DEMOLITION
Director : Jean-Marc ValléeCast : Jake Gyllenhaal, Naomi Watts, Judah Lewis, Chris Cooper, Heather Lind
Genre : Drama
Run Time : 100 mins
Opens : 14 April 2016
Rating : NC16 (Coarse Language And Sexual References)
If a story opens with “so-and-so
had it all”, you know things will soon take a turn for the worse. Davis
Mitchell (Gyllenhaal) had it all: a high-paying investment banker job, a
beautiful wife, loving parents, a plush house and a fancy car. Davis’ world is
shattered in the aftermath of a car accident that claims the life of his wife
Julia (Lind). Davis’ father-in-law and boss Phil (Cooper) sees that Davis is
unravelling and tries to convince him to seek professional help. Instead, Davis
goes about his own unorthodox way of coping with grief. When writing a
complaint letter to a vending machine company after his candy gets jammed,
Davis includes some startlingly personal admissions. This soon develops into a
correspondence with customer service representative Karen Moreno (Watts) and
Davis gets to know Karen and her rebellious teenage son Chris (Lewis) as he
works out his issues.
Demolition is
directed by Jean-Marc Vallée of Dallas
Buyers Club and Wild fame, from a
screenplay by Bryan Sipe. This is meant as a character study, delving into a
man’s search for catharsis – and meaning, if there’s any to be found - in the
wake of trauma. Unfortunately, the cold, stale odour of sophomore year creative
writing class wafts off the screen. It’s almost immediately obvious that the
narrative conceit of Davis’ over-sharing in his complaint letters serves as a
way to pack in as much exposition as possible. The dialogue also heaves with
such clunky lines as “repairing the human heart is like repairing an automobile.
You’ve got to dismantle everything, then you can put it back together again.” While
there are elements of dark comedy within, the bulk of the film is sullen
navel-gazing.
Gyllenhaal has played a number of truly fascinating
characters in his career. Alas, Davis doesn’t number among them. The character
is meant to be inherently sympathetic because his wife has just died; his
erratic behaviour an extreme manifestation of loss. As the title indicates, he
develops an appetite for destruction, of property and of self. The film seems
to go out of its way to make the more rational characters come off as
unlikeable, in order to justify Davis’ actions. The methods with which Davis
deals with tragedy may be relatable to some, but are generally overblown and
melodramatic. This is a character whom we’re supposed to think is edgy and cool
– you know, broken, but sexily broken, with Gyllenhaal working those puppy dog
eyes for all they’re worth. It feels a little cheap and is easy to see through.
To the film’s credit, it goes out of its way to frame the
burgeoning relationship between Davis and Karen as something other than an
impulsive rebound fling. Karen is an unfulfilled pot-smoking single mum and
while she takes pity on Davis, she is also wary of him given Davis’
instability. If anything, the movie needs more of Naomi Watts. Cooper has
several moments in which Phil wears his heart on his sleeve and emotion bubbles
to the surface, but the main note he’s required to play is ‘disapproving’. Chris
is not so much a character as all the stock ‘troubled kid’ traits rolled into
one. This reviewer got the impression that Lewis watched Edward Furlong in Terminator 2 a hundred times to prepare
for the role. It’s a wayward kid of a very 90s sort. Davis’ attempts at bonding
with Chris, while potentially sappy, also give the film the jolts it needs.
Demolition’s
version of ‘working through pain’ involves public displays of volatility, copious
quantities of self-pity and long voiceovers wherein complaint
letters-turned-teary confessionals are read aloud. The 100-minute running time
is relatively shorter than that of the average drama, but it still feels
interminable at times. We’ve taken Demolition
apart and searched for meaning – there’s some of it, to be sure, but not nearly
as much as the film would like us to think there is.
Summary: Demolition
is packed with on-the-nose clumsiness and soap opera plot twists masquerading
as depth, but lead actors Gyllenhaal and Watts manage to suss out some
substance.
RATING: 2
out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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