Passion of Darkly Noon, The (1995)

reviewed by
Dennis Schwartz


PASSION OF DARKLY NOON, THE (director/writer: Philip Ridley; cinematographer: John de Borman; editor: Leslie Healey; cast: Brendan Fraser (Darkly Noon), Ashley Judd (Callie), Kate Harper (Darkly's mom), Mel Cobb (Darkly's pop),Viggo Mortensen (Clay), Grace Zabriskie (Roxy), Loren Dean (Jude), Lou Myers (Quincy); Runtime: 101; Entertainment Film Distributors; 1995-GB/Ger/Bel)

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

An off-beat, haunting, overwrought fairy tale for adults. This visually pleasing allegory ends on an apocalyptic note. It takes a stab at being an intelligent slasher movie for those who like their gore laced with some sensible dialogue to go along with its good and evil characterizations.

Darkly Noon (Brendan Fraser) is named for a saying in the Book of the Corinthians--"Now we see another through 'Darkly Noon.' " He is a stuttering 17-year-old who escapes after his parents and their religiously fanatical cult commune were unwarrantedly attacked by the prejudiced townies, killing his parents and the others. He's found lying unconscious in the woods by Jude (Loren Dean) and brought to Callie's (Ashley Judd) isolated house in the woods. She's a sexy blonde, given to wearing mini skirts and walking around braless (a Mary Magdaline figure!). She lives here with her mute boyfriend Clay (Viggo Mortensen), who is a carpenter (a Jesus figure!). He makes his living by selling the coffins he builds to the town's undertaker Quincy (Myers). Jude brings the coffins to town in his pickup.

After recovering from his exhaustion, Darkly (an evil beast figure!), who was brought up to believe in the letter of the Bible as law, is seen as a tortured psychologically abused young man, who is deeply struck by the physical attraction he has for Callie and is at the same time alarmed by her sinful attitude. When Clay returns after taking a walk in the woods for a few days, Darkly becomes resentful of him and though he helps him build coffins, the two never really bond.

Her sexually physical presence and free-spirited behavior sets off all his repressions, and he is further fueled to rage when he meets a reclusive woman named Roxy (Zabriskie) living in a mobile home in the woods. She fills his head with malicious stories slanted against Callie, saying that she's a witch. She tells the impressionable boy that she took Callie in to live with her when she found her abandoned in the woods and that Callie bewitched her son Clay into falling in love with her and also tempted her husband to be sexually attracted to her before she killed him. When he tells this to Callie, she gives him a different version of what happened, saying that he tried to rape her. But by this time, his dark side has gotten hold of him, and in his confused and self-righteous state he's in, he acts out the fanatical religious way he was brought up and seeks the Lord's vengeance.

Darkly starts seeing visions of his parents, who urge him to seek vengeance on Callie, telling him that the God in the Bible says that is what he should do. He is so twisted by his literal biblical beliefs, that he punishes himself for the temptations of the flesh he has when staring at Callie, as he wraps barbed wire around his body which causes him some pain and to bleed.

Smeared with blood and induced into a trance-like frenzy of hatred, while living in a cave Callie once took him to that has neolithic paintings and dense stalactites, he takes a sword and goes to do God's work of vengeance against the innocent lovers.

The surreal forest sets the dark mood for Philip Ridley's eerie and atmospheric film. What propels this film is not the slight story, but the bold interactions among the characters and the striking symbolic conflict over strict biblical interpretations versus a worldly sensual view of life. But the film just couldn't wait to get to the slasher part fast enough, and that left very little time in the film's middle to go into the brainy part of the movie, leaving the film literally and figuratively going up in smoke by the finale.

REVIEWED ON 1/14/2001     GRADE: C

Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"

http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ


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