Sunday, November 3, 2019

Get Out (2017)

rating: ****

the story: Chris finds out it's dangerous to be black among white folks with ulterior motives.

review: Wow, so this is a great example of knowing what a movie technically accomplishes, and getting a totally different grasp upon actually seeing it.  Get Out, for me, was a victim of the vast scaling back of film watching I've experienced over the past decade.  I was pretty out of control, generally speaking, for a few years.  I went to the movies all the time.  I had a pretty comprehensive sampling of what was released.  Then I had to become more selective.  I had to start making some snap judgments before movies ever hit theaters, including must-see picks and things that didn't seem like they were for me.  Get Out seemed like it wasn't for me.  It seemed like one of those movies hipsters like, that only seemed to be clever.

Boy was I wrong.

The surface elements are certainly there but even those underscore its greater message.  It's funny that Get Out even had a chance to be widely celebrated, as it mocks liberal attitudes at a time when liberals have virtually succeeded in dominating popular entertainment, both the product and reception of it.  But by the end, it becomes so savage as to become inexplicable.  Clearly a lot of people just didn't get it.  They chuckled knowingly, without comprehension.

You see, Chris's fate is damn ironic.  That he ends up escaping it is much a part of how we've reached this endless public hysteria as anything that helped create it.  When Bradley Whitford says he would've voted for Obama a third time if only given the option, which he repeats after Allison Williams has already told us he'd say so, director Jordan Peele has shown his hand.  That's the whole message right there.  Liberals somewhat liberally exploited black people to get the White House.  Period.  And then moved on, after everything spiraled out of control. 

Yeah.  Peele's ascent as filmmaker came from a popular sketch comedy series, Key & Peele, which can be felt in Chris's best friend, who hilariously puts the whole thing in context for viewers and comes to his rescue at the end.  Chris himself, as portrayed by Daniel Kaluuya, is dumbfounded by the whole experience but never at a loss for action.  The only time he's a victim is when Catherine Keener brainwashes him. 

Stephen Root shows up in a supporting role, subverting his usual comedic persona by both leaning into and away from the stereotype Southern racist the movie never actually delivers.  This is a horror movie with comedy instincts, not a comedy with horror instincts, not a parody.  That's what makes the whole thing so refreshing, so subversive, and so biting.  It might even be called satire.   Probably the way it will properly be understood later.

So I'm glad I finally saw it. 

2 comments:

  1. I really liked this one too. Crazy, but creepy and with a really strong message underlying it all.

    ReplyDelete

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