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Darkness is as Darko does..., 2 December 2009
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
And I find it kinda funny, I find it kinda sad / The dreams in which
I'm dyin' are the best I've ever had... -- Mad World, Tears For Fears.
The Tears For Fears song, Mad World, closes DONNIE DARKO. As it softly
meanders under the closing montage of characters, everything in this
movie clacks into place in your head... it is like tension released
between your shoulder blades; like the exhalation of breath after
holding it in sympathy with Gene Hackman trapped in THE POSEIDON
ADVENTURE. DONNIE DARKO will quietly enmesh you in its intrigue,
spiraling to a morbid climax where nothing makes sense - until
everything makes sense. Or not.
The jet engine through the bedroom roof is the key. Or is it the giant
sinister rabbit? Some might say the death of Donnie's newly minted
girlfriend Gretchen (Jena Malone) was the catalyst that caused Donnie
to make the fateful decision of restoring balance to the universe...
Movie opens with young Donnie Darko (Jake Gyllenhaal) awakening on a
hillside road, disoriented. Just before he moves out of frame,
something catches our eye and disorients US: instead of retaining the
worried look on his face, a wry smile crosses it. There is more here
than meets the eye.
The opening song gives away more of the theme than we realize - INXS's
Never Tear Us Apart: "I was standing / You were there / Two worlds
collided / And they could never tear us apart..."
The normalcy of Donnie's average American family makes everything that
happens to him seem doubly strange. Besides sleepwalking and waking in
strange places, he sees visions of a person in a rabbit suit, named
Frank, who tells him in a Vader-like voice that he has 28 days, 6
hours, 42 minutes, 12 seconds, before the world will end.
The space-time continuum is out of sync and teen outcast Donnie is
somehow connected with its repair. We cannot begin to understand how,
and neither can he. Set in the tree-lined suburbs of Anywhere USA
(maybe California?) during the year 1988, two parallel time lines are
inexplicably interwoven, and only Donnie's unwitting power of mentally
accessing both can restore balance. DONNIE DARKO could be the most
subtle "superhero" movie ever made - one in which the superhero (Darko)
is unaware of the powers he accesses and in which we the audience are
also kept from knowing his true powers. Never realizing we are watching
a "super" hero because there's no dead giveaway of wearing his undies
on the outside of his pants.
The writer's own explanation: that someone from an alternate,
tangential universe (Frank) is trying to get through to this universe
to rectify the rip in space-time. And Donnie is the willing, though
unknowing, receptacle.
Unlike BACK TO THE FUTURE (Donnie gives a nod to the "time machine
shaped like a DeLorean"), where events in the present are traced to
events in the past, time here is juggled and twisted back on itself in
a tip-of-the-tongue madness. Writer-director Richard Kelly constructs a
time travel mythology - not scientific in any way - based around this
movie's plot; expounded in a mysterious book that Donnie is bequeathed
by his science teacher (Noah Wyle, who has the misfortune to resemble
vanilla-pussy Breckin Meyer).
Thematically touching on alternate universes, time portals, membrane
theory, this movie itself is some kind of time capsule, as it captures
Patrick Swayze at the tail-end of his dancing career (DIRTY DANCING was
a loooong time ago), Katherine Ross from an era before that (BUTCH
CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID), Jake Gyllenhaal at the start of his
storied career (sowing the seeds of intensity that would bring him many
acting awards and an Oscar nod), Seth Rogen as a glorified extra with
two lines, long before he was the ribald voice of a generation (in true
Rogen fashion, his first line to Jena Malone is "I like your boobs!");
Drew Barrymore's interest in this film enabled its funding, yet she
seems to be in a strange space-time sandwich here (between two Adam
Sandler turds and two CHARLIE'S ANGELS debacles). Holmes Osbourne is
Donnie's fun father and Mary McDonnell his strangely detached mother.
Then there is Jake's sister Maggie, playing Donnie's sister Elizabeth,
spectacularly beautiful and young, her smile as radiant as Donnie's
head-bowed sneer is ominous, like a supernova in a universe of
sputtering candles, simultaneously cherubic and hotter than a devil's
pancake. She is the cutest thing I have ever seen. Quite the sensual
feat when up against the jailbait-cute Jena Malone (grown to legal age
since her pivotal role in CONTACT).
DONNIE DARKO was released in the United States just after "9/11," so
was lost amidst the psychological debris of W's inadequacies - at
preventing the attack and then at botching its response. A messianic
tale of sacrifice too layered to be appreciated in one viewing does not
usually play well with dunderhead American audiences at the best of
times, let alone the worst of times. Ignorant marketing as a teen
comedy didn't help. Luckily, the dweeb brigade rediscovered the film
and cultified it.
Donnie's cheerful laugh in the final scenes, when he knows his timeline
is about to collapse under a jet engine, is as ominous and incongruous
as his opening wry smile.
But maybe Donnie should not have sacrificed himself. Look at the
timeline we ended up in: W's reign of terror after abrogating his vow
and constitutional duty of keeping America safe.
Might we have been better off if Donnie had let the rabbit live?
--Review by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).
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