Paul Haggis's Crash: First the Bad News
Published July 19, 2005
Because Haggis hasn't thought through what he's dramatizing, Crash comes close to equating the things worked-up people say after car accidents with the cop's sexual assault of the black woman, and the incidents keep piling up and blurring--a hit-and-run, burglary, attempted murder, carjacking, homicide, slave-trafficking. The whole thing tips over into the ludicrous. Once I realized I was playing the game of guessing who was going to die and who wasn't, each new "dramatic" development seemed merely garish, superfluous. The movie wants to be an unvarnished view of bias in one of the country's most racially and ethnically mixed cities and there I was responding the way I would to Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None. About halfway through, my boyfriend said, "This is the kind of movie people will laugh at ten years from now," and I said, "Why wait?"
Ambition can be a bitch. If Haggis had scaled back and shown how prejudice made a few well-intentioned people reach a bad outcome, while broadening his outlook to allow for the possibility of a good outcome and showing some even-keeled people for contrast, he might have avoided the predictable pessimism that raises a camp response. As is, for all its scale Crash has the same limited outlook as House of Sand and Fog, with race and ethnicity at issue instead of a beachhouse.
All the same, a number of the actors do make strong impressions. Sandra Bullock and Ryan Phillippe are both surprisingly brisk and forceful in loud confrontations, and Brendan Fraser does some adept, low-key cartoon comedy as the D.A., a man so important his aides do all his thinking for him, and his wife all his feeling. Even cursed with the problematic role of the Irish cop Matt Dillon manages to be creepy in a precise way--he knows we can read the billboard-sized messages. Best of all is the comic teamwork of Ludacris and Larenz Tate as the weaselly, paranoid, speechifying street thug and his sunny, open-faced partner. In substance, their scenes have some of the overbearing "relevancy" of Spike Lee or John Singleton, but the style is more like Quentin Tarantino--they're a fine mismatched pair of incongruously clownish, sociopathic chatterboxes. Their syncopated patter is the most confident expression of Haggis's uncertain sense of humor about his subject. (Click here for my chapter about Pulp Fiction.)
The startling good news is that the actor's best moments gain a lot from the fluidity of Haggis's moviemaking. Haggis wrote the flea-bitten script for Clint Eastwood's Million Dollar Baby, but his direction of Crash is way beyond Eastwood's competency behind the camera. (Click here for my review of M$B.) It isn't ordinarily the case that successful screenwriters turn out to be more talented as directors.
The single greatest virtue of this overfreighted vehicle is that Haggis keeps the rhythm going as he cuts among the characters and stories, back and forth in time. (He does this much better than Paul Thomas Anderson in either Boogie Nights or Magnolia. And if Haggis is slicker than Robert Altman in Nashville that may have something to do with his tightly-riveted script, which doesn't permit the intuitive looseness that was Altman's great contribution to American moviemaking.) Crash features some surprise sharp cuts when you think you're following one character and turn out to be following another, and the cuts are not only judicious (accepting the dramatic framework as given) but smooth. Perhaps because I rejected the substance of Crash, Haggis's moviemaking made me aware all over again of how much style can do to awaken an audience's senses. Haggis's directing is so secure in its rhythms it kept me alert to the shifts among stories I had otherwise lost interest in.
- Paul Haggis's Crash: First the Bad News
- Published: July 19, 2005
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Art House, Video: Drama, Video: Suspense and Mystery, Video: Urban
- Writer: Alan Dale
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Comments
Sorry. But I think that movies that are 2 years old are mostly fair game as far as spoilers go. It's not like a big surprise in the movie--it starts at the end and then flashes back.
Another amazing review, Alan. I actually enjoyed this review more than your critique on "The Milky Way" which was one of your best, in my opinion. I remembered reading a review from Armond White about Crash (which he panned by the way) and he called it Neil LaBute-lite. Maybe one day I can articulate myself and express why I dislike a certain movie like you. Sigh. One can dream, can't they? Great job, as usual
Jamal Sledge
Hey Jamal,
Thanks for the comment, and for spurring me to write about Crash in the first place. I agree with Armond White about David Denby--when DD calls a movie a masterpiece it generally turns out to be something I can barely sit through. Otherwise, although White is so angry he isn't always clear, I was interested to see that he also mentioned House of Sand and Fog. Thanks, finally, for the high expectations--they make me work harder.
I loved Crash. Saw it tonite and was blown away. I'll think about the points you make about it.
Can't reasonably ask for more than that--that you think about what I wrote. Thanks for writing.
You hit on the heart of it, Mr. Dale.
My impression: Haggis set up all these plots using some very audacious and skilled filmmaking, and the surprises of the film's first half-hour are, indeed, thrilling.
I thought there was no chance that Haggis could keep that kind of excitement going for two hours (especially if he's gonna cram in a lot of self-righteousness about race in the process), and that turns out to be the truth.
But I never would have thought the failure so complete. These stories are wrapped up in as obvious and pandering a fashion as an episode of Fat Albert. AD is so right about the movie just devolving into a plot-driven exercise in who's gonna live or die.
