FILM-FORWARD.COMReviews of Recent Independent, Foreign, & Documentary Films in Theaters and DVD/Home Video
Directed by: Paul Haggis. Produced by: Cathy Schulman, Don Cheadle, Bob Yari et al. Written by: Paul Haggis & Bobby Moresco. Director of Photography: J. Michael Muro. Edited by: Hughes Winborne. Music by: Mark Isham. Released by: Lions Gate. Country of Origin: USA. 107 min. Rated: R. With: Sandra Bullock, Don Cheadle, Matt Dillon, Jennifer Esposito, William Fichtner, Brendan Fraser, Terrence Howard, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, Thandie Newton, Ryan Phillippe, Larenz Tate, Nona Gaye & Michael Peña.
Writer Paul Haggis (Million Dollar Baby) drew impetus for his directorial debut from a car
jacking he experienced, at gunpoint, after leaving a video store in his
hometown of Los Angeles. Crash begins in the present day at the site of a
crime scene and flashes back to the events of the days leading up to
the incident. Sandra Bullock and Brendan Fraser play an upper class couple -
he's the L.A. district attorney - who is car jacked by two black men (Larenz
Tate and Chris "Ludacris" Bridges). This occurrence is the catalyst that
sets off the collision of strangers who are as different as they are the
same. Bullock, in a thankful departure from anything congenial, is
immediately suspicious of the two men as she first passes them on the
sidewalk. Her mistrust is confirmed and the subsequent tirade she unleashes
on her Hispanic maid and a young Latino locksmith is graphic and shocking.
Likewise, the abuse Terence Howard and Thandie Newton's characters undergo
at the hands of a racist cop, (Matt Dillon, who gives a riveting
performance) is so horrifying that you'll feel compelled to either turn away
from the screen or hurl something at it. And the always praise-worthy Don
Cheadle is a police detective having an affair with his "white girl" partner
(Jennifer Esposito) and who finds
himself trapped in a sticky political situation involving the D.A. and a
police cover-up.
Compellingly told, Crash is an unflinching and mesmerizing drama about
the way the complicated aspects of race permeate our everyday life. With a
talented ensemble of familiar and famous faces, Haggis uses each actor, some
in ways that are unexpected, to tell individual stories that converge in one
way or another by the film's completion. Though there are multiple story
arcs and it would be easy for some characters to become lost, Haggis
successfully layers each tale and gets to the heart of each person. The
still baby-faced Ryan Phillippe, for instance, turns in a surprisingly
mature and pivotal performance as a young cop repulsed by his partner's
racism, but who is not immune to its reach. No one or ethnicity is left
unscathed. Crash forces us to take a look at the way we interact with
each other and how intolerance is not reserved for "others." It will
certainly be one of 2005's top films. Tanya Chesterfield
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