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Crash is that most unusual of mass market
movies--one made from a screenplay written on spec by a well-estasblished writer, in this
case Paul Haggis. It's the same route Haggis took with the brilliant Million Dollar Baby: Write the screenplay first,
get a couple of terrific actors interested, and then package the deal. As it is, Crash
was made before Million Dollar Baby, but is only going into distribution now. It
was produced on a bare-bones budget (although it sure doesn't look it) and, despite its
flaws, it is an engrossing, thoughtful film.
Placed in Los Angeles and telling the stories of a group of diverse
characters whose paths cross, Crash immediately calls to mind Robert
Altman's fine Short
Cuts, Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnolia,
and Lawrence Kasdan's Grand
Canyon. All three films capture the uneasy strangeness of L.A--the
diversity of the city's racial and ethnic populations spread out in an urban environment
where people are unlikely to mix, where there's a constant undercurrent of incipient
conflict, where Hollywood dreams more often than not turn into ashes.
Haggis, who also directed, is particularly focused here on both the
broad and the subtle play of ethnic and racial distrust, fear, misunderstanding and
prejudice. The district attorney (Brendan Fraser) and his wife (Sandra Bullock) are
carjacked by a couple of Black thugs and the D.A.'s main concern is that, as a result of
the publicity, he will alienate either the Black vote or the law-and-order voters. A Black
film director (Terrence Howard) and his wife (elegant Thandie Newton) are stopped in their
SUV by a couple of white policemen, one of whom (Matt Dylan) is an unrepentant racist who
turns a frisking of the wife into a sexual molestation and a humiliation of her husband.
The other cop, a rookie (Ryan Philippe), disapproves of his partner's behavior and asks
for a transfer, but gets a hard time from his Black lieutenant who is unwilling to make
waves and jeopardize his career.
A Black detective (Don Cheadle, again delivering a finely modulated
performance) is sleeping with his Latina partner. He calls her Mexican, thoughtlessly
lumping together all Latino identities, and she angrily reminds him that her mother is
Puerto Rican and her father is Salvadoran. Cheadle is dealing with his mother who has
Alzheimer's and Dylan is dealing with his father who is seriously ill. Further incidents
include an Iranian shopkeeper, an Asian couple and Cambodian victims of a slave trade.
Haggis' broad canvas provides the vehicle for him to explore the many
ways that prejudice leads to open conflict. He delivers his intriguing story with an edgy
tension growing out of the frustrations and anxieties of these urban people and he makes
sure to demonstrate that even bigots can be heroes and good guys can go astray. He has a
first rate ear for the way people speak and he also draws first rate performances from the
cast, with the notable exception of Brendan Fraser who is stiff and unconvincing as the
D.A.
But a couple of problems beset the film and keep it from being as
effective as it should be. The script is overloaded with coincidences, one after another,
that undermine the powerful sense of dramatic verisimilitude that Haggis establishes.
Similarly, the glaringly schematic structure (the wealthy Black couple, the wealthy white
couple; the parallel guys with aging parents and the like) further detracts from a sense
of reality. Haggis suggests a touch of magical realism in a couple of spots (snow in L.A.;
a little Black girl with seemingly magical powers), but not enough to transport the film
into the realm of fable. The straddling of styles weakens, but doesn't destroy a strong
film that outshines most of what comes out of Hollywood these days.
- Arthur Lazere