Sunday, January 6, 2013

“Rub Some Dirt on It”: A Clever Way to Revitalize an Outdated Film


                            
            Okay, I’ll admit it right off: Dan Bradley’s Red Dawn, released November 21st, 2012, isn’t the “best movie ever made!” However, as his first film as lead director (in the past Bradley had been stunt coordinator and second unit director for several box office hits) it had the potential to be disastrous but ended up being pleasantly refreshing. I know what you’re thinking: “Oh God, not another remake,” and I’m with you on that. In the past few years it seems Hollywood has lost the creativity and ambition to come up with new and exciting films. Instead they choose to reach into that box in the garage no one’s touched in a while and bring back several hand-me-down screenplays to put a big shiny bow on and force the new generation to wear. Hate to break it to all those producers and directors out there, but adding updated special effects and casting the latest Hollywood heart throb in an effort to make an old movie look totally awesome and new, doesn’t work. Just face it: we can see right through your tricks.
            Now that I’ve finished shaming the film industry, I’ll get down to it. While far from cinematic masterpiece, Bradley’s Red Dawn remake didn’t make me want to hurl my popcorn on the floor and run from the theater demanding my 10 dollars back. By updating the screenplay, casting competent actors, creating suspenseful and intriguing scenes, and bringing a bit of humor to an otherwise dreary war film, I believe that Bradley achieved something astonishing: making a remake that surpassed the original on nearly all fronts. Now, I know there will always be those cult followers that watch the 1984 Red Dawn five times a day and think it was fantastic—but for those of us who don’t fit into that category ,let’s acknowledge that it really was not that good. The 1984 version of Red Dawn was somewhat hard to follow, had little memorable dialogue, and when the kids weren’t out there shooting up tanks or blowing up buildings, it was honestly rather boring. Upon re-watching it, 
since it had been a few years, I was abhorred to discover that despite my love for Dirty Dancing, even Patrick Swayze (Jedd) and Jennifer Grey (Toni) couldn’t cut it for me. I understand it was supposed to show the “gruesome reality of war” and all that, but when an audience can’t keep the characters names straight and isn’t shocked or upset by the death of a leading protagonist, all hope for deeper meaning is lost.
            Red Dawn (2012) at the most basic level of plot, is about a group of Midwestern teenagers banning together to defend their home town from invading forces during the beginning of what is labeled as World War III. In contrast to its precursor, which simply, rolled ominous background information in block text over a black background screen, Bradley’s Red Dawn introduces the setting of the outbreak of WWIII through creative use of a montage of news clips from around the world which even include pieces of speeches by well known officials like current president Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hilary Clinton. Immediately the audience is not just given a sense of perspective but also placed within realistic scenery. After this, we roll to a scenes of a high school football game, friends hanging out at a local dinner and bar, and are introduced to most of what will turn out to be the main characters.
Several changes between character personality and relationships were made in order to help with story development as well as make the characters more likeable in general. Matt (Josh Peck) and Jedd Eckert (Chris Hemsworth) are the two sons of the local Police Chief, Tom (Brett Cullen). Matt is a senior High school quarterback dating the cute little blond Erica Martin (Isabel Lucas) while Jedd is a U.S. marine on leave from six years of active duty. This differs drastically from the 1984 version in several ways:
1)            Jedd is not in High school and has military experience—making it a hell of a lot more reasonable that all of the kids can be trained in military grade weapons and guerilla tactics.
2)            The classic “brotherly love” from the 1984 version is on short supply in the 2012 one—Matt resents Jedd for leaving them to join the marine’s right after their mother died. (On a side note, “Mom” dies pre-war in this one, not as the troops invade)
3)            In the 1984 version, you get the vibe that Erica and Matt do not even like each other; however, in the 2012 one they’re dating. By having them in a loving relationship the audience is able to relate to the characters, draw from their emotions, and feel for them when they are separated.
The morning after the football game and partying, Jedd and Matt are woken up by the sound of bombs dropping just in time to run outside and see North Korean troops (replacing that of the Soviet and Cuban threat in the 1984 version) parachuting from the sky and rounding up the townspeople. Immediately, they hop into their blue pick-up truck (a throwback to the 1984 version) and go in search of their father who tells them to round up as many of the people as they can and get the hell out of dodge—which happens to consist of going to their cabin in the woods. Throughout the action packed drive through town which depicts bombs dropping, out racing Korean patrol cars, and a heart wrenching goodbye as Matt has to leave Erica behind, they pick up Robert (Josh Hutchenson), Daryl—the mayors son (Connor Cruise), and brother and sister Julie and Greg (Alyssa Diaz and Julian Alcaraz). Later on, when they’re at the cabin, two more join their team, Danny (Edwin Hodge), and Toni(Adrianne Palicki)—who is friends with Erica and is coincidentally harboring a not-so-secret crush on Jedd.
