06 March 2015
THE WORLD IS A FINE PLACE, AND WORTH FIGHTING FOR
A review requested by Mike Gibson, with thanks for contributing to the Second Quinquennial Antagony & Ecstasy ACS Fundraiser.
I shall start with a personal anecdote, since who doesn't love personal anecdotes from nominally objective arts critics? But "a man goes to the movies. The critic must be honest enough to admit that he is that man." And when the man now writing was a good deal younger - a boy, really, though I mightn't have thought it at the time, all of 18 and new to college - he saw for the first and until very recently the only time, David Fincher's 1995 breakthrough Se7en, the film with which that music video director proved that, absent the clusterfuck of studio intervention that made Alien³ such an unimpressive feature debut, he had the stylistic chops and tight control of tone required to be a Real Auteur. And upon this first viewing of Se7en, Wee Young Timmy Brayton was absolutely flattened - just so damn thoroughly unnerved and wrecked by it that, for 14 years and change, it was the one and only title on my list of movies So Good I Can Only Bear to Watch It Once. Now, obviously, the film's not that extreme, and in the intervening decade, I've watched many films that are far more punishing in every way, and for some years now, I've supposed that in this case, memory was exaggerating the titanic dreadfulness of how cruel and unabating the film was, and of course that turns out to be the case. Still, the point remains: it takes a hell of a movie to trigger that kind of response. And yes, Se7en is absolutely a hell of a movie - and a movie of Hell, I might idly throw out there, if I wanted to engage in feeble wordplay.
The film's impact has been seismic; along with The Silence of the Lambs, four years earlier, and maybe we could argue TV's The X-Files, which premiered in 1993, it's one of the creative works in what we might, for want of a clear term, call the Horror Cop genre: police procedurals which appropriate all they can from the gore and terror-driven horror genre (a genre that was, I suspect not coincidentally, in abeyance in the first half of the 1990s), to the point that they start to blur definitional lines. Silence, I think, is a horror film; Se7en, ultimately, probably isn't, but it's right there. And though these two films are, by themselves, almost the entire history of this experimental subgenre, their influence has been felt absolutely everywhere in the two decades since the latter film's premiere - Holy Mother of all things sacred, Se7en is 20 years old, when the fuck did that happen? - in less pure form. Take some of the horror back out, and you have the glut of TV procedurals in which grim-faced cops sorrowfully poke at the most hellaciously violent and often sexualised crimes, depicted with all the brio that standards and practices will permit. Go the other way, and lump in enough horror that it's impossible to deny that's what's going on, and you basically have Saw (a film whose aesthetic does not at all hide its theft from Se7en) and all its little torture porn offspring.
That's a pretty shoddy legacy, but let's not permit it to devalue Fincher's great achievement in anyway, which after 20 years - 20 fucking years - and countless copycats, hasn't lost any of its unnerving, devastating nihilistic power. It is a cruel, bitter movie, undoubtedly the film that most plainly expresses the theme common to all of Fincher's work, that humans are basically prone to cruelty and stupidity, and all decent people can do is try to not give into that impulse. And one may or may not respond to the bleakness and nihilism of that message - and if any English-language film can be confidentally described as "nihilistic", it's Se7en - but it's impossible to deny the potency and artistry with which Fincher and company execute it here. I do not hide my frequent lack of affection for the director's work, but this is a great piece of cinema, the kind that works on such a visceral, primal level to communicate its thoughts and feelings that quibbling with it like pissing in the wind. It is a powerful, brutalising thing, and maybe the most totally successful thing Fincher has directed; alongside Zodiac (which I'd call his best movie; it's also probably his most clinically intellectual), it suggests that whatever he does, Fincher should probably always make movies about serial killers.
