Site created 12/15/97. |
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review added: 10/4/99
8MM (Eight
Millimeter)
1999 (1999) Columbia
TriStar
review by Todd Doogan of
The Digital Bits
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Film
Rating: C+
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): A/A/B
Specs and Features
123 mins, R, widescreen (2.35:1), 16x9 enhanced, full frame
(1.33:1), dual-sided, single-layered, Amaray keep case packaging,
theatrical trailer, featurette, commentary track with director Joel
Schumacher, cast and crew information, film-themed menu screens,
scene access (28 chapters), language: English (DD 5.1) and (DD 2.0),
subtitles: English, Close Captioned |
"You dance with
the devil and the devil don't change -- the devil changes you."
When 8MM first popped up in
theaters, I really wanted it to be "important." I wanted
it to mean something. At the time, I was pulling in research
information about the porn world, and a common question had always
come up: "Is there really any such thing as a snuff film?"
The answer was always no. Whoever answered the question -- police,
producer, director or star -- no one had ever seen one, nor did they
ever want to see one. I really find it hard to believe, in this day
and age with as many murders and the proliferation of video
technology, that the police hadn't stumbled on a cache of videotapes
showing murders mixed with sex. Then it occurred to me that, even if
the police did, they wouldn't talk about it. They'd just destroy it
and say, "nope, there are no snuff films." And you know
what? They wouldn't be lying. So who is lying? Who cares really? The
simple fact of the matter is we, as human beings, are sick enough to
create them in legend or material form, and therefore they will
always exist.
Like Nicholas Cage's character Tom Welles, in 8MM,
most of us have seen things that forever change our perceptions of
what life truly means. Unlike him, I wouldn't take any of them away
-- I need them, because I am creative, and creative people need
those things in their lives to build upon. Cage's character isn't
very creative. He's a very mellow, down-to-business private
detective. He's cultivating a higher class of client, and he's very
proud of his practice. Some of the things he does bring out the
darker sides of life, but if you are right and true, then exposing
others faults isn't such a bad thing. The saying goes, "let he
who hasn't sinned throw the first stone." And when we first
meet Tom, he has a pocketful of stones.
One day, Tom is called to the huge Christian estate, where he is
shown a very sensitive piece of film (a snuff film), and is asked to
determine its authenticity. Tom's search for the girl who appears in
the film, leads him on a very dark journey of the human soul. He
soon meets people who don't truly seem to belong in the world they
live in, like Max (Joaquin Phoenix), or even the girl in the film,
Mary Ann Mathews. Various people do belong where Tom finds them,
like porn director/egomaniac Dino Velvet (Peter Stormare), slimy
video producer Eddie Pool (The Soprano's
James Gandolfini), and the mysterious Machine (Chris Bauer), the
dark star of the snuff film.
8MM isn't the best movie, but
it's not the worst. I think it suffers from a schizoid style, where
it really wants to be a update of Paul Schrader's remarkable (and
under appreciated) film Hardcore,
starring George C. Scott. But it also wants to be like Seven
(the other Andrew Kevin Walker scripted film), and a Nic Cage action
fest. I would bet you the original screenplay for this film read
different than this, and much darker, and this would have been a
better film if the script hadn't been changed. As it stands, 8MM
has some really cool elements, and some stuff I really do wish I
hadn't seen.
The DVD is very good - a nice tight Columbia disc with all the
usual attention paid. The transfer is flawless, 16x9 (on the
letterbox side) and with really great sound. The viewable extras are
sort of minor, with a trailer, and a short marketing "making of"
featurette. I'll tell you what though -- the one thing that makes
this a disc hard to not run out and pick up right now, is the
director's commentary. It's really, really good. Schumacher is a
filmmaker not very well respected on the Internet (thanks to his
Batman films), and it's a damn
shame. He's not a bad filmmaker, nor is he a bad person, and he does
a great job presenting both identities on this disc. I really
enjoyed listening to him on this track. He discusses porn, the dark
and the mainstream sides of it. He talks about filmmaking, giving
out good nuggets to future filmmakers on what to do and what not to
do. He even suggests some stuff for fetishists out there. Schumacher
really changed my view of his work here, and does a lot to show
people that he really cares about filmmaking. Sure, his taste may
not be to everyone's liking, but he really shows that he loves what
he does, and I appreciate him for it. Sometimes he misses the mark,
but I think he really tries to make good movies for us, the lovers
of movies. Anyone who likes movies, of any kind, will enjoy
listening to him. He gives a miniature film class, which works well
on this disc.
The one thing that pisses me off about the disc, is that Schumacher
talks about a 3 hour cut of the film... but there are no
supplemented scenes. What's with that? If the cuts were made by the
MPAA, then they should have been put on here as a director's cut.
Maybe Schumacher doesn't believe in that -- he doesn't say why they
aren't here, but if there's about an hour of cut footage, I would
have liked to have seen that stuff. At the very least as separate
scenes.
8MM is definitely not for
everyone. The subject is dark, and the quality of the storytelling
is questionable, but at times it proves to be somewhat well made.
Overall, I liked 8MM because
of its better moments, and after listening to the commentary, I came
away with a better impression of the film, its filmmaker, and some
of the choices made. At the very least, it's something worth renting
just to listen to the commentary. It'll open your eyes.
Todd Doogan
todddoogan@thedigitalbits.com |
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