Emile Hirsch as Speed Racer. (Photo: IMDB) |
In The Language of New Media, Lev Manovich wrote, “Digital cinema is a particular case of animation that uses live-action footage as one of its many elements.” While the first film this brings to mind may be The Matrix (1999), the Keanu Reeves-narrated documentary Side by Side (2012) explains how every film is now digital, and shows how every single element is fundamentally manipulable. Non-documentary cinema (and even some forms of documentary) has lost its grounding in to the real, in form and therefore in substance, something that most cinephiles lament – witness the loathing of TV motion smoothing. But what if a film were to celebrate its (oxymoronic) simulacral nature? What if, instead of trying to pass as realistic, a film embraced its artificiality? Well, then we might get Speed Racer (2008).
With Speed Racer, the Wachowskis, pioneers of digital cinema and innovative cinematic forms, are presented with a nearly blank canvas that, given the campiness of its source material, almost begs them to get wacky. They bring the same innovative image-creation techniques to the project that thought up bullet time in The Matrix and the 360-degree mid-air chase sequence in Jupiter Ascending (2015), and then crank it up to 11. In a non-trivial sense, the images in Speed Racer are the film: the full-on color explosions of the palette, the flagrantly artificial backgrounds, the overstylized costumes and makeup. And then you have the transitions: montages consisting of screen wipes using on-screen elements, timeline-jumping so seamlessly integrated that the only hint you have is the change of color, and – a method so intuitive you wonder why nobody thought of it – intercutting dialogue among three drivers during a race by zooming in and out depending on the position in the race of the person speaking. All of this makes the film an overwhelmingly liberating experience, akin to watching John Anderton (Tom Cruise) use the police computer in Minority Report (2002), but on a much larger scale.(My colleague Justin Cummings notes other Spielbergian connections in his review.)
Regarding fantasy films, the critic Richard Brody once wrote:
Fantasy, even when it’s rooted in practical details and doesn’t involve any metaphysical impossibilities, is the hardest genre to pull off, for the simple reason that life is interesting. ... Fantasy, which is by definition extraordinary, requires an extraordinary sensibility to realize it with any sense of substance. It requires a sense of style as well as a sense of metaphor, a sense of abstraction, of the conjuring of life and the realization of solid ground through perfectly chosen touches.
Speed Racer has the extraordinary style down pat, and its sense of
abstraction is what sells the vast race-fixing conspiracy lurking in
the background of the plot. Many reviewers have noted the Wachowskis’ prescience in
painting a corporate behemoth as the bad guy even before the emergence
of Occupy and the Sandernistas (dibs on the band name), but – first of
all – those movements draw on a long tradition, and secondly, it’s not
actually anti-corporation per se, as you might have guessed from this
extraordinary film’s equally extraordinary merchandising campaign.
To put it another way, Speed Racer is against institutionality,
the material embodiment of historical inertia – which can also take other forms: in the Matrix trilogy, it's present in the machine overlords; it's in the Sonmi-451 storyline of the multi-plotted Cloud Atlas (2012); it's the oppressive dystopian state in which service clone Sonmi-451 (Doona Bae) finds herself, and against which she instigates a revolution; and in the Wachowskis' first feature, the spectaularly stylish noir thriller Bound (1996), it's embodied in Violet's (Jennifer Tilly) out-of-control mafioso sugar daddy, who would rather risk certain death than let her get away with stealing his money.. This is one of the great themes of a Wachowski film:
the ever-present possibility that your present need not be your future,
despite all evidence to the contrary. The balance is sometimes toward
the future (as in The Matrix trilogy), sometimes toward the present-as-future
(as in Jupiter Ascending, in which, despite inheriting the entire Earth, Jupiter Jones [Mila Kunis] ends up more or less where she started from), and
sometimes so damn cosmic that it transcends this simple categorization
(as in Cloud Atlas). Here, as in Bound, the focus is on the past, and how
hard it can be to break out of it, even when you have the right stuff.
This is emotionally captured in the scene where Speed (Emile Hirsch),
preparing to leave home against his father’s wishes, is caught by
Spritle (Paulie Litt), echoing a previous scene with a
younger Speed (Nicholas Elia) and his older brother Rex (Scott Porter).
When Spritle asks why he has to leave, Speed replies, “You’ll
understand when it’s your turn.” But in a sign of a perhaps happier
outcome, Pops (John Goodman) decides not to confront Speed as he did
Rex, instead setting aside his anger to give him a proper goodbye.
