Something rotten in the state of Minnesota: or the morality of backwoodsmen: 'A Simple Plan'


Autoria(s): Goldsmith, Ben
Data(s)

2000

Resumo

'A Simple Plan' is a deceptively complex and multilayered film, combining elements of Celtic mythology with the morality play and the windfall fantasy gone disastrously wrong. Despite its blending of realism and heavyhanded symbolism, and its abundant trans-textual gestures, 'A Simple Plan' is in many ways defiantly not a 90s movie: its leading characters are fashionably flawed, but they are neither sensitive, nor honourable, nor heroic; there are no startling special effects or intricate timeshifts; and it desperately gives the impression of depth, of being emphatically more than mere superficial excess. At a stretch it almost appears to be a throwback to the 1930s Production Code emphasis on the role of cinema in moral instruction; while good hardly triumphs over evil, venality is painfully and emphatically punished. But in other ways it is a quintessential late 90s film: an American/British/Japanese/German/French co-production, 'A Simple Plan' acts most palpably as a commentary on the moral, economic and social condition of the United States at the end of the American century.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/50360/

Publicador

Bobit Business Media

Relação

http://www.metromagazine.com.au/magazine/issues.html

Goldsmith, Ben (2000) Something rotten in the state of Minnesota: or the morality of backwoodsmen: 'A Simple Plan'. Metro Magazine: Media and Education Magazine, 121-122, 134-137.

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #20th century cinema #Crime films #Morality #Murder #Raimi #Sam (1959-) #Simple Plan #A (1998) #Small towns
Tipo

Journal Article