't want to explain anything."
Van Sant achieves realistic performances from his amateur cast (only the
adults, which include Bottoms, Matt Malloy ("Finding Forrester") as the
principal and Ellis E. Williams ("Antwone Fisher") as the GSA teacher, are
professionals). The oddly subdued reactions of John McFarland and his father
outside the smoking school contribute to the film's flat effect, though.
The film is named after a British film on violence in Ireland that similarly
withheld explanations, but while Van Sant thought the reasoning lay in the
blind men and elephant fable, the earlier film referred to the British saying
of a problem being like 'an elephant in a living room.'
"Elephant" is a technically elegant experiment which builds tension then oddly
deflates. Only the fate of Michelle, "Elephant's" Carrie, lingers.
B-
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X-RT-RatingText: B-
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