The plot of the film, inspired by screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker's miserable stretch of time living in New York (it's a bit remarkable how not at all impressive Walker's subsequent career has been, when he's every bit as important for the film's impact as the director), is straightforward enough: in an unnamed city where it almost always seems to be raining, and which ends up even filthy after the rain than before it, Detective Lieutenant Somerset (Morgan Freeman) is in the last week of his employ with the police department, and is to spend the next seven days (the title has a double meaning!) showing the ropes to new transfer Detective Mills (Brad Pitt), who is more or less going to end up his replacement. On day #1, they find an appalling murder scene, where a man was tortured to death by being forced at gunpoint to eat till he burst; this turns out to be the first in a series of killings inspired by the seven deadly sins - gluttony, lust, wrath, sloth, pride, envy, and greed. As the two men investigate, the gulf between their respective worldviews begins to inform everything about how they respond to the ugliness and savagery of these crimes: Mills's conviction that right will out, and that the universe favors justice drives him towards passionate anger, while Somerset's work-honed certitude that there is more wickedness than the good people of the world can ever hope to combat leaves him doggedly pursuing clues with a detachment that's like depression, if only depression could somehow be even sadder.
The actual meat of the film is pretty easily gotten through; the content, for the most part, is a more or less literal tour of Hell. Not for nothing does the film heavily emphasise Dante's Inferno: like that poem, Se7en functions as a story of one wise old man guiding a younger, more optimistic soul through several tableaux vividly demonstrating the consequences of worldly sin. The difference being that, in Dante, the sins are against God, while in Se7en, they are punished only by one deeply broken human, played by - is a 20-year-old movie still covered by spoiler alerts? Because it's a huge spoiler - Kevin Spacey in the best work of his career, granite-faced as he spits out his bile in brittle, inhuman tones. There is definitely no God in the universe of Se7en; only psychopaths. And instead of the message "these are the punishments you might face if you misbehave", the lesson is the infinitely bleaker "these are the punishments you might face for having the misfortune to have been born".
Walker's script is insistently symbolic without being overbearing about it, and it's surprisingly willing to stop the narrative development entirely to favor scenes of the two leads talking about morality and philosophy, but the thing never drags. A lot of credit for both of these things must go to Freeman and Pitt, who might fall into the ordinary "sagacious black cop/fiery white cop" dynamic, but build such extreme personality into the parts that everything they say and do feels far more an extension of character than the requirement of the screenplay (it might be my favorite Freeman performance; it is, anyway, the one where he engages with his then-nascent "wise old black man calmly intoning advice" persona in the most interestingly off-kilter ways). And certainly, the quality of the filmmaking is at an extraordinary level: beyond Fincher's direction, there is the matter of Howard Shore's erratic, scraping score, Darius Khondji's cinematography, with its overtones of infection and dessication, and Richard Francis-Bruce's tightly controlled editing, all slow build-up to explosions.
It's an absolutely top-shelf thriller first and foremost; a movie that uses its nervy central gimmick as a great spine to pose the question, "so what happens next?" before plunging us through one of the most raw-nerve mysteries of its decade. The film is propulsive in the exactly the same gestures that it's nauseating and distressing. Hell, that's basically the thesis statement presented in the film's enormously influential opening credits, which combine punchy cutting and a thick visual sense of moral rot and so set the entire film off on the footing it will pursue forever after. Exciting on the one hand; immensely unpleasant on the other. It is a desperately involving and watchable film for something so absolutely starved of joy; it makes the expression of total nihilism vividly cinematic in a way that no other American film I can immediately call to mind has ever even attempted. It is not the kind of film I can honestly say that I could love, let alone do love; but I don't suppose I could possibly admire it any more than I do, for its absolute commitment to tone and the excellence of its construction in every scene and every frame.
I shall start with a personal anecdote, since who doesn't love personal anecdotes from nominally objective arts critics? But "a man goes to the movies. The critic must be honest enough to admit that he is that man." And when the man now writing was a good deal younger - a boy, really, though I mightn't have thought it at the time, all of 18 and new to college - he saw for the first and until very recently the only time, David Fincher's 1995 breakthrough Se7en, the film with which that music video director proved that, absent the clusterfuck of studio intervention that made Alien³ such an unimpressive feature debut, he had the stylistic chops and tight control of tone required to be a Real Auteur. And upon this first viewing of Se7en, Wee Young Timmy Brayton was absolutely flattened - just so damn thoroughly unnerved and wrecked by it that, for 14 years and change, it was the one and only title on my list of movies So Good I Can Only Bear to Watch It Once. Now, obviously, the film's not that extreme, and in the intervening decade, I've watched many films that are far more punishing in every way, and for some years now, I've supposed that in this case, memory was exaggerating the titanic dreadfulness of how cruel and unabating the film was, and of course that turns out to be the case. Still, the point remains: it takes a hell of a movie to trigger that kind of response. And yes, Se7en is absolutely a hell of a movie - and a movie of Hell, I might idly throw out there, if I wanted to engage in feeble wordplay.
