Sundance Review: "Weapons" Is Violent, Feels Authentic
Adam Bhala Lough's "Weapons" has an opening to remember. A teenager sits in a fast food joint eating a hamburger, chewing blithely away in slow motion. He sits facing the camera for minutes until a figure in the background approaches, pulls out a shotgun, and blows off his head mid-lunch -- splashing a ketchup-red splatter of blood right onto the camera lens. It's a harbinger of what's to come.
Lough's opening sequence sets up a story of ambiguous morality and desensitization in modern day youth that unfolds in out-of-sequence chapters; we see the aforementioned murder, then immediately flash back days earlier, when college-boy Sean (Mark Webber) comes home to hang out with his pothead pals Jason (Riley Smith) and Chris (Paul Dano).

Sean and his pals smoke weed and shoot the shit in extended takes -- nearly unbearable takes, deliberately long and protracted as in real life -- and plot to jump a neighborhood kid over some casual slight. They listen to slow, hypnotic rap (all songs by late mixtape artist DJ Screw) and cruise the streets in a station wagon; shot again in slow motion, the result is a hazy, careless aura that evokes the mind-numbness of a drug high. But what about the kid in the restaurant?
That doomed kid is Reggie (Nick Cannon), a black teen in the same town who's just found out his little sister's been raped and beaten. He was on his way to a job interview, but the news sends him into a blind rage that only grows stronger as he sets out to exact revenge. We follow Reggie and his pals on a quest through the ghetto to find a gun, which he does after a particularly brutal beating involving a fire extinguisher and a man's head.
"Weapons" is a film about violence, though actual acts of bloodshed happen only sporadically (though viciously) throughout the film. Lough's point may well be to send a message about messed up kids in America (parents, watch your children or else) but the film, as many young people can attest to, is an authentic portrait of reality -- teens really do have unbelievably easy access to guns, drugs, and sex.

Lough also takes care to obliterate the race card; the two groups of friends, one black and one white, are acquainted but not hostile. They hang out at the same parties. They listen to the same syrupy, sedate rap, speak the same ghetto-pop language, and -- most importantly -- make the same bad, explosive decisions and enact brutal acts of violence upon others with the same cavalier disregard.
The film is broken into chapters told out-of-order that unfold the twists and motives of multiple characters. One particularly impressive sequence, entitled "I'm Making A Movie," is shot completely by actor Paul Dano on a handheld home video camera as his character Chris circulates through a party. It's an impressive scene; also remarkable is Dano's performance throughout the film as a troubled and lonely introvert in desperate need of acceptance.
Lough's opening sequence sets up a story of ambiguous morality and desensitization in modern day youth that unfolds in out-of-sequence chapters; we see the aforementioned murder, then immediately flash back days earlier, when college-boy Sean (Mark Webber) comes home to hang out with his pothead pals Jason (Riley Smith) and Chris (Paul Dano).

Sean and his pals smoke weed and shoot the shit in extended takes -- nearly unbearable takes, deliberately long and protracted as in real life -- and plot to jump a neighborhood kid over some casual slight. They listen to slow, hypnotic rap (all songs by late mixtape artist DJ Screw) and cruise the streets in a station wagon; shot again in slow motion, the result is a hazy, careless aura that evokes the mind-numbness of a drug high. But what about the kid in the restaurant?
That doomed kid is Reggie (Nick Cannon), a black teen in the same town who's just found out his little sister's been raped and beaten. He was on his way to a job interview, but the news sends him into a blind rage that only grows stronger as he sets out to exact revenge. We follow Reggie and his pals on a quest through the ghetto to find a gun, which he does after a particularly brutal beating involving a fire extinguisher and a man's head.
"Weapons" is a film about violence, though actual acts of bloodshed happen only sporadically (though viciously) throughout the film. Lough's point may well be to send a message about messed up kids in America (parents, watch your children or else) but the film, as many young people can attest to, is an authentic portrait of reality -- teens really do have unbelievably easy access to guns, drugs, and sex.
Lough also takes care to obliterate the race card; the two groups of friends, one black and one white, are acquainted but not hostile. They hang out at the same parties. They listen to the same syrupy, sedate rap, speak the same ghetto-pop language, and -- most importantly -- make the same bad, explosive decisions and enact brutal acts of violence upon others with the same cavalier disregard.
The film is broken into chapters told out-of-order that unfold the twists and motives of multiple characters. One particularly impressive sequence, entitled "I'm Making A Movie," is shot completely by actor Paul Dano on a handheld home video camera as his character Chris circulates through a party. It's an impressive scene; also remarkable is Dano's performance throughout the film as a troubled and lonely introvert in desperate need of acceptance.
Related Items
| Movie: | Fundance at Sundance 2007 |
| Celeb: | Paul Dano |
| Nick Cannon | |
| Adam Bhala Lough | |
| Mark Webber |
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h-town24 writes: on Jan 25 2007 07:08 AM It's DJ Screw, bit DJ Skrew! But anyways, "Weapons" does look good! (Reply to this) |
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dOiNk writes: on Jan 25 2007 09:14 AM [b]here's hoping[/b] last violent movie i got excited about was History of Violence, and that movie ended up being horrible. Here's hoping this one actually ends up being good. (Reply to this) |
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RuSH- writes: on Jan 25 2007 10:13 AM sounds like a hella good movie a great plot that is very real. The beginning sounds like me and my friends (other than listening to rap), Paul Dano gets another great role in a Sundance film and if his acting is half as good as it was in "Little Miss Sunshine" then this is sure to be a great film! (Reply to this) |
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the_shadow writes: on Jan 25 2007 10:27 AM In reply to this comment (#853943) really? really really? you thought A History of Violence was horrible? really? (Reply to this) |
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Sadistik writes: on Jan 25 2007 10:36 AM this sounds like a rip-off of Irreversible (Reply to this) |
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Warner Brown writes: on Jan 25 2007 10:59 AM [b]RIPOFF[/b] It looks like a total rip-off of "Irreversible," from the beginning part to going backward in time, the rape, etc, etc, that's all lifted & twisted around. What an original filmmaker, pfft (Reply to this) |
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unbreakable_samurai writes: on Jan 25 2007 12:40 PM I think it sounds very good, and that opening scene should get you involved right away. Glad to hear that Dano's got another great role. I doubt if it will feel like Irreversible, I hope not at least. (Reply to this) |
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GrumpySauce writes: on Jan 25 2007 01:42 PM In reply to this comment (#853946) Exactly what I was thinking! Right down to the fire extinguisher. *yawn* (Reply to this) |
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osiris3657 writes: on Jan 25 2007 06:38 PM Amen to all the people who agree that this is a total rip-off of Irreversible. Irreversible was amazing... Alpha Dog+Irreversible=Weapons? (Reply to this) |
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Praz writes: on Jan 26 2007 08:21 AM How come teens really do have unbelievably easy access to drugs, but I can never find any? And DJ Skrew is dead? Thank god, and let his "style" die with him. (Reply to this) |
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