Contrary to the self-inspired fit of revenge the group goes on in the 1984 film, Bradley opts out for a traumatic depiction of murder as Tom Eckert tells his boys to do what he would do—defend the town or die trying—and is immediately shot in the head by the big, bad General Cho. After this, Jedd takes control of his reluctant troop of teens and inspires them to fight back; he says that for the Koreans this is just a place, but for them it is home. In contrast to the 1984 version, which used bland text stating the month over a still shot of the weather, Bradley uses yet another montage to depict a time lapse. This time, it is of the kids training with weapons, building camps, meeting allies in town, and generally preparing for their first strike at the Koreans. Because of transitions like these, Bradley’s Red Dawn flows from one scene to the next flawlessly and makes a 114 minute film seem to go by too fast as opposed to dreadfully slow.
After several raids, a failed attempt to take out Cho, successfully rescuing Erika, but at the cost of a few lives (Greg, Danny, and Julie die shortly afterwards), Jedd and the team—having taken on the name of their High school mascot, the wolverines—scramble to try to come up with a plan B while dealing with the loss of their comrades. However, just as in the 1984 version, the real battle gets started when the Wolverines meet up with a U.S. special ops team—this time there are three rather than one and they have the key to ending the war: stealing a black case used to create a closed network for the Korean army.
They plan a siege on the head quarters the Korean Army established in the old police station and just barely escape with their prize. Compared to the melodramatic, suicidal two-man last stand of Jedd and Matt that is depicted in the 1984 version, this climactic scene is not only much more interesting and tactically reasonable, but also significantly more suspenseful and exciting. There is a moment in which the audience literally holds their breath expecting the entire plan to fall through. Just then Matt makes a triumphant leap from a second story window, tumbles, and grabs the case. Right after the exhale, when everything seems safe and okay, the audience is shocked yet again as Jedd is shot by a sniper through a window and falls to the floor dead. While some critics probably disagree, to me this is a much more valiant and disturbing death than that of Matt and Jedd bleeding out on a park bench in each other’s arms.
In addition to the better character development, more suspenseful scene arrangement, interesting stunts, and inclusion of emotional attachment, the main change made from the 1984 to the 2012 version, is the addition of some pretty witty and memorable one liners, as well as scenes of humor and reflection. Scene’s such as Robert and Daryl’s raid on a Subway in which they declare handing the kid behind the counter a plastic bag, “Sandwhich artist, fill this with food!” or Jedd’s comment to “rub some dirt on it” and get back in the fight to Matt as he struggles with being responsible for Greg’s death. In the midst of a war flick the fact that Bradley takes the time to show the Wolverine’s sitting around cracking jokes like “we’re living Call of Duty, and it sucks,” makes the film so much more enjoyable. This also creates another dimension to the characters and humanizes them—you not only begin to like the characters but also care about what happens to them. You feel the pain as Julie stitches up a bullet wound for her comrade; when Jedd shouts “You fucked with the wrong family,” as he shoots Cho you feel the justice and satisfaction; and like Toni, you’re heart broken when Jedd dies.
The film ends with the discovery that the Koreans are tracking them through the use of a microchip locator they implanted in Daryl by stabbing him. Rather than shooting him, as in the 1984 version, Daryl valiantly chooses to remain behind so that the remainder of his friends can escape with the box to “Free America” and end the war. This is possibly the only redeeming moment for his character, which spent much of the movie running away and being indecisive. After this, the screen cuts forward what the audience suspects to be a few months and Matt is depicted giving a speech—eerily familiar to the one his brother gave at the beginning of the film—to new recruits that have chosen to fight with the rebel forces. Ending with a moment of hope, we are then transported to the middle of a raid on a concentration camp (used to detain the town’s most troublesome occupants) where the kids driving souped-up cars, with mounted guns atop, free the prisoners. This final depiction of rebellion and teen angst faired far better than that of the emotional voice over given by Toni in the 1984 version. Rather than leaving the theater somewhat depressed, confused, and bored, we are amped-up, inspired, and hopeful, with Jedd’s memorable quote “Marine’s don’t die. They just go to hell and regroup.” ringing in our ears.
Ultimately, Bradley’s Red Dawn won me over. This wasn’t my first war [film], and there are many out there that surpass it by far (Brave Heart, Behind Enemy Lines, Rules of Engagement, and Black Hawk Down to name a few) but it did prove to be an interesting and entertaining revitalization of its 1984 predecessor. Despite the fact that I don’t believe Chris Helmsworth is related to Josh Peck for one second, the movie itself had the perfect combination of action, romance, tragedy, and patriotism. I have high hopes for Bradley’s next film; here’s to him keeping up the good work.