Descent Movie Review
Descent Review

"Descent" Overview

Rating: NC-17
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Talia LugacyProducer : Rosario Dawson,Morris S. Levy,Talia Lugacy,Brian Priest
Screenwiter : Talia Lugacy,Brian Priest
Starring : Rosario Dawson,Chad Faust,Marcus Patrick,Christopher DeBlasio
There's an unavoidable visceral reaction that occurs while watching a victim
exact revenge. It can make an audience cheer during the Death Proof segment of
Grindhouse. It's what keeps your fists clenched as the girl in Hard Candy
reveals her twisted plans. Descent is a bit more complicated, a periodic test
of viewer stamina that's occasionally stretched unnecessarily. When that
occurs, Descent loses its effect and potency.
Rosario Dawson is Maya, a quiet college student who meets good-looking football
jock Jared (Chad Faust, The 4400) at your typical frat party. Excessively
confident, Jared makes a quick play for Maya, droning on lyrically about the
first time he saw her. A couple of conversations later, Maya softens. As this
dance continues, Faust and Dawson are excellent; he's the slimy "tell 'em what
they wanna hear" player, and she's the protective but hopeful girl, using her
natural sex appeal skillfully.
Then, in a scene reminiscent of Gaspar Noé's Irréversible, Jared rapes her.
It's a quiet, dangerous scene that first-time director Talia Lugacy drags on
uncomfortably in a spookily lit basement. It's painful to watch, as intended,
and considering the scene's length it's actually well paced. But once Jared
begins whispering racial epithets, the rape feels like it may be just an
overdone narrative device.
As expected, Maya collapses into her own silent world. She works at a clothing
store where she ignores co-workers while in a near catatonic state. She
frequents a dance club where house music pulsates, bodies grind, and everyone
gets loaded. Dawson, playing the role well, just glides through her world -- as
does the movie, and after a couple of extended club scenes, it feels like
Lugacy is plodding along for the sake of "mood."
Months later in the story, coincidence places Jared and Maya in the same
classroom and the film's depraved final act begins. It's no surprise that
Maya's acceptance of her attacker is plotted, so the only unknown is in how
much the filmmakers are willing to ratchet up the suspense and resultant acts.
In order to get there, the story forces us to oversimplify Jared's intellect.
Is this guy so willing to do what he's told because he thinks he might get
laid? It's tough to believe he would get involved with the girl he's raped,
thinking she's unstable enough not to care. Without this suspension of
disbelief we don't get the horrifying finale.
So the characters become more like pawns in a statement film, and it has the
opportunity to make a heck of a statement. In methods ranging from subtle to
immensely over the top, Lugacy and her co-writer/cousin Brian Priest discuss
gender roles, sexual roles, survival of the fittest, race, and education. But
too much of the film plays like a blurry nightmare, with long scenes becoming a
game of keep-away; we get the sensory involvement but not much more.
It's difficult to overstate the sickness of the film's conclusion. This is not
the eye-popping go-for-broke gore of something like Takashi Miike's Audition.
It's an act of vengeance in its purest form, going on and on and on, reducing
its participants to nothing but animals. Is that what we're here to learn? That
violence begets more violence? Although Lugacy receives some shockingly
courageous performances from her leads, there's not enough substance to make
for a good movie. What we see in these characters is simply an exercise in
human soullessness.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager





