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Unbelievable
Unbreakable Writer and director of The Sixth Sense, M. Night
Shyamalan, is back with a film equally as engrossing, well-paced
and seductive. Unbreakable's main downfall, perhaps, is
that it follows hot on the heels of such a smash; as such, it has
an impossible lot to live up to. Expectations aside, however, and
Unbreakable holds its own as a beautifully spare,
melancholy and well-crafted film. The first scene opens with security guard David Dunn (Bruce
Willis) chatting up a woman on a Philadelphia-bound train;
despite his politeness, she's spooked and changes seats. There's
a sense of spying given to the scene, which is framed between the
two seats in front of them; it's a device that's employed on
numerous occasions throughout the film. Willis is again in a role to which he brings complexity and
restrainedness; he's likeable and at the same time he's not,
having attempted to cheat on his wife.
The train later crashes, and Dunn is the sole survivor. Things
aren't going well in his life: he's having major marital
problems; life just doesn't seem satisfying; and now he has to
somehow give meaning to his strange escape from death. Then a note left on his windscreen asks him how many days he
has been sick in his life. He tracks down the writer of the note,
Elijah Price (Samuel L. Jackson), who has suffered from a disease
that makes his bones incredibly brittle from birth. Elijah's
mother encouraged him to participate in the world by getting him
to read comics. As an adult comic book art-dealer, Elijah has
come to develop a theory: that if someone as fragile and close to
death as he is exists, perhaps there is someone at the other end
of the spectrum, someone invincible, a real-life version of a
superhero. Dunn resists, but slowly comes to realize that there is truth
in what Elijah says. One of the most genuinely amusing scenes in
cinema here in Bangkok for some time has to be when Dunn and his
son Joseph (Spencer Treat Clark) realize together that he does
possess incredible strength. "You know what to do if something
goes wrong," Dunn says a he lifts a remarkably heavy weight over
his chest. "Get Mom," replies Joseph solemnly. As Dunn begins to accept his potential power - and dons an
over-the-top hooded jacket that reads 'Security' across the back
- Dunn's wife Audrey Dunn (Robin Wright Penn) decides that she
wants to give their marriage another go. Her performance is as
faultless and riveting as that given by the other actors, but
their relationship is perhaps not as fleshed out as is it could
be. She remains unaware of his newfound powers, while an
emotional Joseph is let in on the secret. The inevitable twist is not as satisfying as that offered in
The Sixth Sense. While The Sixth Sense offers magic
that's unbelievable, Unbreakable offers a neat twist that's both
clever and unbelievable. Without the magic, audiences might not
be as willing to suspend their disbelief - it's devastating news
they're given rather than anything uplifting. Forget The Sixth
Sense though, and Unbreakable is a mournful and
haunting film in its own right. |
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All material copyright Samantha Brown 1997-2005 | ||||||||||||||
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