The film's impact has been seismic; along with The Silence of the Lambs, four years earlier, and maybe we could argue TV's The X-Files, which premiered in 1993, it's one of the creative works in what we might, for want of a clear term, call the Horror Cop genre: police procedurals which appropriate all they can from the gore and terror-driven horror genre (a genre that was, I suspect not coincidentally, in abeyance in the first half of the 1990s), to the point that they start to blur definitional lines. Silence, I think, is a horror film; Se7en, ultimately, probably isn't, but it's right there. And though these two films are, by themselves, almost the entire history of this experimental subgenre, their influence has been felt absolutely everywhere in the two decades since the latter film's premiere - Holy Mother of all things sacred, Se7en is 20 years old, when the fuck did that happen? - in less pure form. Take some of the horror back out, and you have the glut of TV procedurals in which grim-faced cops sorrowfully poke at the most hellaciously violent and often sexualised crimes, depicted with all the brio that standards and practices will permit. Go the other way, and lump in enough horror that it's impossible to deny that's what's going on, and you basically have Saw (a film whose aesthetic does not at all hide its theft from Se7en) and all its little torture porn offspring.
That's a pretty shoddy legacy, but let's not permit it to devalue Fincher's great achievement in anyway, which after 20 years - 20 fucking years - and countless copycats, hasn't lost any of its unnerving, devastating nihilistic power. It is a cruel, bitter movie, undoubtedly the film that most plainly expresses the theme common to all of Fincher's work, that humans are basically prone to cruelty and stupidity, and all decent people can do is try to not give into that impulse. And one may or may not respond to the bleakness and nihilism of that message - and if any English-language film can be confidentally described as "nihilistic", it's Se7en - but it's impossible to deny the potency and artistry with which Fincher and company execute it here. I do not hide my frequent lack of affection for the director's work, but this is a great piece of cinema, the kind that works on such a visceral, primal level to communicate its thoughts and feelings that quibbling with it like pissing in the wind. It is a powerful, brutalising thing, and maybe the most totally successful thing Fincher has directed; alongside Zodiac (which I'd call his best movie; it's also probably his most clinically intellectual), it suggests that whatever he does, Fincher should probably always make movies about serial killers.
The plot of the film, inspired by screenwriter Andrew Kevin Walker's miserable stretch of time living in New York (it's a bit remarkable how not at all impressive Walker's subsequent career has been, when he's every bit as important for the film's impact as the director), is straightforward enough: in an unnamed city where it almost always seems to be raining, and which ends up even filthy after the rain than before it, Detective Lieutenant Somerset (Morgan Freeman) is in the last week of his employ with the police department, and is to spend the next seven days (the title has a double meaning!) showing the ropes to new transfer Detective Mills (Brad Pitt), who is more or less going to end up his replacement. On day #1, they find an appalling murder scene, where a man was tortured to death by being forced at gunpoint to eat till he burst; this turns out to be the first in a series of killings inspired by the seven deadly sins - gluttony, lust, wrath, sloth, pride, envy, and greed. As the two men investigate, the gulf between their respective worldviews begins to inform everything about how they respond to the ugliness and savagery of these crimes: Mills's conviction that right will out, and that the universe favors justice drives him towards passionate anger, while Somerset's work-honed certitude that there is more wickedness than the good people of the world can ever hope to combat leaves him doggedly pursuing clues with a detachment that's like depression, if only depression could somehow be even sadder.
The actual meat of the film is pretty easily gotten through; the content, for the most part, is a more or less literal tour of Hell. Not for nothing does the film heavily emphasise Dante's Inferno: like that poem, Se7en functions as a story of one wise old man guiding a younger, more optimistic soul through several tableaux vividly demonstrating the consequences of worldly sin. The difference being that, in Dante, the sins are against God, while in Se7en, they are punished only by one deeply broken human, played by - is a 20-year-old movie still covered by spoiler alerts? Because it's a huge spoiler - Kevin Spacey in the best work of his career, granite-faced as he spits out his bile in brittle, inhuman tones. There is definitely no God in the universe of Se7en; only psychopaths. And instead of the message "these are the punishments you might face if you misbehave", the lesson is the infinitely bleaker "these are the punishments you might face for having the misfortune to have been born".
