Chopper Movie Review
Chopper Review

"Chopper" Overview

Rating: NC-17
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Andrew DominikProducer : Michele Bennett
Screenwiter : Andrew Dominik
Starring : Eric Bana,Simon Lyndon,Kenny Graham,Kate Beahan
One of the more annoying trends in recent cinema is the glorification of
violence, making the depraved and nihilistic seem as cool as a pair of mirror
sunglasses. Fact is, most sociopathic killers, drug pushers, thieves and
outlaws are unimaginative morons who stumble through their pathetic lot doling
out cycles of violence to break up the boredom. Full of flawed, stylistic
overdrive, Chopper doesn’t make the numerous onscreen shootings and stabbings
look remotely cool.
Which is not to say that the central character isn’t delighted by his own
supposed carnage -- Australia’s prime cut of criminal splendor Mark “Chopper”
Read revels in his own self-deluding mythology. The smartest thing about
writer-director Andrew Dominik’s elliptical biopic is to acknowledge that ol’
Chopper spins unrealistic tall tales about his bloody escapades. “Never let
the truth get in the way of a good story,” he giggles. This notorious creep
wrote a series of best-selling memoirs exploiting his tale of smashing the
living piss out of his cellmates, fellow underworld denizens, floozy
girlfriends, and whoever else was unlucky enough to get in his way. How much
of it was fantasy is anyone’s guess.
A friend was quick to point out that the recent film Blow falls into the trap
of actually buying into the conceits of George Jung, envisioning himself as the
tragic hero in his own life. Not so with Chopper. As charming and affable as
stand-up comedian Eric Bana plays Mark Read, he’d never be conceived as someone
to bring home to mum. He’s the type who’ll be sitting on your couch, drinking
a beer, telling a joke, then out of nowhere he’s got a gun pressed against your
temple asking you to beg for mercy, and then he might put the gun away and say
he’s so sorry for making such an ass of himself. “It’s embarrassin’!” With
friends like him, who needs friends?
Chopper begins with the celebrity hooligan being interviewed for television,
mugging for the camera and spinning a host of almost clever one-liners. It
then switches to an extended sequence in prison where stabbings are such an
order of the day that even the guys getting shivved barely flinch. “What’re
you doing?” is Read’s annoyed response to getting knifed in the gullet. From
there, we cut to a few years later after a heavily mustached Read, resembling
German filmmaker Rainer Werner Fassbinder, is back on the street. He’s
glimpsed watching television with his old man, abusing his stripper girlfriend
(who can barely keep a straight face while he’s boxing her ears) and letting
paranoia get the best of him as he threatens to kill all of his friends and
enemies alike. Sure enough, we head into the inevitable Taxi Driver climax,
abruptly followed by a nifty coda that shifts the film back into an
appropriately incongruous perspective.
The mercurial and boyish Eric Bana thankfully never plays the title character
as edgy or intense, a welcome relief from over-emoting tough guys who hit false
notes of brute chic. Bana single handedly carries the movie through a torrent
of excruciating slow spots. Once Chopper gets into the relentless cycle of
Read’s dead-end obsessive fury, it never finds a way out. What would have made
for a hardcore 30-minute short is padded out into 94 minutes of “we get the
point.” It doesn’t help that the stylized flash photography and bone-bleached
saturation bring to mind the excess of Oliver Stone’s Natural Born Killers,
never a good sign. One can see that if Dominik isn't careful, he'll be
churning out gutter scum variations of 3000 Miles To Graceland in Tinseltown --
he shows the early warning signs of explosive content without penetrating
insight. His collaborator Bana is already slumming as a "chopper" pilot (I kid
you not!) in Ridley Scott's next debacle. Didn't take him long, did it?
Chopper is larger than life and twice as ugly, but it has the good taste not to
play the gruesome bits for shock value -- even in the squirm inducing scene
where a central character gets pieces of his ear sliced off. The camera doesn’
t shy away as in Reservoir Dogs, but it doesn’t leer either. It simply places
the viewer into Mark Read’s troubled psyche, a place of false machismo and
garbled fictions. Why shy away? If you can’t take the heat, go indulge in the
more superficial charms of Exit Wounds, where violence has no consequences.
As to whether Chopper or Exit Wounds is more damaging to our cinematic psyche,
I suppose it all depends on your perspective. If you’ve taken the time to read
this review, infer my response as you will. The outcome is never in doubt.
Chop shop, smoke shop.
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Review by Jeremiah Kipp
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