I wasn’t really expecting much from this flick but the concept had some potential so I thought I might as well check it out. Well, first of all, let’s talk about this concept. To be honest, I wasn’t really convinced. Why would the violence stop if you would allow people to do whatever they want for 12 hours? Furthermore, the amount of damages would be huge and, of course, the emotional and psychological impact on the victims and even the perpetrators would be massive as well. So, the whole thing didn’t make much sense but logic is not something you should expect from your average horror flick. The other disappointing thing was that, even though it is a nationwide event, the whole thing took place only in one house. They made this choice obviously to keep a low budget but, with this concept, they kind of guaranteed some massive mayhem on a huge scale but they eventually never delivered on this promise. And yet, in spite of all these flaws, I thought it was still a decent watch. Indeed, even though the concept didn’t make much sense, it was something original and there was also a decent cast involved (Ethan Hawke, Lena Headey). To conclude, my rating might be generous here but I thought it was not bad but it is pretty obvious that they could have done something much bolder with this idea.
The Purge Reviews
An average movie
Posted : 7 years, 10 months ago on 17 June 2016 07:500 comments, Reply to this entry
Purged Ambitions
Posted : 10 years, 5 months ago on 6 December 2013 04:39The film's premise is more than sound; in fact, it denotes a tertiary alternative that stands equally apart, and between, dystopian and utopian societies. Yet the seed of promise is bereft of all it needs to find fruition.
Now, it could be said that one must suspend belief, to a certain extent, when watching a film to fully enjoy it but the counterpoint to that is that the tale should be woven with enough skill and magic that it isn't even a conscious decision on our part. Indeed, we should believe yet I found that I simply could not.
I just did not buy what they were selling; I'm not even sure that the actors believed.
That the government, to entice the public to walk the straight and narrow the other 364 days of each year in exchange for one night of unbridled chaos with complete immunity from prosecution, is...interesting. In fact, it's a concept I wouldn't be at all surprised to find in a sci-fi novel but, as far as the screen, I think it would have been more promising as an episode of The Twilight Zone than a feature film.
For all Ethan Hawke's popularity, I've never found him appealing or impressive, especially as a leading man, but I found this to be the most stilted performance of his career. Lena Headey, on the other hand, I have always enjoyed whether it was in The Cave, 300, The Sarah Connor Chronicles or Game of Thrones. Yet here I just had the feeling that she wanted it to be over. As a wealthy couple who hold themselves above the 'lesser fortunate', particularly on the night of 'The Purge', then descend alternately into murderous intent and then turnabout to express heroism the two just phone it in.
The kids, both within and without the fortress-of-a-home, are equally ludicrous in behavior. Most of all the son who actually opens their home to the man fleeing certain death at the hands of a young mob who watched far too many screenings of A Clockwork Orange while silver spoons dangled from their mouths.
In fact, the only believable person in the entire cast is the man who seeks refuge with them and he, surprisingly, only plays a minor role in the whole affair.
Yet it seems that the premise of the film (if not the poor script and watered-down performances) appealed to more than a few of our fellow humans, hence the big payday for the studio. So even if the self-indulgent, bloodlusting spectatorship of Ancient Greece is dead and gone, it seems that the rather dark appeal of wanton violence and murder is far from slumbering but simmering to a threatening boil in today's culture.
Not only is disco dead but it seems remorse is as well.
Harsh criticism? Heavy-handed? Perhaps. Fitting in my opinion though.
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The Purge review
Posted : 10 years, 5 months ago on 28 November 2013 01:040 comments, Reply to this entry
Stupid to a criminal degree
Posted : 10 years, 10 months ago on 27 June 2013 01:37There's nothing worse than watching a motion picture completely waste a brilliant premise. 2013's The Purge is one such movie. It's built on a marvellous idea that could've made for a mature and thought-provoking examination of contemporary society, but writer-director James DeMonaco has no interest in a quality motion picture, instead delivering a fatally ridiculous film that fails to take advantage of its potential. The Purge is stupid to a criminal degree, lobotomising itself over its eighty-minute duration. By the time the film reaches its climax, the proceedings have become so laughably silly that only the boldest viewers will make it through to the end.
In the near future, the United States government has sanctioned an annual "purge" for the country, wherein murder and assorted crimes are legal for twelve hours. Emergency services are suspended, police cannot be summoned, and general anarchy is permitted. As a result, crime rates for the other 364 days of the year are down, and the economy is more stable. Taking advantage of the situation, James Sandin (Ethan Hawke) is a home security salesman who has accrued substantial wealth through his business. On the night of the purge, James locks down the house as usual, ready to relax with wife Mary (Lena Headey), daughter Zoey (Adelaide Kane) and son Charlie (Max Burkholder). The night looks to be reasonably calm until Charlie decides to let a bloodied, helpless stranger (Edwin Hodge) enter their home. Making matters worse, the family are soon visited by a mob of armed "purgers" wanting to get the stranger. The Sandin family are given an ultimatum: give the man over, or the house will be stormed and all of them will be slaughtered.
Here's the thing: Charlie's choice to take in a potentially dangerous stranger is never believable, as it seems like it was only done for the sake of script convenience. And the family's decision to want to protect the guy, even though it could cost them their lives, is retarded. They do not know him, they owe him nothing, and yet they're prepared to protect him and possibly die for him due to a crisis of conscience? It's especially problematic since the stranger actually holds a gun to Zoey's head at one stage. And why is it that the armed mob spend so much time and effort trying to get to just one "homeless pig"? Couldn't they just keep hunting for other people? The Purge hopes nobody will think too much about it, as it's full of holes and vague motivations. Furthermore, the homeless guy is not even given a name or any characterisation beyond being a simple plot device. He does wear a set of military dog tags, though, to tell us that he must be a sympathetic good guy.
The idea of the annual purge is brilliant for a motion picture, provoking several questions. For instance, do businesses hire private armies to defend their property? What does this mean for the small businesses that are undoubtedly looted during the night? DeMonaco does show people killing and rioting, but what about other crimes? Do hackers and black marketers do most of their work during the purge? Alas, The Purge has no interest in exploring this stuff; instead, the premise is more like Assault on Precinct 13 (which was remade in 2005 from a script co-written by DeMonaco and starring Hawke), resulting in a routine "house under siege" flick marred by an over-reliance on silly horror movie theatrics. Indeed, DeMonaco wastes the most fertile premise in recent memory on a silly slasher movie that we've seen done before, done better, and done without all the elaborate set-up. Worse, DeMonaco captures a number of conflicts with herky-jerky cinematography, not to mention most scenes simply depict villains being conveniently killed mere moments before they plan to kill a main character.
Nit-pickers will adore The Purge, as DeMonaco's woeful screenplay of perpetual convenience, excessive idiocy, and unanswered questions is ripe for mauling. Had the writer-director pursued realism and depicted a truly nightmarish vision of society run amok, this could've been a harrowing motion picture full of potent societal commentary. But DeMonaco is only interested in cheap exploitation, with cartoonish violence replacing potentially fascinating details. The only real saving grace of the flick is Rhys Wakefield as the masked stranger; he's sinister and unpredictable, and his charisma makes him a memorable villain. The Purge's box office success has ensured that a sequel is coming, an avenue that might give the creative team a chance to create a truly epic horror film out of the superb central premise.
3.2/10
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The Purge review
Posted : 10 years, 11 months ago on 9 June 2013 02:59But the acting was good, and it definitely had suspense, I personally just disliked it.
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