****Here’s a SPOILER WARNING, just in case, by
some strange chance, you would rather see its failings
yourself first! ****<\/strong><\/p>\n
The films starts with Some Women being accused of
witchcraft and flung over a bridge and hanged.
“Oh, I see,” I thought, as the priest
pronounced them worthy of hanging despite tearful,
desperate confessions.\u00a0“This’ll be
an Examination of the Church’s
Cruelty.”<\/p>\n
And then one of them comes back to life.<\/p>\n
“Oh,” I thought.
“Oh.\u00a0Right.”<\/p>\n
Then, we jump to THE TIME OF THE CRUSADES, where
Ron Perlman<\/strong> and
Nicolas Cage<\/strong> are fighting a
dark-skinned, faceless horde, stirred into
friendly, competitive violence by the
Christianity-spouting standard-bearer.\u00a0 God
only knows where they think the Crusades
happened, however – the intertitles
confidently proclaimed “Styria”
– as our heroes trundle from the desert
into bafflingly-named snowy wilderness in only a
few years.\u00a0 Presumably, then, they had been
fighting Staracens in Stamascus on the way to
Sterusalem which had defied the laws of
steographical stysics and raised in staltitude,
altering its stlimate beyond repair.\u00a0 And
they are, I assume, Knights Stemplar.\u00a0 Or
of the Steutonic Order of – okay,
I’ll stop.<\/p>\n
But despite the prolonged, stupidly-costumed
battles spent massacring hundreds of turbaned
Staracens, it’s only when Nick Cage
stabs a young, white woman in the stomach that
he comes to the staggering realisation that
they’ve been killing
people.<\/em><\/p>\n
“Holy shit, Ron Perlman!” Nick
Cage says with his best
worried <\/em>face.\u00a0 “I
didn’t realise that we were
killing people!<\/em>”<\/p>\n
Ron Perlman’s face resembles a
disgusted brick with frightening
accuracy.\u00a0 “Killing
people,” he repeats,
confused.\u00a0 Then he looks at the
floor, which is littered with
bodies.\u00a0 His tiny, crab-like
eyes widen slightly with sudden
horror.\u00a0“Holy
shit!” he rumbles. “Killing <\/em>killing people! I
didn’t sign up for this
shit!”<\/p>\n
And so they left the
crusades.<\/p>\n
It was at about this point that
I sort of hoped for them to run
into some Stashshashin.<\/p>\n
By now, I think you’ll
have realised that this film has
one hell of a lot of problems.
\u00a0The race failure is
intense, as I’ve
mentioned: I’ve yet to see
a film that handles the Crusades
at all handle race in a
non-insulting way, but
it’s a very difficult and
horrible era to handle at all,
what with the inherent
colonially-minded, racist nature
of the conflict in the first
place.\u00a0 But to have the
moment of realisation for Nick
Cage’s forgettably-named
protagonist to come as he plants
his sword squarely in the gut of
a young, white woman (who must
be
very<\/em> lost, all context
considered) after cheerfully
hacking his way through what
appears to be all the
non-white extras from
Prince of Persia<\/strong>
is just offensive.<\/p>\n
The other problem that
glared out of the
celluloid into my tired,
disbelieving eyes was the
witch herself.\u00a0 She
was the only female
character in the film, and
she didn’t even get
a name.\u00a0 She’s
credited as “The
Girl”.\u00a0 But as
crap as this is, this
wasn’t the worst
problem with her.<\/p>\n
Oh<\/em> no.<\/p>\n
She’s captured,
tortured and abused at
the hands of the
Church, and that is
made eminently
clear.\u00a0 She
crawls, curls into the
foetal position and
weeps.\u00a0 When
anyone tries to talk
to her, she panics and
begs not to be left
alone with the priest
who she doesn’t
want touching
her.\u00a0 The
implication of rape is
ladled on thick, heavy
and triggering in a
way that I found, in
some parts,
challenging to watch
(although nothing is
explicit: the way the
witch behaves is just
so
wounded<\/em>)
– but then she
lashes out like a
caged tiger, and is
eventually proven to
be the
“deceiver”
the priest says she
is all along.<\/p>\n
Wow.\u00a0 How
many problems are
there with
that<\/em>?<\/p>\n
For a moment,
I thought the
film would be
an
expertly-balanced
exploration of
whether the
“witchcraft”
the girl does
is real or
imagined by
the terrified
men who keep
her caged, and
started to get
into it
– but it
wasn’t
at all.\u00a0
In fact,
nothing could
be further
from the
truth.\u00a0
It felt as if
the film
makers had
made
themselves all
uncomfortable
by bringing
the reputation
of the Church
into question,
and therefore
had to
reassure
themselves
that yes,
everything was
as it should
be: any
maltreatment
of “the
Girl”
was made
excusable and
fine due to
her actually
being evil
after all, and
any power the
girl had was
due to her
actually being
a
non-gender-applicable
demon (the
protagonists
switch from
referring to
her as
“her”
to
“it”
in a single
cut of film)
and not a girl
at all.\u00a0
And any
accusations of
rape in the
first place
were probably
false,
anyway.<\/p>\n
All that said,
my
film-watching
companion and
I did find
ourselves
bellowing
disruptively
with laughter
at several
points during
the film,
because it
really is one
of those films
that’s
so dreadful,
it’s
amazing.\u00a0
The
ill-researched
sets, costume
and fighting
styles
(that’s
not how you
fight with
anything<\/em>!)
were
hilarious.\u00a0
Nicholas
Cage’s
permanently
worried face
was
hilarious.\u00a0
The clunky,
awkward
dialogue was
hilarious.\u00a0
The scene
with the
wolves was
side-splittingly<\/em>
hilarious.\u00a0
And the
fact that
it was all
meant to
be deadly
serious
and
wire-sprung
with
tension
was the
best
punchline
of
all.\u00a0
We
certainly
weren’t
the only
ones
ruining
the
scary-movie-dates
of young
couples by
howling
our
amusement
every time
a plague
victim’s
head
exploded.<\/p>\n
But the
handling
of The
Girl and
her
abuse
was not
hilarious
at all
and made
me feel
quite
sick.<\/p>\n
Oh, and
here’s
one for
the
gamers:
there’s
a bit in
the
soundtrack
that is
nearly
identical
to the
stealthy-mission
music in
Assassin’s
Creed<\/strong><\/a>.\u00a0
This
and
the
fact
that
Templars
appear
in the
film
combined
in my
mind
to
deadly
fanboying
effect<\/em>.<\/p>\n
YOU
SHOULD
SEE
THIS
FILM
BECAUSE:
\n<\/strong><\/p>\n