Author's Note: Well...this is it.
This is officially the end of my review list. No, I'm not done.
This blog will continue. However, I will be scaling down to Fridays
only, with Wednesday Review as
horror movies come out. It's a bittersweet moment, knowing that I've
worked so hard for so long to complete this. I hope you all enjoy
this, my 153rd regular review.
The Purge
was a firecracker aimed at American's political Right. The
Purge:Anarchy is a grenade.
It's one of the most drastic perspective shifts in the history of
Cinema. We're no longer seeing the Purge through the eyes of a rich,
white family whose lives are in danger purely through their own bad
luck. Instead, we see the people who fear for their lives every
year.
There
are five characters in three converging storylines. The most
prominent characters are Eva and Cali Sanchez (Carmen Ejogo and Zoė
Soul), a mother and daughter who are nearly raped by their
apartment's maintenance man moments after the Purge commences, only
for him to be killed by armored members of a Government Death Squad
sent out to subsidize the killing.
Shortly before
commencement they found a note revealing that Eva's father (John
Beasley) sold himself to a wealthy family to be killed. This is a
moment that somehow manages to be both touching and a punch to the
gut, which shows us how truly sick the people of this society are,
but the matter doesn't really come up again. I actually consider
this something of a bold move on the part of the filmmakers, on a
night as horrible as the Purge bad things happen and we have to move
on.
Meanwhile, husband
and wife Shane and Liz (Zach Gilford and Kiele Sanchez), are stuck in
the midst of the Purge when a group of masked bikers cut their fuel
line before commencement. All four characters are rescued by a
mysterious man (Frank Grillo), who has come out to willingly
participate in the Purge in search of one target. I use the term
“rescued” loosely, here. While the man does save Eva and Cali,
Shane and Liz sneak into his car, and he initially wants to cut all
four of them loose afterward. However, over the course of the night
they find means of staying near him, and it becomes clear that he
isn't going to let an innocent person die while standing in front of
him.
I'm not sure if the
stranger's name is officially Leo Barnes, or if that's fan-given. If
it was given in the movie I missed it, but IMDB credits the character
as simply “Sergeant” for both Anarchy and the (as of this
writing) upcoming Election Year. That said, most news sources
seem to have no problem calling him Leo Barnes, so for the sake of
simplicity I'll call him that for the rest of the review.
Of these three
stories, I'd say Shane and Liz are easily the least developed.
Basically, they're in the film because they were dumb enough to be
out shortly before the Purge began. The only real development we get
from them is Shane's death, leading to Liz's decision to Purge
herself by fighting the people who killed him.
The story actually
gets amazingly complex given the premise, with our heroes caught in
the crossfire between at least three factions who are at varying
degrees of war with each other on Purge night. We find out that the
bikers are not themselves Purgers, but work for wealthy Purgers by
kidnapping people off the streets and bringing them to be auctioned
off for a Most Dangerous Game-style hunt. The government Hit
Squad is led by a man named Big Daddy (Jack Conley), who not only
sees The Purge as patriotic, but sees any attempt to save lives on
Purge Night as morally wrong, and thus becomes determined to kill
Barnes.
The final faction,
however, is an anti-Purge Resistance Movement, led by a man named
Carmelo Johns (Michael K. Williams), a character who's half-street
preacher, half-Black Panther. Johns is established early in the film
when Cali watches his videos online, but most of the population
appears to believe he's simply an ideologue standing on a soap box,
and are shocked when he and his followers actually succeed in taking
out one of the Death Squads, and break into the auction house just in
time to save four of our five heroes (the aforementioned loss of
Shane), and recruiting Liz to their cause.
We eventually find
out that Barnes is headed for the home of a drunk driver who killed
his son. The ending is predictable: he threatens the man, the camera
cuts away, and Barnes walks out of the house. He's shot and wounded
by Big Daddy, who monologues about the importance of killing during
the Purge rather than finishing him off. Big Daddy is then shot down
by the driver, who Barnes had spared. The Purge ends, the Death
Squad backs off, and Eva and Cali rush Barnes to a now-open hospital.
The first thing I
should note is that the decision to carry Barnes over to the next
film is easy to understand. He's badass, while still managing to be
sympathetic. He's clearly someone who could easily make it among the
upper echelons of Purgers if he participated without discretion, but
instead he remains on a moral razor-edge. The decision of such a
powerful individual to reject violence is a resounding statement
within this universe. Honestly, forget Crossbones, this is the role
Grillo was born to play.
I don't make a
secret of the fact that I'm a Liberal (or Progressive or whatever
else you want to call it), so it's obvious this series would appeal
to me. Where the first movie seemed mildly insightful, this movie at
times approached brilliance with it's social satire. The first film
gave us the perspective of the 1%, and showed us how it could all
come crashing down. This movie, however, shows us the real dark
side, revealing how people of lower means can come to support
policies against their own interests if they believe that they can
find a way to rise above the masses.
The bikers, for
instance, are prepared to see their neighborhoods turned into war
zones, and have their own lives put in extreme danger, for a wad of
bills likely worth no more than a few hundred dollars. The people
they capture are then resold for hundreds of thousands of dollars. I
don't think Bernie Sanders himself could have written a more clever
send-up of Corporate greed.
Many of the
characters who take part seem to represent a fairly uneducated
version of Conservatives. I was fascinated to realize that in the
first film there is never any reference to the “Right” to Purge
being “given.” I imagine that in this world there's some
justification for Purging being a “Natural Right” among educated
Conservatives. In this film, however, at least two Purgers reference
the Government “giving” them the Right. Notably, the maintenance
man even gets the name of his own political party wrong, calling them
the “New Found Fathers.”
I personally took
the Death Squads as a parody of hypocritical corporate subsidies
supported by “Free Market” advocates. The government allowed the
Purge because it was “natural,” but then sends out killers when
it turns out people aren't as naturally violent as they had hoped.
Maybe I'm reading in too deeply, but I think the critique is there.
There are elements
in this film that are underused. Carmelo Johns is little more than a
cameo, clearly setting up for future films. Edwin Hodge returns as
the homeless man from the first film, now one of Johns followers.
Both Hodge and Williams give great performances, and I'm hoping
Election Year features them fighting alongside Barnes much
more extensively.
The bottom line is,
if you're a liberal you'll like this movie. If you're a Libertarian
or something similar, you'll probably also find some things to like.
If you like the current Government Establishment...well, hello
Senator McConnell, happy to have you reading my post! Unfortunately,
you probably won't like this movie.
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