Genre: Thriller/Horror
Director: Ryuhei Kitamura
Cast: Bradley Cooper, Vinnie Jones, Leslie
Bibb, Brooke Shields, Peter Jacobson
RunTime: 1 hr 35 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: M18 (Violence And Gore)
Official Website: http://www.midnightmeattrainthemovie.com/
Opening Day: 14 August 2008
Synopsis:
When his latest body of work – provocative, nighttime
studies of the city and its inhabitants -- earns struggling
photographer Leon Kaufman (Bradley Cooper) interest from a
prominent art gallerist (Brooke Shields), she propels him
to get grittier and show the darker side of humanity for his
upcoming debut at her downtown art space.
Believing
he’s finally on track for success, Leon’s obsessive
pursuit of dark subject matter leads him into the path of
a serial killer, Mahogany (Vinnie Jones), the subway murderer
who stalks late-night commuters -- ultimately butchering them
in the most gruesome ways imaginable.
With
his concerned girlfriend Maya (Leslie Bibb) fearing for his
life, Leon’s relentless fascination with Mahogany lures
him further and further into the bowels of the subways and
ultimately into an abyss of pure evil – inadvertently
pulling Maya right along with him.
Movie Review:
Clive Barker’s more sanguinary inclinations are paid
tribute here through a hulking golem, a malevolent meat merchant
in his dapper best, named Mahogany (Vinnie Jones) who smashes,
eviscerates and cleaves through unsuspecting commuters on
the last train home. Adapted from Barker’s seminal anthology,
“Books of Blood”, the similarly named “The
Midnight Meat Train” is more than just an opportunity
for some sophomoric snickering over its title but one of Barker’s
most revered short stories about a supernatural serial killer
that ekes out fascination, fear and obsession from a lone
photographer, Leon Kaufman (Bradley Cooper) stumbling upon
the butcher’s late night deliveries.
Director
Ryuhei Kitamura (of “Versus” and “Azumi”
fame) offers up one of the year’s most brutally alluring
gore fests in his American debut. With the gritty and detailed
hard-edge of early 70s horror films (why, hello there Lucio
Fulci!), his flair for CGI augmented visuals and the intense
seduction of experimental camerawork in a cinematic environment
so increasingly sanitised of actual visceral terror, Kitamura
refreshes the genre’s ability to unsettle and provoke
audiences and jolt jaded horror enthusiasts out of their PG-13
apathy. (So can I get the R21 version now, please?)
Kitamura
works with a modest but shrewd sense of space in the decaying
subway, the claustrophobic train and the creeping gloom of
the city. There’s a certain simpatico between Barker’s
distinctive tone and Kitamura’s balls-to-the-wall filmmaking
that compliments each other to the benefit of the film’s
atmospheric resilience. The unvarnished horrors cooked down
deep in the gallows of the tunnels, plunged into darkness
form the basis of Kaufman’s terrible fixation on the
disappearing passengers and that indescribably malicious man
who stalks the shadows. Mahogany is the film’s myth,
the legend of The Butcher. Prepossessing the exactitude of
traits essential to the character, Jones has the nasty glint
in the eye, the mysterious swagger of indestructibility and
the imperative of consuming evil, as well as having the benefit
of looking like the quiet guy in the corner of the bar who
could take out an entire gang of hoodlums without spilling
his drink.
Kitamura’s
modulation of the material’s emotional stakes and his
slow-burn style of ratcheting up tension gives the story further
layers to plunge into, not withstanding Cooper’s unlikely
presence as the film’s corruptible protagonist. Jeff
Buhler’s screenplay from Barker’s 25-year-old
story is uneven at times but keeps an atmospheric dread of
hopelessness. Supporting characters include Kaufman’s
wife (Leslie Bibb), a counterpoint to the man’s wavering
sanity and a threadbare characterisation of his good-humoured
pal Jurgis (Roger Bart) who stands to represent Kaufman’s
humanity. But even if these emotional contrasts don’t
work, the film itself is a tidy and effective meta-slasher
that resonates beyond corporeal carnage. Kitamura’s
subtextual ingenuity is shown through macabre imagery of animal
carcasses hanging off meat hooks as Mahogany tenderises, disembowels
and stores his victims just like the morsels of flesh they
are.
Clive
Barker’s fantastical and mad blend of visceral shocks
and profoundly unsettling explorations of worlds coexisting
and buried deep within the one we think we understand has
become an important component of our contemporary literary
and filmic universes. While “The Midnight Meat Train”
never hits the spasms of metaphysical despairs in “Hellraiser”
or the diabolical mind-warps of “Candyman”, this
is forthright horror – simple, powerful and unadulterated.
Movie Rating:
(One of the best adaptations of Clive Barker’s stories,
and a very decent supernatural slasher in its own right)
Review by Justin Deimen
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