Pink Floyd The Wall
I watched this with my sister (17) and she said it was the most disturbing thing she’d ever seen. It’s an aspect of the movie that always escapes my memory of it. I think it’s beautiful – but it is very disturbing. As well as being an autobiographical feature length rock musical, it’s really deep down a horror movie, and a horror movie of the best kind at that: it’s about the human soul.
This is a movie that (bizarrely for its 90 minute duration) drags in places but soars for me because of its moments. I still haven’t really delved into the Pink Floyd albums other than this one, but this movie is a hell of an ad for them – the music is astounding by itself, the images Alan Parker and Gerald Scarf conjure up are just icing. Then, I always preferred icing.
It’s obvious imagery sometimes – the Union Jack flag collapses into a gravestone cross; airplanes turn into flying crosses; two moving flowers look stunningly like male/female genitalia mid-coitus – but that’s why I love the movie. It’s the extreme of extreme. Intercutting is used to hammer the point home more than any movie I’ve ever seen, eg. You see fans trampling fans and Parker cuts to soldiers at war trampling soldiers at war. This is not a subtle movie, and it doesn’t mean to be. The imagery might disturb you but I can honestly say I’ve never found a single frame of the movie to be less than beautiful, and I’ve watched it in many moods ranging from suicidal to high as a summertime kite. This is the kind of ugly that’s enticing. The law in this movie is a talking arsehole… need I say more?
January 30th, 2007 at 12:51 am
[...] Pink Floyd The Wall Alan Parker [...]
May 15th, 2007 at 9:15 pm
[...] It’s an incredibly different movie for director Alan Parker, none of his slick style getting in the way of the human drama (he did that in the other half of his ‘82 double whammy, Pink Floyd: The Wall). Special mention has to go to Dana Hill, too, I’ve said it before talking about the TV movie Fallen Angel but she was such a fantastic young actress in the few movies she did before her untimely death, and her performance here only gets better as the movie goes on. [...]