Walker's script is insistently symbolic without being overbearing about it, and it's surprisingly willing to stop the narrative development entirely to favor scenes of the two leads talking about morality and philosophy, but the thing never drags. A lot of credit for both of these things must go to Freeman and Pitt, who might fall into the ordinary "sagacious black cop/fiery white cop" dynamic, but build such extreme personality into the parts that everything they say and do feels far more an extension of character than the requirement of the screenplay (it might be my favorite Freeman performance; it is, anyway, the one where he engages with his then-nascent "wise old black man calmly intoning advice" persona in the most interestingly off-kilter ways). And certainly, the quality of the filmmaking is at an extraordinary level: beyond Fincher's direction, there is the matter of Howard Shore's erratic, scraping score, Darius Khondji's cinematography, with its overtones of infection and dessication, and Richard Francis-Bruce's tightly controlled editing, all slow build-up to explosions.
It's an absolutely top-shelf thriller first and foremost; a movie that uses its nervy central gimmick as a great spine to pose the question, "so what happens next?" before plunging us through one of the most raw-nerve mysteries of its decade. The film is propulsive in the exactly the same gestures that it's nauseating and distressing. Hell, that's basically the thesis statement presented in the film's enormously influential opening credits, which combine punchy cutting and a thick visual sense of moral rot and so set the entire film off on the footing it will pursue forever after. Exciting on the one hand; immensely unpleasant on the other. It is a desperately involving and watchable film for something so absolutely starved of joy; it makes the expression of total nihilism vividly cinematic in a way that no other American film I can immediately call to mind has ever even attempted. It is not the kind of film I can honestly say that I could love, let alone do love; but I don't suppose I could possibly admire it any more than I do, for its absolute commitment to tone and the excellence of its construction in every scene and every frame.
16 comments:
Just a few rules so that everybody can have fun: ad hominem attacks on the blogger are fair; ad hominem attacks on other commenters will be deleted. And I will absolutely not stand for anything that is, in my judgment, demeaning, insulting or hateful to any gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religion. And though I won't insist on keeping politics out, let's think long and hard before we say anything particularly inflammatory.
Also, sorry about the whole "must be a registered user" thing, but I do deeply hate to get spam, and I refuse to take on the totalitarian mantle of moderating comments, and I am much too lazy to try to migrate over to a better comments system than the one that comes pre-loaded with Blogger.
"Se7en" really is a legitimate landmark of a movie. As you say, it is immaculate in its construction, and at an aesthetic level alone its impact is still being felt today; that particular look so many Horror and Thriller and Dark Crime movies and shows have, where everything is at once sleek and crisp, and yet simultaneously grainy and worn? I feel pretty confident tracing that particular look back to this movie, which uses it to magnificent effect.
ReplyDeleteIt helps that that same clear care has gone into the script, which manages to REALLY slam me every time even when I should hate it. The whole thing hinges on one of my least-favorite narrative tropes in the world, the Bad Guy who is somehow magically One Step Ahead at all times and in all ways. "Se7en" earns that in a way none of its imitators come even close to, by virtue of giving us protagonists who legitimately feel like they SHOULD be able to catch this bastard. It doesn't cheat by making them seem incompetent or shortsighted; the flaws they both have flow naturally from their characters, and are balanced by actual strengths as Detectives. Likewise, Doe is, as you say, a livewire of a villain; the performance is fantastic, and the writing manages to strike a fantastic balance between "this guy is completely unhinged" and "maybe he has something of a point...." that renders him all the more frightening.
Definitely a modern-day Classic, IMO.
I saw this film for the first time on DVD and liked it, then a couple of years later I bought the remastered blu-ray edition and was floored. A friend of mine describes Fincher's aesthetic and this film in particular as "pop nihilism", which really nails it to me.
ReplyDeleteI don't think there's a single aspect of the film that isn't close to flawless in execution, but the thing the blu-ray release really highlighted for me was how absolutely phenomenal the production design is - to this day, if someone were to ask me "how does production design inform the overall impact of a film?" I would just sit them down with a copy of this movie. I'd love to be able to see it in a cinema one day.
