Viking Night: Dark City

By Bruce Hall

July 24, 2012

Jazz hand!

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All of this is really neat, for about 20 minutes. And then, Dark City gives up most of its secrets. It just starts showing you cards, giving up information that shouldn’t be available until later in the story. By the time we get to the part where we usually find out the Butler did it, the only real mystery is whether or not John will win in the end. And since he's the protagonist, that never really feels in doubt. That the story takes place in such a stylized environment is helpful, but the type of person Dark City is aimed at will immediately identify the Men in Black with Hellraiser. They're a race of undead British people who all look like Pinhead without the pins.

A film this odd can afford to be a little derivative, but not when it pretty much blows its wad 40minutes in. After that, discriminating minds and restless nerds will just pick it apart. And that's what the haters really hate about Dark City - it's really NOT as original as it seems. It does save a few surprises for the appropriate time, but even then it doesn't take a savvy viewer to recall the dozens of books, movies, and television episodes that tell more or less the same story, which is basically:

"You humans ____ us with your primitive ____, so we have decided to ____ you, to better help us ____ you."

Right. Cue the part where Captain Kirk talks the computer to death. Been there, done that. Got the red shirt.

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Dark City does remind me of a lot of other stories, but I happen to LIKE those stories. The plot is 90% post consumer material, but is it possible some stories get told so often because they're meaningful? I think the story’s borrowed nature is innocent - Dark City is an homage to everything that ever made Alex Proyas want to make movies. It’s part noir, part sci-fi pulp, part post modern existentialism, part Twilight Zone episode. It asks some pretty basic, obvious questions about human nature. When do our experiences stop defining us, and we start defining our experiences? And when we love someone, in what ratio do we love them because we know them, as opposed to who they are and what they represent to us?

The story has been told before, and on a lot of levels, this movie has been made before. But why should the great questions of life be left to our ancestors? You can make a lot of things out of the same bucket of Legos. Alex Proyas took a pile of toys that a lot of other people have already played with, and built something kind of unique with it. He successfully tells the story he wanted to, the way he wanted to, and when it's over it kind of feels good. And let's be honest - the movie looks fantastic. Dark City is a unique experiment that doesn't succeed on all levels, but it takes more steps forward than it does back. It’s the kind of film where even if you decide to hate it, the fact you thought about it at all makes it a success.


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