Jack Mason (Ice-T) has hit rock bottom. He is homeless, and making his life
even more difficult by torturing himself for something pretty damn traumatic
that happened in his past. When his only friend, an elderly white guy, dies,
Jack gives up completely and tries to kill himself by walking into traffic. He’s
rescued – or at least dissuaded – by Walter Cole (Charles S. Dutton) who works
at the local food bank and thinks Jack is just the right man to work for him and
his partner as a wilderness guide, even though the only external wilderness Jack
knows is on the streets (or probably the Streets).
Alas, once Jack has gone through a curious encounter/job interview with
Walter’s partner Thomas Burns (Rutger Hauer in his best creep mode), and he ends
up with Thomas, Walter and a group of clients in the wilderness, things turn out
to be less empowering for our hero than he thought. In fact, Jack isn’t there to
help some rich idiots hunt, but rather to be the human prey of former CIA men
and assorted perverts – the most dangerous game, you know the drill. Co-hunting
Jack are psychiatrist Doc Hawkins (Gary Busey in a short, surprisingly nuanced
and creepy performance), cowboy John Griffin (John C. McGinley), and rich people
supremacist Wolfe (F. Murray Abraham) who has brought his son Derek (William
McNamara) to make him a real man by making him complicit in sadistic murder.
Turns out this amount of injustice and cruelty is just the therapy Jack needed,
and soon, he’s rather effectively striking back at his tormentors.
Among the group of rappers gone genre actors, for my taste Ice-T has always
been the best one, probably because he usually makes efforts to act his
characters instead of exclusively performing his standard persona. So it is no
surprise that Ice-T in a film directed by undervalued (most probably because
he’s black, if we’re being honest) Ernest R. Dickerson makes a rather fine
action hero; and he is the more interesting kind of US action hero to boot – the
one with troubles, who isn’t a perfect killing machine. In fact, the film makes
rather a point out of our hero not being a killer by nature or
inclination but a guy who defends himself with as much force as necessary and
who is even willing to give the worst people imaginable a choice and a chance to
walk away. Which is certainly more than they did for him.
Another obvious point in Surviving the Game’s favour is its cast of
a host of great character actors, all with copious experience at being
entertaining Bad People. They all can chew as much scenery as is needed but also
don’t chew more than they should this time around. Not that the characters are
exactly subtle, mind you: each and every one of them does after all represent
something that is very wrong with (white, powerful) America and its structures
turned up to eleven. Still, Dickerson treats these crazy freaks at times much
more seriously than you’d expect, giving even the worst of them some depth
beyond their inherent horribleness. Which doesn’t make them better people or
people we as an audience don’t want to see killed or maimed (preferably both) by
Ice-T, but sure turns them into much more interesting action movie
villains. Obviously this also gives the film’s political arguments about the
intersections of race and class in the USA further heft.
Mind you, this is not first and foremost a deep analysis of US society but a
great (perhaps the greatest, depending on the day you ask me) action movie
version of The Most Dangerous Game that just doesn’t see why it
shouldn’t also consciously comment on the world around it; its makers
are after all living in it and had to live through part of it.
As US style action director, Dickerson here is as fine as they come,
delivering many a tense scene, a handful of pleasantly absurd ones, and nary a
moment after the very effective set-up that isn’t exciting. He also really knows
how to get the best out of his actors – which isn’t always typical of directors
good at action – by leaving them space to work. There’s an incredible monologue
by Busey’s character about his fucked up childhood in the film’s big dinner
scene that alone would be worth the price of admission but in this film it’s
just one of many great scenes, some of them delightfully and cleverly cheesy,
some just clever.
Sunday, August 27, 2017
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