The scene in Se7en that well and truly got its hooks in me was the "This isn't going to have a happy ending" conversation between the detectives. Like reading the pop-up book in The Babadook, it's basically the film, a la Babe Ruth, calling its shot and daring you to do something about it.
ReplyDeleteI love the use of David Bowie's "The Heart's Filthy Lesson" during the closing credits. Much like Leonard Cohen's "The Future" and Bowie's "I'm Deranged" (off the same album, no less) in Natural Born Killers and Lost Highway, respectively, it wasn't written for the film, but it fits so perfectly that it may as well have been.
ReplyDeleteOh, I have no problem calling Se7en a horror film. One word: sloth! *shutters*
ReplyDeleteAs a 40-something man, it is embarrassing to admit that you still sometimes squirm and cover your eyes and look out between your fingers at the screen--this is one of the films that ALWAYS makes me do that, even when I know it's coming. No doubt Fincher derives much satisfaction from that confession...
ReplyDeleteWith regard to Spacey, I very much love a lot of his work, and have a few more "leading" performances that I rate better overall, but it would be dishonest to disagree that his work in the 5 minutes of the final "reveal" are just about as good as it is possible to get.
***KINDA SPOILERY BUT YOU SHOULD HAVE SEEN THIS BY NOW ANYWAY***
ReplyDeleteI was 17 when this came out and it was part of the first handful of R rated movies that I didn't have to sneak into. I was so absorbed that the theater faded away and at one point I was startled to find myself painfully gripping the armrests. It's one of those moments that I've wished I could go back to and experience fresh because it blew my mind so completely.
When True Detective was a thing last year I was sure that Se7en was a huge influence and I loved the show but, ultimately, I was let down by the final episode. It's just so hard for *anything* to nail the ending and still surprise me. Even my 17 year old self had seen it all by that point: the detectives find a way to win in the end and catch the bad guy... blah.
But Se7en really threw me for a loop. I love that John Doe is essentially unbeatable because the way you would normally beat a serial killer in a movie is part of his plan. I can't imagine how anyone could have seen the courthouse scene coming (DETECTIIIIVVESS!!!!); the tension and curiosity never lets up after that point. Andrew Kevin Walker not being particularly amazing after this was a huge disappointment for me. He seemed to tread similar ground in 8MM but it never really worked, and looking at his filmography I wonder where he disappeared to.
The editor, Richard Francis-Bruce, was rightfully nominated for an oscar but lost to Apollo 13. It just seems wrong seeing how perfectly and creatively Se7en flows. There is a moment when Gwyneth Paltrow’s face flashes on the screen that floors me every time. So much is conveyed in that millisecond: You would do the same thing in this situation. I think it would be impossible to convey that any more efficiently. He also edited Shawshank Redemption and … Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone?! What?!
Nihilism combined with excellent filmmaking must be cathartic for me because I can watch Se7en, or the similarly evil-abounds-and-good-guys-can-not-do-shit-themed No Country For Old Men, when I'm feeling depressed and actually come out of it in a better mood.
Thanks for the excellent review, I feel that your library of reviews is somehow more complete now. :)
P.S. Back in the olden days of 1995 we used to need verbal confirmation when a girl we were dating graduated to "girlfriend" status. Knowing this, and having seen Se7en once already, I planted a cardboard box with a note in it asking that very question to a girl I was going to see the movie with that night. We "stumbled upon" it later I couldn’t help but wonder “What’s in the box?!”
I like to think that this was the most creative way that question has ever been asked, even if it was totally creepy in retrospect. Despite that, it did eventually lead to the loss of my virginity so... seems legit.
Agreed on all points brought up in the review. The one small problem I have with this movie is Brad Pitt's performance. Everything else was so well done that his attempted depiction of the young, brash detective comes off as unnatural and really stood out for me.
ReplyDeleteI feel Pitt is a great example of an actor who has greatly improved from his early career to now.
Any thoughts? Or is it just me?
And thanks for the reviews - checking your blog is a daily part of my online ritual.
