Categories
Arts

Second that: Jordan Peele thrills again with Us

With Get Out, Jordan Peele electrified the world of modern horror filmmaking, reinvigorating the potential for strong socio-political messages in harrowing and entertaining packages. The message amplified the scares and vice versa, sending shockwaves all the way to the Academy Awards. With Us, Peele cements his position as a genuine auteur with far more to offer than we saw in his huge debut (as if that were ever in doubt). Us is not as revolutionary as Get Out—and thank God. How boring would it be if he tried to break the mold every time? Like if every song on Led Zeppelin IV was a variation on “Stairway to Heaven.” The worst thing Peele could have done would be to emulate his previous breakthrough, and with Us, he proves that he is worth the hype.

Us follows the Wilson family: mother Adelaide (Lupita Nyong’o), father Gabe (Winston Duke), daughter Zora (Shahadi Wright Joseph), and son Jason (Evan Alex) on their annual trip to their summer home—the house in which Adelaide grew up.

A trip to the nearby boardwalk and carnival revives memories of a traumatic event from Adelaide’s past that she has never shared. When she visited this same carnival as a child, she wandered away from her family and saw her doppelgänger in a house of mirrors—not a reflection. Bit by bit, we see glimpses of the event and the emotional consequences to her and her parents. Little coincidences lead her to believe that her double is coming for her, until one day copies of her and her entire family appear at their house during a power outage. The strangers have mysterious origins and unclear motives, but Adelaide must fight for her family’s lives, and her own right to exist.

Us

R, 121 minutes

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX, Violet Crown Cinema

There are as many twists and turns in Us as there were in Get Out, but if you happen to hear an unwanted spoiler, the fun will not be ruined. In Get Out, the audience’s ignorance of the larger plot was crucial to the film’s air of creepiness, and put us in the shoes of the protagonist. In Us, everything is bad, it escalates, and there is no easy way out. I happened to predict some crucial twists, but when they came to be, they were still scary, satisfying, funny, or all three.

In addition to the scares and jokes, Us is a tribute to social relics of the past. The film opens in 1986, with Adelaide watching an old TV set with various VHS cassettes on either side (watch for references to those films throughout; some are obvious, some are subtle). Among the things she witnesses is an ad for Hands Across America—if you’re old enough to remember, you’ve also likely forgotten this massive non-event by now. But, like many of the best horror films, Us seizes on the shadows of memories either buried or cast aside. Just because we never talk about it anymore doesn’t mean its traces have disappeared, and so too with personal memories and trauma.

The film works on almost all levels: visually, thematically, and even comedically. Nyong’o is spectacularly creepy in her dual roles, while Duke is a revelation as the goofy dad. The performances from child actors are terrific, and supporting turns from Elisabeth Moss and Tim Heidecker prove surprisingly resonant. There are a few narrative hiccups that interrupt the flow, including at least one twist that might actually be impossible, but they don’t drag the film down. Us is a great sophomore film from a gifted filmmaker who has many more stories to tell


See it again: Napoleon Dynamite

PG, 96 minutes

The Paramount Theater, April 2


Local theater listings:

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema 377 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

Violet Crown Cinema 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000

Categories
Arts

Movie review: Get Out digs deep with powerful message

Jordan Peele’s Get Out is a perfect movie in its own right, a masterful effort in raising then subverting audience expectations while delivering a powerful message on a subject that has gone tragically unaddressed in film. It is also a revelation for Peele himself, half of the beloved comedy team Key & Peele, whose feature film debut as writer-director is as good or better than the work of artists with twice his experience.

Thrilling, funny, richly layered, efficiently told yet never at the expense of style, Get Out is a must-see for all audiences, both for the vital commentary it provides, and for the experience of seeing what will one day be considered a classic while it is still brand new.

Get Out
R, 103 minutes
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX,
Violet Crown Cinema

Get Out follows an interracial couple, Chris (Daniel Kaluuya) and Rose (Allison Williams), that is visiting her parents in the suburbs for the first time. While packing, Chris pauses to ask Rose if her parents know he is black, a question she laughs off as paranoid. They’re corny, she insists, but not racist. Upon arrival, Chris is greeted warmly by Dean (Bradley Whitford) and Missy (Catherine Keener), but is immediately subjected to many boastful examples of how open-minded the white, wealthy, isolated couple is, which feels like commenting on Chris’ race in every way except directly.

Chris appears very familiar with how to brush off the pandering admiration of white liberals who want to prove just how not racist they are, and Kaluuya gets remarkable mileage out of glances, smirks and a simple “Mmm-hmm.” But everything he experiences at the house is just a step too far, and questions arise about whether these are more than the familiar microaggressions he’s endured his whole life. The first warning sign is the presence of black workers on the estate—a groundskeeper and a maid—who do not seem altogether whole as people. The second is Rose’s aggressive brother, the first to directly reference Chris’ “genetic makeup” while explaining how effective he would be as a mixed martial arts fighter; Chris would be “a beast,” spoken somehow admiringly.

Finally, there is a large gathering of Dean and Missy’s friends, who are other wealthy white elites. They all fixate on Chris as well, each in a troublingly specific and insulting way that is spoken as though it is a compliment: a retired golfer brags about knowing Tiger Woods, a woman with a paraplegic husband asks Rose if “it’s better,” another guest says that being black is in fashion. Again, these appear to be everyday microaggressions, a fact that conceals the more sinister web that Chris has walked into.

It is best to stop describing the plot here because where it goes is truly remarkable, and I defy anyone to correctly predict the twist. The central message is a powerful one, that black people in America are not permitted to simply be, even by those who very proudly proclaim how racist they are not. This is a class of racism that is not confronted enough in film, those who speak admiringly to black people about their race and decry bigotry yet do not fully grasp the black experience in America and are doing nothing to bring about positive change. We have seen the frothing Klansman who spouts racial slurs, but the negative effects of performative liberal guilt is demeaning and toxic in its own ways, and it is the latter dynamic that Get Out explores.

Without revealing much more, Get Out is spectacular, whether you’re a genre fan or not, and ought to be a star-making turn for Kaluuya and Lil Rel Howery, who plays Rodney, Chris’ best friend. Peele is the real deal, and any studio in its right mind will be throwing money at him to bring all of his ideas to life.


Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

Collide, A Cure for Wellness, A Dog’s Purpose, Fences, Fifty Shades Darker, Fist Fight, The Great Wall, Hidden Figures, John Wick: Chapter 2, La La Land, The Lego Batman Movie, Rings, Rock Dog, Split

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000

2017 Oscar Nominated Shorts, A Cure for Wellness, Fifty Shades Darker, Fist Fight, The Great Wall, Hidden Figures, I Am Not Your Negro, John Wicks: Chapter 2, La La Land, The Lego Batman Movie