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The Fury

Posted : 6 years, 2 months ago on 4 February 2018 04:02

A clear signpost for Brian De Palmaā€™s transition away from the more experimental early half of his career and towards the more coherent latter half, The Fury still plays out a smorgasbord of ideas thrown against a wall and waiting to see what sticks. Pumped full of so many detours and tonal changes that itā€™ll spin you around just as violently as John Cassavetes during the final scene, The Fury is an entertaining mess. But itā€™s never less than a mess.

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De Palmaā€™s prior film, Carrie, has its own moments of kitsch and twisted comedy, but the brutality and homerun of its ending smooth over any inconsistencies there, and that trick is not repeated here. The Fury is ostensibly about a pair of teenage psychics being studied and trained for weaponized use by a secret government organization during the Cold War, but it takes its sweet time getting not only to that plot point but happily diverts with a plethora of car chases, violent shootouts, and other distracting episodes.

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The main plot becomes something of an afterthought routinely, and such an afterthought that the third act becomes something of a rush job. The film has teased our two main characters eventually meeting up and unleashing havoc, but thereā€™s no great or satisfying payoff to that tease. De Palmaā€™s sexual hysterics here play out like a particularly horny and gore-obsessed teenage boy struggling to tell a story without getting too distracted by diversions playing into those twin interests.

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Weā€™re promised a thriller, and we get in spots, but we also get bloody gore, subpar espionage scenes, and misplaced comedic interludes that play in such discordant notes with the rest of the film that make your head tilt in confusion. We open with a psych-out of terrorists storming the beach to break-up a father/son pair, but they forgot to factor in that the father is played by Kirk Douglas. Spartacus wonā€™t go down until the final frame, if he goes down at all. Itā€™s all an elaborate copout, and one made to setup Cassavetes with a dead arm thatā€™s a glaringly obvious symbol for a type of castration.

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Look, no one would ever accuse De Palma of subtlety, and I wonā€™t even try. Then the son, Andrew Stevens mostly asked to glare and flex, becomes a trained attack dog and bored demigod that is ripe for a rage against the machine, and so it goes on and on. Throw in Amy Irving as the distaff half of the teenage psionics, Charles Durning as a shady instituteā€™s head, and Carrie Snodgress as a rebellious nurse, and youā€™ll begin to see why this thing is more entertaining than it is coherent.

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Even worse is how little The Fury makes us care about any of its characters with Douglasā€™ being a particularly nasty bastard prone to using both Irving and Snodgress at their most emotionally vulnerable to achieve his goals. This is Douglas at his hammy worst, but at least heā€™s balanced out with a solid performance from Snodgress and an effectively oily one from Cassavetes. Iā€™m just not sure what to make of Irvingā€™s performance, at times sheā€™s delicately vulnerable that sheā€™s deeply engaging, but others sheā€™s strangely flat or awkward.

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I suppose that carries over into the entirety of The Fury. Thereā€™s some daring thematic material at play buried somewhere underneath De Palmaā€™s histrionics. Itā€™s no Carrie, and probably more than enough fuel for several chapters in Misogyny in the Movies: The De Palma Question, yet The Fury is entertaining enough during it. Just donā€™t think too hard about its abundance of disappearing characters, plots, and needless diversions.



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An average movie

Posted : 8 years, 9 months ago on 20 July 2015 12:35

From the 70's until the end of the 90's, Brian De Palma was one of the most highly regarded directors but now he is pretty much forgotten and that's a pity. Indeed, I always had a weak spot for this director and even though this movie is quite obscure, I still wanted to check it out. Basically, it was the first movie De Palma made after his breakthrough with ā€˜Carrieā€™ and even though it was far from being one of his best efforts, I thought it was still a decent watch. Like most of the movies delivered by this director, the most enjoyable element was the dark and gloomy mood which managed to cover most of the paranormal non-sense delivered in this movie. It was also nice to see the charming Amy Irving who was just starting at the time and she eventually became mostly famous for being Steven Spielberg and even more famous for divorcing him for an estimated $100m. Concerning Kirk Douglas, even though the guy was already 60 years old at the time, he still wanted to play the lead but, thanks to this eternal charisma, it actually worked. To conclude, I thought it was a decent thriller and it is worth a look, especially if you are interested in Brian De Palmaā€™s work.


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