Speed is Spritle’s hero, just as Rex is Speed’s. The opening of the
film emphasizes how much Rex has influenced Speed by overlaying Speed’s
race with that time Rex took him to the same track to do a lap; both
brothers use the same technique and attain the same, er, velocities. Speed wants to be everything
his older brother was except one thing: dead, from a crash, the result of sabotage.
(In deference to the film's family-friendly nature, drivers who get into one of the film's many pyrotechnic crashes are unharmed thanks to a “quick save” bubble that forms instantaneously.) Yet Rex’s death seems like the
logical conclusion of his brilliant but foreshortened career, the same
career now being embarked on by Speed, and Speed’s struggle to achieve
success without dying in the process constitutes the core of the film.
The seeming inseparability of success and death heightens the tension
with each passing plot point: Speed wins an important race, gets calls
from major corporate teams, and is courted by Royalton Industries CEO
and big baddie E. P. Arnold Royalton (Roger Allam). His brother chose
to go corporate, and look where that got him, so Speed turns down
Royalton’s offer, only to learn that it’s one he can’t refuse. He walks out anyway, as a result of which
his career is derailed and his family’s finances ruined. But at least
he’s alive, right? Then comes a chance for redemption, and the true
beginning of the typical Wachowskis narrative: Speed gets a second
chance via a team rally race alongside Taejo Togokahn (Rain) and the
mysterious racing cop Racer X (Matthew Fox). The team wins, but Taejo
turns out to be a dirty backstabbing son-of-a-gun.
Let’s pause here. The typical Wachowskis hero breaks out of their
foreordained narrative by a combination of fate and skill, and as any
fan of Greek tragedy will tell you, fate is manifested via human
intervention. Neo dies but is revived by Trinity’s foretold love.
Jupiter inherits the Earth (among other planets) but must work hard to
keep it from being snatched away. Violet has a plan, and only needs her man to get off her back for just one second. And the repeatedly
reincarnated protagonist of Cloud Atlas keeps fighting the powers that
be and losing, until they eventually succeed (though Sonmi-451 actually fails in the
book).
Speed Racer spends a lot of time establishing Speed’s pedigree and
ability; he just needs the fate. This arrives in the form of an
invitation to the Grand Prix, secretly delivered by Taejo’s sister
Horuko (Yu Nan). He wins, of course, and gets to drink that sweet,
sweet victory milk (?!), but not before his car is
disabled. He doesn’t know how to restart it, but his car knows, and in
a last confirmation that his ability is the right ability and his fate
the right fate, he recalls his brother teaching him to listen to the
car. He does, it starts, and with the central conflict now resolved,
the film doesn’t even bother showing us most of the rest of the
race – the last leg is shown merely because the film needs to translate
resolution of the conflict into resolution of the plot.
As in all Wachowskis films, the roles as written are subservient to
thematic, plot, and even allegorical concerns, so that the performances
depend solely on the caliber of the actors. (Remember Eddie Redmayne in
Jupiter Ascending?) Case in
point: though both have similar scenes, John Goodman is
good-trying-to-be-great, while Susan Sarandon is effortlessly magical
as Mom. In a telling shot she spreads jam on bread in the middle
of the night, breakfast for the big day ahead; previously all smiles,
here she has no one to reassure, so she breaks from type and replaces
the smile with a look of intense concentration, as if she’s willing her
sandwiches to help Speed win. Other standout performers, though playing types, include the maniacally overblown Allam, Christina Ricci
as the manic pixie dream girl Trixie, and Hirsch. It should be
mentioned, however, that Hirsch’s performance takes on a sinister
turn when you recall that he was later convicted of choking Paramount
exec Daniele Bernfeld in public, possibly making her black out; what at the time of the film's premiere came across as studied intensity now seems more like barely suppressed narcissistic rage..
Having said all that, the award for most fitting performance goes to
Litt as Spritle and Kenzie and Willy as Chim-Chim the chimpanzee. The
duo engage in what can only be called hijinks in the classic Looney Tunes register (absent the violence and double entendres),
and though they’re only funny in the nostalgic sense of remembering how
we used to laugh at these antics, the tone of their performances and the
degree of fun they have is perfectly matched to the weakness of film, helped in no small part by the similarly attuned soundtrack. One gets
the sense that, once the Wachowskis have worked out their customary
themes to complete satisfaction and retired, this is how they’d like to fill their days.
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