Only God Forgives (2013)
Dir. Nicholas Winding Refn
1 out of 5
Nicolas Winding Refn has described the difference between his new film, Only God
Forgives, and 2011's critically-acclaimed Drive in terms of specific
drug-taking experiences. Whereas Drive was “like doing the
best cocaine all night long” (and how!), Only God Forgives is
a self-conscious acid trip that’s obsessed with locking itself and the audience
into the present moment, with no hope of escape from the beautiful
phantasmagoric nightmare.
What he’s forgotten is that
drugged-out adventures often make for banal storytelling when you’re hearing
them secondhand, a problem that plagues this flat, obtuse film about the seedy
underbelly of Bangkok seen through glazed eyes. Ryan Gosling stars as
Julian, an expat American drug dealer and owner of a martial arts academy with
the smartly appointed, GQ-ready wardrobe of Ryan Gosling. His
brother, Billy (Tom Burke), is an even scummier drug dealer who murders a teen
prostitute, then is murdered in turn by the girl’s bereaved father at the
urging of Chang (Vithaya Pansringarm), a corrupt machete-toting cop. This
act of vigilante justice kicks off a chain reaction of increasingly extreme
violence as Crystal (Kristin Scott Thomas), Julian and Billy’s foul creature of
a mother, hectors her surviving son into seeking retribution against the
architect of his brother’s slaying.
The film springs
to life during the handful of scenes that play to Refn’s bloody
aplomb (recall Gosling’s elevator stomp-a-thon in Drive). But
the film needs something more substantive than the occasional arterial spray to
keep us interested, and the wafer-thin plot is just not cutting it. Maybe
it’s the heat in Bangkok, but Only God Forgives feels like
lumpy, lackadaisical B-movie trolling from a director who’s capable of much
better. Refn wastes Pansringarm’s appropriately steely performance and
the pitch-black comedy of Thomas’ intriguing gender-inverse character (she all
but swings around a pair of novelty brass balls), instead pitching
everything to Gosling’s muffled monotone and fatal inaction. The result
is a movie where the characters spend most of their time staring blankly at
each other, as if searching for the modicum of tension required to make this
story feel like an actual cat-and-mouse thriller. (It isn’t, not when
Chang and Julian locate each other with an ease that renders almost all
preceding action meaningless.)
It’s not a sin to make a
nihilistic movie, but it should be a crime to make one this lifeless. Only
God Forgives is doomed once its moral torpor seeps into the actual
craft of the film. Aside from the throbbing synths of Cliff Martinez’s
excellent score, it’s tough to find a pulse in this sea of slack
expressions, de rigueur brothel lighting, and interminable
bouts of staring that rival the early installments of the Twilight saga.
Contrary to Refn’s statement, you don’t have to be high to sit
through Only God Forgives - but it probably helps.
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