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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesStarring regular collaborator Joaquin Phoenix along with Mark Wahlberg, Eva Mendes and Robert Duvall, on the surface the film looks like a routine cop drama, but within is a simmering tale of fathers and sons, and of vengeance that both bonds and bruises two brothers. The '80s-set story follows a nightclub owner who comes up against his policeman brother, who is cracking down on the drugs being dealt in his club. As a result he's forced to reckon with his lifestyle, and how it could affect his family and his future. It's a much more powerful and layered film than the marketing at the time suggested, and now that it's back on the big screen, if you can make the trek out at BAM it's worth seeking out. We were fortunate enough to catch up with Gray to talk about the film before Monday's showing, and he discussed his difficulty in reflecting on his movies, and what his intentions were with the film. There are mild spoilers below.
That being said, the process of confronting his previous films is one he still finds illuminating, particularly as audiences bring their input and experiences to their interpretations of his films during a Q&A. And that feedback is deeply appreciated by the filmmaker. "[The questions] are much more interesting and intelligent observations than anything I've ever had about my own work. That's just a fact. The people who watch your films always bring to it tremendously interesting things, things that you never contemplated. That's one of the most rewarding things about being a movie director, because the work of art -- if I may call any movie a work of art -- I don't want to say the author doesn't matter, but the person who made it, the people who made it -- in the case of the movie, it's a collaborative process -- it's no longer theirs once it's made. Once it's made, it's for the audience. It's very rewarding when they come up with multiple readings…I think it's fantastic. The best you could possibly ask for, is for them to bring their own thing to what it is you've done."
"The motive for making the film, was to make a movie which was about a certain emotional approach to the police. That the movie would be not at all be about the procedural aspects of being a policeman, but would be much more about the emotional life of being a policeman," Gray continued about what he wanted to capture. "And I had seen a photograph on the front of the New York Times from, I believe, July of 2000, which was a funeral for a policeman who had died in the line of duty. And the photograph was of a bunch of grown men crying, their fellow officer had been killed. And the photograph is unbelievably troubling, because it shows all these grown men and they're just weeping terribly, and it's an aspect of police life you really don't see in movies very much. You see the police procedural or the buddy-cop, but I don't think you see the cop families, and the toll that it takes, all that much."
Indeed, "We Own The Night" really is unlike any other movie about police officers you will see. Rich, intelligent and perceptive, it's further evidence of Gray's skills and insights as a filmmaker. "We Own The Night" screens on Monday, March 26th at 7:30 PM at BAMcinematek.
5 Comments
Isabelle | March 27, 2012 11:47 AM
I'm in love with this movie, and I recommend it to everyone. That's truly one of the best I've ever seen.
Nick | March 26, 2012 10:13 AM
The Yards is one of the best movies ever made. Full stop. Grey's definitely an undersung American master.
jingmei | March 25, 2012 10:41 PM
A very good article this is. James Grey need to be recognized more in the States domestically, now that he's already pretty awesome in Europe.
lancel stigmeyer | March 23, 2012 6:33 PM
very underated film