I have a
confession to make.
I was a
Chris McQuarrie fan before I was a Lee Child fan.
Who’s Chris
McQuarrie?
Some of you
may have heard of a little movie called The Way of The Gun. It had a small
theatrical release and nobody went to see it. I did. I was first in the line
for tickets. This was because the movie was written and directed by McQuarrie.
And I thought, and still think, that McQuarrie is a genius. The first script he
got produced was for a little film he wanted to make with his buddy, Bryan
Singer. That script was The Usual Suspects which earned him the Oscar for Best
Original Screenplay. The Writers Guild of America voted the screenplay for The
Usual Suspects at #35 on the list of best screenplays of all time. The Usual
Suspects is a heist movie, the title comes from a line in Casablanca and most
of the main characters take their names from guys that McQuarrie worked with in
a legal firm.
The Way of
The Gun has its flaws, it’s not perfect, but it’s vastly underrated. Two
criminals, played by Ryan Phillippe and Benicio Del Toro, plan to kidnap the
surrogate mother who is carrying a child for a wealthy couple and hold her to ransom.
They get a lot more than they bargained for. It’s a modern day Butch Cassidy
and The Sundance Kid with a final shootout that rivals The Wild Bunch. One of
the things I love about The Way of The Gun is the interaction between Phillippe
and Del Toro. A lot of their communication is non-verbal: a wink, a nod, and
all the time you can see them thinking their way through the problems thrown at
them. It’s an incredible piece of writing and film making and James Caan is
superb in this film – some of his best work is on screen here.
When I heard
Lee Child’s Jack Reacher was going to be made into a movie, I secretly prayed
that McQuarrie would write and direct it.
He did.
I thought
there would be no-one better to capture Reacher on screen. And you know what?
He does it. He nails the heart of that character.
Now, I can
already hear you shouting – ‘BUT JACK REACHER IS FOURTEEN FEET TALL, BUILT OUT
OF DETROIT STEEL AND THE BROKEN BONES OF HIS ENEMIES AND TOM CRUISE IS A MIDGET
FROM A COLGATE ADVERT.’
I will admit
to being surprised at Tom Cruise being cast as Jack Reacher. It’s a little like
casting Arnold Schwarzenegger as the lead in a biopic on Charlie Chaplin.
I’ve been in
the room when Lee Child discussed this and I agree with him that there are not
a lot of lead A List actors who are anywhere near Reacher’s physical size. The
actors that are that size aren’t great actors to begin with. There are a few
who would’ve been closer in size to Tom Cruise but it was a case of ‘is this
movie ever going to be made? We have a star and a shoot ready.’
Lee Child
has had to endure a fair amount of criticism but casting isn’t really his
decision anyway and I can completely understand his reasons for that film being
made. The movie adaptation will never live up to some fans expectations.
But in my
opinion, humble as it may be, McQuarrie and Cruise captured Reacher, and in
fact they captured the most difficult aspect of his character to realise on
screen.
For me, what
makes Jack Reacher isn’t his size, it’s his mind.
Reacher
outthinks his opponents in fights before a single punch is thrown. He thinks through
the problems that he encounters in the books to figure out what’s really going
on. Those are the best moments in any Reacher thriller.
How do you
capture someone thinking on screen?
You hire
Christopher McQuarrie.
I really
enjoyed the Reacher film and I hope there’s more to come.
For me,
McQuarrie and Cruise bottled a fair amount of Reacher lightning.
Feel free to
disagree, it’s a movie, it’s an interpretation of a character, not a theft.
Speaking of
theft, I’ve been robbed by two films in recent years. Robbed of my time, lied
to, and generally I got played.
Spoiler
Alert. I’m, going to talk about The Grey and The Amazing Spider Man 2. If you haven’t
seen The Amazing Spider Man 2 and you might want to see it, then don’t read on.
If you’ve seen TASM2 but you’ve not watched Liam Neeson in The Grey – then I
urge you to read on because you’re not missing anything.
Sorry Liam.
I’m a big
Liam Neeson fan; I’m from Northern Ireland after all, but Christ on a bike, The
Grey infuriated me like no other film I’ve ever seen and it’s not Liam’s fault.
He was good in the film. The film itself is poor.
Now, a lot
of people liked it. I know Harry Knowles and a couple of his buddies over at
Ain’t It Cool News, really loved it.
I hated it
and it’s largely because of the trailer.
Liam is a
marksman who works for an oil company in some Artic wasteland. He protects the
other employees from wild animal attacks, chiefly wolves.
For this
film, I willing ignored the widely held knowledge that wolves are terrified of
people and rarely do they attack anyone. That wasn’t my bug bear. In the
trailer we see Liam on a plane, with around twenty other guys and the plane
goes down, they land in the frozen wasteland and about twelve or so survive.
