3 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Brutal, Bloody, Beautiful., 2 March 2009
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Would you kill your older brother to save your younger brother from the
noose?
In 1800s Australia, somewhere in the rugged skeleton colonies of New
South Wales, police trooper Captain Stanley (Ray Winstone) puts this
proposition to Charlie Burns (Guy Pearce, greasier and grimier than he
was in THE HARD WORD, 2002 if that's even possible).
THE PROPOSITION is filth and dust and blood, punishing Outback heat
bleeding off the screen; a land so untamed it spawns lawmen as
sociopathic as the lawbreakers they pursue.
Captain Stanley has the best intentions ("I will civilize this land")
but has been hardened by the vicissitudes of keeping order in this
barren world far from Britain. ("Australia. What fresh hell is this?")
After capturing two of the three notorious Burns brothers, Charlie and
Mikey, Stanley proposes to hang youngest brother Mikey come Christmas
Day if Charlie has not yet killed his older brother, Arthur. Charlie
reminds him he is only a copper, not a judge and jury, to which Stanley
replies, "Clearly, Mr. Burns, I am what I wish to be."
Arthur (foreboding Danny Huston) is the sadistic eldest brother
singularly responsible for putting the "notorious" in Burns, so Captain
Stanley proposes a pardon for Charlie and Mikey when Charlie kills
Arthur.
What no one counts on is the ruthlessness that comes at Charlie and
Stanley from all sides: the insubordinate prison guards who disapprove
of Stanley's plan and who can't stop thinking about rubbing their
wonderful filth over Captain Stanley's delicate wife (Emma Watson);
Captain Stanley's superior, sadistic Eden Fletcher (David Wenham,
putting on the weaseliest voice he could possibly muster) who has Mikey
flogged; bounty hunter Jellon Lamb (John Hurt, educated, articulate and
crazy as the heat) who is also hunting Arthur; the aboriginals of this
stolen land who pigstick Charlie in a shocking scene...
Then there is Arthur Burns himself, a poet savage, a lunatic genius, "a
monster, an abomination," whose credo of love and family are an insane
irony when we learn of the family he recently raped and mass-murdered,
the very reason for which Captain Stanley has set his own brother upon
him.
Arthur seems to realize what a deviant he is when he carves a knife
down a man's chest, while asking brother Charlie, "Why can't you ever
just - stop me?"
The strange paradox of this movie is Arthur's rightness in the way he
perpetrates his wrongness. When his young crazy gang member asks Arthur
the definition of "misanthrope," their Aboriginal gang member answers
and the youngster turns on him, "I didn't ask you, you black bastard!"
Hilarity. Arthur replies, "A misanthrope is someone who hates every
other bastard." Youngster: "Is that us?" Arthur: "Good lord, no! We're
a family." Dark hilarity piled on dark hilarity.
Words cannot describe this particular visual feast, baked in the
furnace of the great southern desert land; when Captain Stanley sits on
his porch and gazes out at the expanse of dry flat earth haze, the
heaviness of the air makes it hard to breathe.
Though everyone's performance is superb, Ray Winstone floats miles
above the cast for nuance; just the way he holds tears in his eyes in
moments when moral ambiguity clouds all reason, is enough to put tears
in yours.
And everyone gets to point a gun almost directly at the camera, arm
ramrod straight, in hard closeup. We can see the director drooling at
this angle.
Written by Nick Cave (who also composed the dirty violin soundtrack),
directed by John Hillcoat like shade never existed, THE PROPOSITION is
a good hard bushranger tale ("bushranger" is the Aussie version of the
wild west "outlaw"), probably the first to draw you into the old world
so fully with its attention to 1800s detail and its ochre
cinematography, the accepted social injustices toward the blacks
(Aboriginals), and avoiding the base romanticism of Ned Kelly movies
(Australia's most famous bushranger).
What makes this film so immortal is that the words "outlaw" and
"bushranger" are never mentioned - because by film's end, it is
impossible to distinguish who the outlaws are.
--Review by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).
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