Friday, 10 April 2015

Plane Film 2: Nightcrawler

If there’s a trend for characters like Simmons’ in Whiplash – clever, driven, irascible geniuses you’d hate in real life but enjoy watching tearing others down and heading inevitably for tragedy – there’s also a fascination with characters like Louis Bloom in Nightcrawler. Bloom is a sociopath, utterly indifferent to the feelings of others and yet sufficiently understanding of how their minds work to cleverly manipulate them. Like the Fletcher character, Bloom is contemptible, terrifying and likely to end up in very deep trouble eventually, but is compelling to watch and charismatic. This is probably the performance from Jake Gyllenhall I’ve enjoyed the most, and it’s good to see him play creepy, which he does very well indeed.

The fact is, we are fascinated by monstrous people, and the quiet unassuming ones chill us more than the insane babblers. And Bloom has been given a clever and funny quirk – he made a study of business, so often regurgitates trite marketing buzzwords, which is actually a small bit of brilliance.

At first, Bloom is just a petty criminal, stealing and selling on whatever he can. But he encounters the freelance cameramen who follow police radio calls to get footage of accidents and scenes of violence, which can be sold to local news stations. These stations have realized that gaudy violence is what gets viewers, especially when they can directly relate – ie, violence enacted on people just like them. When a sociopath who cares nothing for breaking rules, rearranging crime scenes or letting violence he likely could have prevented unfold for the sake of a better shot. The tension ramps up as Bloom gets involved with something bigger, and can begin to actually manipulate how the story will unfold – and get there for the footage.

The film is a simple one, with a simple premise and a very pessimistic attitude. It taps into the fascination with the American psycho, though Bloom acts indirectly. Its main target is the superficial fascination for violence that feeds TV news bulletins, but of course its entertainment factor derives from a similar desire to be morbidly fascinated.


An enjoyable film with strong performances, but without characters to really identify with and no real closure, it isn’t one I would rewatch

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