Series 7 Movie Review
Series 7 Review

"Series 7" Overview

Rating: R
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Daniel MinahanProducer : Jason Kliot,Joana Vicente,Christine Vachon,Katie Roumel
Screenwiter : Daniel Minahan
Starring : Brooke Smith,Glenn Fitzgerald,Marylouise Burke,Richard Venture,Michael Kaycheck,Merritt Weaver,Donna Hanover
The title Series 7 stands for the seventh season of the highest-rated reality
based show on television, The Contenders. Set a few years from now, the
program rules are laid out with unsparing precision: Six average, everyday
citizens are chosen via random lottery to mercilessly kill one another. This
will continue until one survivor remains. Sound familiar? When historians
chart the downfall of human empathy, they will see that we were only one step
away from moral paralysis in our increasing apathy to Survivor, Temptation
Island, and The Real World. Here we are, now entertain us.
This satire couldn't be more cutting edge. Former tabloid TV producer Daniel
Minahan (and co-screenwriter of I Shot Andy Warhol) takes dead aim on glib,
pre-packaged network formulas for success. A terse narrator (Will Arnett)
offers mock-sympathetic encouragement for the contestants as well as in-depth
play-by-play ring coverage. Opponents are given screen time for weepy
confessions to their assigned guerrilla cameramen, dispassionately filming
their fight or flight confrontations on hand-held digital video.
Our odds-on favorite is the lethal, eight-months-pregnant Dawn (Brooke Smith),
a returning champion with 10 confirmed kills under her belt. If she makes it
through one final season, she'll be granted her well-earned freedom. Marching
through the eroded suburbia of her hometown (Newbury, Connecticut), there's no
confusing her for a helpless female. This pistol-packing mama will do anything
to save her unborn child, eyes glazed over with steel acceptance.
In the grim opening footage lifted from a previous season, the camera follows
Dawn as she barges into a 7-Eleven to pop a few caps into an unsuspecting
victim. The expressive, open-faced Smith has always been one of cinema's
best-kept secrets, most memorable as the senator's daughter at the bottom of
Buffalo Bill's well in The Silence of the Lambs. Here, she displays a
vigilance that kicks Series 7 into overdrive.
The programmers throw a sensational tabloid curveball by placing Dawn's
perpetually glum high school sweetheart among her opponents. But almost all of
the dramatic contrivances (this one being the most obvious) can be written off
as part of the television structure-induced malaise. It's doubtful they'll be
apparent in the visual onslaught of information.
Revealing a taste for showmanship, the now-married Jeff (Glenn Fitzgerald) has
unorthodox plans for their televised reunion. Rotting away from testicular
cancer, Jeff literally doesn't have the balls for this contest. Minahan shows
admirable restraint in not exploiting this obvious gag. Jeff asks that Dawn
painlessly remove him from the game with an overdose of sleeping pills. Easier
said than done, especially when it's the only man she ever loved -- and what if
he suddenly rediscovers his lust for life? This morbid coupling is even
granted an appropriate theme song, Joy Division's "Love Will Tear Us Apart
(Again)."
Though Dawn and Jeff are given the center spotlight, there's no telling when
their number is gonna be up. The same can be said for their colorful
opponents, a perfectly cast ensemble of "Joe Average" deviants: Franklin
(Richard Venture), a half-crazed conspiracy theorist; Tony (Michael Kaycheck),
a hulking brute who practices intimidating shadowboxing techniques; Connie
(Marylouise Burke), a brittle emergency room nurse; and Lindsay (Merritt
Weaver), a bright eyed, attractive 17-year old virgin.
Place your bets, but be forewarned: They may not die in the order you'd
expect. Whether prowling through dimly lit houses or playing hide-and-seek in
an airy shopping mall, mundane locations become bloody battlegrounds at the
drop of a hat. There's a queasy adrenaline rush in this hastily staged
domestic combat, with tension increased by the digital photographers covering
the scene. What happens when they step into the line of fire?
Minahan doesn't play this potentially lurid material as camp, opting instead
for the howlingly funny pseudo-documentary approach of Rob Reiner's This Is
Spinal Tap. By playing it straight, he's able to take blistering potshots at
media carnage (including an obligatory freeway chase with echoes of O.J.
Simpson) without losing his edge. When a contender is taken out, it's not done
for giggles like Oliver Stone's na•ve Natural Born Killers, but viewed with the
ironic detachment of video surveillance. There are no formalities -- once the
kill is confirmed, it's on to the next kill with maddening proclivity.
Series 7 is too self-conscious to be defined as naturalism, but there's
something freakishly accurate in the mannered affectations of these media-savvy
contestants. Even Dawn's gaze keeps flickering to the lens of the camera,
seeking artificial validation. Constantly reciting dialogue lifted from a bad
episode of Geraldo Rivera, their emotional codes of conduct have been gleaned
from daytime talk shows. To even say, "I love you," during a tearful embrace
feels like art imitating life imitating 90210. Daniel Minahan welcomes us to
the bleak dead-end of our cultural void -- if it's seen through the camera,
it's no longer real life.
Coming soon to a TV near you.
|
Review by Jeremiah Kipp
|






