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Treasure Island (1999)
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Stephanie Ittleson |
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Scott Kings debut feature Treasure Island ought to be
put into a time capsule so future generations can see all of the bad things that make up
what we call "independent films." Shot in an ultra-low budget black-and-white,
with forgettable actors who are outmatched by their underwritten roles, it chews on many
of the favorite themes of indie cinema: sexual alienation, racial stereotyping, the truth
underlying recorded history, and that mind-numbing perennial, "the question of what
is real."
King has taken the B-grade World War II spy thriller and tweaked it
with an experimental sensibility. Set on Treasure Island, a former naval base in San
Francisco Bay, he tells the story of two American counterintelligence officers, Frank
(Lance Baker) and Sam (Nick Offerman), who are preparing a disinformation campaign to be
launched in anticipation of the invasion of Japan. They plan to fit a corpse with fake
invasion plans and throw it into the bay to be found by the Japanese, and in order to
create a backstory for the body, they must write up love letters, create identity cards,
open phony bank accounts, and so on.
As the two men go about creating their new human being, their
discussions cause them to examine their own lives. Frank is a bigamist married to two
social outcasts: a Japanese woman in hiding from the authorities and a woman whose
mysterious skin ailment has turned her into a hermit. Meanwhile, Sam and his wife pick up
strange men with whom they engage in discomforting three-ways; Sam spends most of his time
in these sessions avoiding eye contact with either party. As the crises in Franks
and Sams lives intensify, the dead man (Jonah Blechman) not only arises from the
dead, but begins asserting himself into both mens reality with odd and increasingly
alarming results.
Although he shot his film with a 1932 Mitchell camera, King didnt
attempt to re-create the feel of the old spy flicks Treasure Island
isnt a spoof. Frank and Sam dont talk like Joe Friday, and the movie is cut
like an experimental film, alternating lightning-quick scenes with takes that are long
enough to melt an iceberg. This is probably all to the good, if only because nothing feels
right when King attempts to replicate old movies in a brief prologue. The prologue
consisting of a fake spy serial episode and newsreel not only doesnt serve
any real purpose, but tonally is at serious odds with everything that follows.
The main body of Treasure Island has the emotionally distanced
minimalism of Eraserhead, and it tries to achieve some of the same hypnotic effects
by letting the camera stare for an eternity at characters who simply return its gaze, or
by having people repeat dialogue in never-ending loops. (Man 1, on his knees looking at
Man 2s penis: "Whats that?" Man 2, coyly: "Whats
what?" Repeat this ad infinitum, and by about the third time around you feel
like screaming out, "Its his schlong, for Gods sake!") In Eraserhead
the static set-ups and Sphinx-like dialogue pulled the viewer into the film and magically
created suspense out of nothing. But in Kings hands the same effects lose this
centripetal motion and become maddening; theyre pieces in a cryptographic parlor
game to which we never get the key.
Treasure Island is composed of a hundred separate inspirations
that never fuse into a single one. We may wonder why were given a view of a deadly
riot that breaks out on VJ Day until we read that King wanted to show what he feels is the
reality behind that famous photograph of the sailor kissing the woman in the street. What
is such a banal not to mention suspect historical insight doing in a picture
like this one? (Its not even much of a riot: it looks like the same ten or fifteen
people running back and forth in front of the camera.) Even some individual flashes of
inspiration, as when a letter we see being typed doesnt match up with the dictation
being read aloud on the soundtrack, lose their luster by going on long after theyve
made their point. Treasure Island is so caught up in its uneven whimsy that
its audience-proof.
- Tom Block