Exclusive Premium Content

One Battle After Another Is Satirical Sexy Subversive But Not A Great Film

One Battle After Another Is Satirical Sexy Subversive But Not A Great Film

Rating: ***

 Other than a rousing raunchy  performance  by  Sean Penn as a power-revved pervert, Paul  Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another left me , battle-fatigued,  underwhelmed.  It is  a good film, clogged with an irresistible  visual and verbal you-chew-my-line-I-chew-yours vitality.But beyond that, the  pulverised  plot  falls short of the greatness that is being attributed to the film.

  Leonardo DiCaprio plays Pat Calhoun , a  member of  a defunct revolutionary  group  named French 75(?!)  who wants to lead a quiet peaceful life with his lovely 17-year old daughter Willa( Chase Infiniti). But the  Establishment  wouldn’t let him.

 That’s it! This is  the plot,  though it looks far more dense, tense and intense, there is nothing more to it. For all  we care Pat(with his multitudinous aliases, many borrowed  from musical bands of the  1970s) could have been a bank robber trying to leave his violent past behind heal  and rehabilitate  with his  daughter. In brief a  Schwarzenegger  film with political overtones.

 The  “revolutionary” thrusts in  the  plot are eyewash-level  anti-Trumpisms, hurling abusive statements  against the American anti-migration laws.

 In Paul Thomas Anderson’s  vainglorious vision,  there is room for all colours  and  cultures, though the focus of the writer-director’s overweening satirical romp is Mexico.  There is this  lengthy   mono-look  at  an undercover Mexican shelter run by  a sufi-like  martial arts  teacher  Sergio, played  by the  brilliant  Benicio del Toro.

 The  entire  coverage  of this episode where  acute  danger is  alchemized  into cute game-playing , didn’t work for me. We can’t  whittle down racist  hunting to a  joke and expect  the humour to  wash away all the toxicity.

There is this ongoing joke  about  DiCaprio forgetting the password on the phone that accesses his special  privileges as a former revolutionary. Watching the tiring joke I was reminded of the recent Malayalam film Eko in which a  character  describes how his  Maoist parents were blown into smithereens.

    Death, particularly of the outlaw, is not funny. For this  film and its terrific  cast, it  is.

Amen to that.  What  caught my attention in  One  Battle After Another was  how the action tumbles out in a ferocious fusion of farce and fear with the  funny lines finally overcoming the danger. It’s  like watching a reality show where you know  no one is  going to be harmed, or at least hopefully not.

 Then  there is Sean Penn, so twisted so  perverse and yet not too sinister as an American army officer who is hoodwinked  by  a Black revolutionary woman  and must have his  revenge.

  The  problem is, they wouldn’t let him. Not in a film as wildly subversive as  this.

Comments

Most Popular

To Top