Speaking as a thirty-something cinephile, Tim has the right of it: this was an absolutely seismic film at the time for me. Before I had seen CHINATOWN, before KISS ME DEADLY, before BONNIE AND CLYDE, this was the film that made me sit up and realize, "Holy shit. I didn't know that mainstream films were *allowed* to be this fucking dark."
ReplyDeleteSetting aside all that has been written about the film's absolutely essentially look and sound, I have to gush for a moment about Freeman and Pitt's performances, which are probably still my favorites from their respective careers. It's a testament to their talents (and the writers) that even the various interlude scenes where they spell out the film's themes explicitly just seem to glide by, never sounding clunky. And it's telling that for all the surreal and horrifying images that the film burns into your brain, I still vividly recall the subtle little character moments, especially in Pitt's performance. When it comes to encapsulating the absolute existential terror of this film, some might think of the "Sloth" victim suddenly gasping back to life, or of "Lust"'s proxy killer shrieking, "I FUCKED HER!," but for me I always think of Pitt's face in closeup when he has John Doe at gunpoint at the climax. The way he *blinks* is great, for God's sake. You can see clear as day in his countenance how the entire paradigm of this hot-headed but noble guy is crumbling in real time, as he struggles to process the truth of What's in the Box and then decide what to do about it.
This one has actually grown on me - which seems to be the reverse of the usual trajectory people take with Fincher movies that aren't Zodiac.
ReplyDeleteWhen I first saw Sesevenen I didn't quite view it much as a horror film, which made me find it overwhelmingly portentous in its mixture of such earnest nihilism and garish set pieces. Taking it as a horror movie those set pieces are more a given, and I find myself much gentler on the grandiloquence of its choice to try and stick a philosophy alongside its "ick gross, oh my god he's still alive!!!" scenes.
You say you're aren't a Fincher fan Tim, but you think his three great movies(Seven, Zodiac, The Social Network) are the same three all the other Fincher fans think
ReplyDeleteI've never liked this movie. Always thought it wore it's Darkness and Nihilism on its sleeve so blatantly that any feint toward real-world meaning just came off goofy. They avoid saying the name of the city a couple times in really obvious ways, it's always raining, all these murder scenes are so artfully dark they just seem fake, etc.
ReplyDeleteThat's what I thought the one time I saw it all the way through a few years back, anyway. I've seen pieces again on TV a few times, and it's just never grabbed me. Something about it seems too fake for me to get invested--which is weird, because if it had been really upfront about it's pulpy elements, embraced it's inner crime comic roots, I might have loved it.
I just think it's trying to say something profound, but I don't buy the packaging for that statement.
And let's not forget the terrific R. Lee Ermey performance. I love it when you see folks you don't expect to show up in a genre film. Hell, even Morgan Freeman's presence fooled me into letting my guard down. And then the film flattened me.
ReplyDeleteAs for "This isn't going to have a happy ending", Gaspar Noe's masterpiece "I Stand Alone" did it so much better.
ReplyDeleteI'm really regretting now that I didn't make a THIRD donation to request that one.
Tim – I find it almost disturbingly eerie how similar your thought processes are to mine – to the extent that sometimes it feels like you're articulating thoughts and opinions that I can't eloquently put into words. Beyond the fact that I share much of your philosophy about film and often your opinions of specific movies, we share similar life experiences as we are almost the same age and I also have been a cancer survivor for a little over 10 years. And now Se7en. I also saw this movie when I was an impressionable undergraduate and it's utter nihilism absolutely destroyed me. I had a really hard time processing why anyone would make such an utterly bleak movie. I have never watched it again. But even at the time I recognized that to make me feel such an extreme reaction the film had to be amazingly constructed. Clearly I still have a lot of feels about this movie so I really appreciate your review, as it helped me sort through some of them. Fabulous job as always.
ReplyDeleteP.S. - My request for the Quinquennial fundraiser is coming – I'm just having such a hard time deciding what movie to choose!
The Sicario review reminded me of this movie, and I just want to say that while I admire the craftsmanship in Sesevenen, its ideology is just so fucking ridiculous. I'm extremely bored by stories about how society is getting worse. Like what universe is this film set in where the world is more violent now than ever before? So much of it is about providing social commentary for an imaginary hyperviolent world, it becomes hard to take seriously.
ReplyDelete