"Sucker Punch," the latest barrage on the senses from writer-director
Zack Snyder ("300", "Watchmen") is his first film that's based on his
own source material. And it proves to be quite stunning definition of
pop filmmaking. In a triumphant marriage of style and tone, Snyder has
created his own "Kill Bill" by going deep down into the rabbit hole. A
glorious pastiche of colour, CGI and kinesis, "Sucker Punch" even
through its obvious flaws, has set a new bar for graphic storytelling
that attempts to transplant the purity of imagination onto the cinema
screen.
The ultimate girlfight movie.
Essentially cohering around a simple premise -- hot chicks kicking ass
and taking names, the film's bravura opening charts Baby Doll's (Emily
Browning) institutionalisation by a wicked stepfather after her
mother's death and her introduction to the asylum where damaged young
women are sent to be kept away from society. She meets the
people-in-charge, Blue (Oscar Isaac) and Dr. Gorski (Carla Gugino) as
well as the other girls in the institute: Rocket (Jena Malone) and her
sister Sweet Pea (Abbie Cornish), Amber (Jamie Chung) and Blondie
(Vanessa Hudgens).
You don't wanna mess with these ladies.
The story that follows Baby Doll reveals a larger canvas of a clever
narrative conceit that coincides three realities together ("Inception"
comparisons, tread lightly); the first being the asylum, the second is
a burlesque brothel run by Blue and trained by Gorski and the final and
most resplendent one is Baby Doll's hyper reverie focused on destroying
the forces of evil -- be it shogun titans, zombie Nazis or killer
androids. The darker the reality preceding it, the deeper and more
risky the wormhole of fantasies go. There is a real sense, despite its
tremendous parade of visual set-pieces that Snyder wanted a narrative
strong enough to endure the weight of spectacle, and in many respects
he has. He uses the age-old device of character quests to propel the
plot, peppering it with familiar consequences until he doesn't. The
flow culminates in an intriguing final act that sets it a mark higher
than anyone would have expected, or even needed from a film that
already proudly wears its stripes as pure escapist entertainment.
When the samurai sword fails, it's always wise to keep a shotgun handy.
Did I mention giant robots?
Snyder goes the way of Tarantino in appropriating and amalgamating
artistic and stylistic influences from the most conspicuous of genres
and mediums. Within the real world or whatever the relative equivalent
of what exists in this film's dark and twisty tone, the film uses
templates in the vein of sexploitation female prison grind-house
features from the 60s and 70s like "Love Camp 7", "99 Women", "Caged
Heat" and the grandmother of them all, 1950's "Caged". As the film
progresses into its action-oriented enterprises, it quickly recalls the
dizzying array of cut-scenes from video-games and punk anime-style
design in how it encompasses the digital environment. Snyder's thematic
goal is to situate the idea of imagination as a coping mechanism for
terror, a concept seen recently in "Pan's Labyrinth" and "Tideland".
The landscape of the mind is uniquely realised here by Snyder, who
etches a remarkable amount of detail into each CGI frame, an
hyperbolised celebration of artifice and invention that is at once
magnificent and exhilarating as it is compelling and spellbinding.
Emily Browning does get naked in the Sleeping Beauty.
Baby Doll goes nude.
Cosplay deviants rock!
Werner Herzog once posited that the dearth of new and unique imagery
that do not reflect the times we live in will be the death of
civilisation. If anything, "Sucker Punch" truly defines the generation
of filmmaking we exist in -- a sophisticated and passionate emblem that
delivers an overload of sugar high through the ideals of creating and
maintaining a creative medley of pop-culture influences, bridged
together with keen commercial sensibilities. Suddenly, Snyder holding
on to the helms of the next Superman film makes more sense than it ever
did.
Pintaba para buena, pero el final lo arruino todo. Original en su esencia, no logro convencerme para tenerla en mi colección. Tener a Vanessa Hudgens ex chica disney es un acierto, pero no mejora la historia. La estética es similar al Anime Steamboy de Katsuhiro Ōtomo pero como dice el dicho, parte como caballo ingles y termina como burro.
2 comments:
Pintaba para buena, pero el final lo arruino todo. Original en su esencia, no logro convencerme para tenerla en mi colección. Tener a Vanessa Hudgens ex chica disney es un acierto, pero no mejora la historia. La estética es similar al Anime Steamboy de Katsuhiro Ōtomo pero como dice el dicho, parte como caballo ingles y termina como burro.
Saludos don waso
Es cierto, el final de la historia no se condice con todo lo previo a éste
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