So far, the
trailer, and the movie itself up to this point, is setting up a survivor story.
I love a good survivor story; man bonds with man against the elements in an effort
to survive beyond all the odds. It’s a story about hope, friendship, and the triumph
of the human spirit. To triumph, you need adversity. In this movie we have the
environment itself and a pack of ravenous and truly terrifying wolves.
So the
wolves begin howling as the survivors huddle round a campfire – that’s a really
cool scene, probably the best in the film.
At this
point, watching the trailer and the movie, I was rubbing my hands thinking this
was going to be a great story.
It isn’t.
Before I tell
you about the rest of the film, I have to mention the big problem with the
trailer.
In the
trailer we see a few scenes with Liam on his own; he’s being surrounded by
wolves, he’s injured, he takes a couple of empty miniatures of vodka and whiskey
and tapes the bottles in between his fingers, then tapes a dagger to the other
hand. He smashes the bottom of the miniatures against a rock so now he has his
own make-shift broken glass claws, the wolves move closer, quick cuts between
the wolf’s eyes and Liam’s eyes and… the trailer ends.
I was
thinking, ‘wow, I have to watch that film to see that fight between a desperate
Liam and a CGI wolf.’
Back to the movie.
The wolves
pick off the survivors. Just as we get to know and like a character, they get
killed. More people die. Then more. Then some fall off a rope stretched over a ravine, more get taken
by the wolves.
This is
getting pretty depressing.
More die.
It’s all
hopeless and one character, and I shit you not, dies by simply giving up; he
sits his ass down in a rock and says, ‘that’s it, I want to die, I can’t take
it anymore.’ This is a little over three
quarters of the way through the film and at that stage, I knew how the man felt.
But I didn’t
turn off the film.
I’d remembered
the trailer. I’m sticking with this depressing film because I want to see Liam
fight the wolf. That’ll be awesome, that’ll make the whole film worthwhile.
More die.
Liam’s hurt
and scrabbling through the snow.
‘This is it,’
I tell myself.
Liam’s being
surrounded by wolves, he’s injured, he takes a couple of empty miniatures of
vodka and whiskey and tapes the bottles in between his fingers, then tapes a
dagger to the other hand.
‘Here we go,’
I say, and I sit forward in my chair.
He smashes
the bottom of the miniatures against a rock so now he has his own make shift
broken glass claws, the wolves move closer, quick cuts between the wolf’s eyes
and Liam’s eyes and… the movie ends.
Dear Reader,
there is very little, if any, swearing in my books, but believe me, I am a
world heavyweight contender when it comes to swearing.
I almost
woke the kids and frightened the shit out of the dog.
There is no
fight with the wolf. The scene in the trailer for the film is in fact the last
scene and the very last shot in the whole movie. How bad is that? The very last
shot is in the trailer.
Trailers are
supposed to tease. This teased me into believing I would see a Liam v Wolf. I didn’t.
This is
essentially a survivor film where everybody dies. That might be intellectually
brave and challenging cinema. But not for me, I like the bad guys to go down, I
like Bruce Willis in a dirty vest, I like Mel Gibson and Danny Glover getting
drunk and shooting people. I like to see the underdog win.
A survivor
movie where everyone dies is pointless. It’s like making a comedy that isn’t funny,
or an action film with no explosions, or a Bruce Lee movie where Bruce doesn’t actually
hit anybody.
Sigh…..
With Spiderman,
again, we see the very last shot of the movie in the trailer.
This is not
good enough – this is trickery.
So I’m not
watching trailers anymore.
But then I
saw the trailer for Guardians of the Galaxy. This restored my faith in cool
trailers that tease.
If you haven’t
seen it, check it out now, it's funny, cool, exciting and it teases, and if Mrs C is reading this - watch the trailer, Peter Serafinowicz is in it - you like him.
Is there a lesson in all of this?
Yes.
(1) If you’re getting your book adapted
for the screen – Chris McQuarrie is a good bet.
(2) If you’re writing a story – don’t promise
what you can’t deliver.
(3) Even though he’s only three feet
tall, Tom Cruise could probably kick our asses.
(4) If Liam Neeson should get cast in a
Renny Harlin film about a tribe of junkie, cannibalistic traffic wardens who
moonlight as Burlesque dancers – it will still be a better movie than The Grey.
(5) Lee Child will continue to write
fantastic thrillers with the full-sized Reacher as the central character.
(6) There is a lack of gun-toting, sarcastic raccoons in literature - maybe this is what Will Self is going on about.
(7) If Arnie ever plays Chaplin on screen, I'll be first in line to buy a ticket.
(6) There is a lack of gun-toting, sarcastic raccoons in literature - maybe this is what Will Self is going on about.
(7) If Arnie ever plays Chaplin on screen, I'll be first in line to buy a ticket.
That’s all
for now, folks.
Best,
Steve.