It can't really present a coherent view of race relations because it doesn't have a coherent view. And it also doesn't present a thrillingly incoherent, wild view either, because the film is so beholden to its intended message that no individual plot can be allowed to deviate.
Thanks, Mr. Dale.
Thanks for your comment. I think your last paragraph sums up the source of the movie's incoherence nicely. Haggis's work isn't coherent, but it does grab people viscerally and based on many people's responses to Crash, and to Million Dollar Baby, which Haggis wrote, being grabbed that way is what a lot of people want from movies. This mystifies me, but then I'm not any kind of typical moviegoer.
Me neither, but I'll admit I was grabbed, which was something. I think that's what made the simplemindedness of the plots' resolutions so dismaying.
The impression that I got from watching the film Crash is that big fat happy multiculturalism is a big fat Utopian fantasy. Good movie. About time a Hollywood movie shows some reak truth. Still though, the white characters never really got their chance at redeeming their severely flawed characters by the end of the film like the black characters did.
Anyway, it's all good.
Still though, the white characters never really got their chance at redeeming their severely flawed characters by the end of the film like the black characters did.
I don't know about that - Dillon's character redeemed himself, as did Sandra Bullock's... which character are you talking about that didn't get the chance?
Oh and my sister's question of the movie - what was the symbolism/meaning of the snow in LA?
Don't know if Matt Dillon and Sandra Bullock were redeemed. When Dillon saves Thandie Newton from the car wreck I thought the point was simply to show contradictions within his racism--when it came to the line of duty he was a "hero" regardless of the race of the person he was saving. It struck me as ironic. And when Bullock hugs her housekeeper, it's insulting--she's saying to the woman, in essence, "My life is so fucked up that you're my best friend." Of course, the other characters' redemptions aren't so epic, either. Ludacris, for instance, realizes that he should free the slaves in the van rather than sell them. I don't experience much uplift when a contemporary American characater of any race merely rises to a minimal standard of human decency. (He didn't, for instance, make amends to the couple he'd robbed.)
The snow struck me as ironic, too. It's Christmas in L.A.--where's the peace on earth and good will toward men that's supposed to go along with the snow?
Alan Dale, well stated, and that's exactly how I saw it concerning the white characters played brilliantly by Matt Dillon and Sandra Bullock. Although they might've realized their own misery, they didn't have and on screen catharsis per se. Ryan Phillipe's character never had a redeeming moment, and is portrayed as a killer as well as a poor police officer who was derelict in his duty.
Even the clean cut softie black guy TV director character had his "stand up" defining moment. He helps out a thug car jacker black man and this is portrayed as heroic, but Shaniqua can't help out Matt Dillon's father because Matt's a little hot-headed.
BUT, I didn't expect anything different from a Hollywood film. I didn't expect them to stray from the Political Agenda that only Whites are severely racist while blacks and browns and orientals and gays et al are all just poor little victims....of course, except for brown people from the Middle East.....like the Persian storeowner who was so stereotypically portrayed.
White people and Arabs: The only politically correct whipping boys of the Hollywood controllers.
Thanks for the comment. There is a strong sense of victimhood in Haggis's conception--his entire sense of drama seems keyed to it. I think, however, that his pessimism about "diversity" is more encompassing than you say. Both Don Cheadle and the Chinese woman in the car wreck make anti-Hispanic comments, and isn't it the Chinese couple's van that's being used for human trafficking? (I didn't notice any gays in the movie at all, though I may have missed something.) I think Haggis would agree with you that "happy multiculturalism" is a fantasy, but I think that the rigged series of encounters he gives us is not a convincing way to demonstrate that point, if it is true, which I doubt. There's got to be something in the middle between Crash and its opposite.
I had wanted to see Crash...up until I saw the cast on Oprah. The fact that Terrence Howard seemed to be creating a history as the show went along really bothered me.
I'm still willing to give the movie a go, but only if I can watch it alone and throw things at the TV screen if needed.
I guess I should have noted that I have enjoyed Howard in other movies (Ray, Mr. Holland's Opus, Lackawanna Blues, and even....God forbid, Big Mama's House.) I guess there's still a part of me that continues to hold Biker Boyz against him. Well, that and his appearance on Oprah to promote Crash. Sorry. He's off my list of "must see" actors.
I'm not familiar with Howard enough to go or skip a movie based on his participation. I don't understand what you're saying about Oprah and what he did on that show.
let me ask this - the writer of Crash also wrote Million Dollar Baby? Did those who disliked Crash also dislike that movie for its attempt to address
difficult topics?
let me ask this - the writer of Crash also wrote Million Dollar Baby? Did those who disliked Crash also dislike that movie for its attempt to address
difficult topics?
Hey Scott,
Thanks for the comment, but it begs the question of whether Million Dollar Baby did, in fact, "address" difficult topics. M$B isn't an essay, it's a story, and I would say if anything it exploits, rather than addresses, the difficult topic of euthanasia. And I didn't dislike Crash because it addressed a difficult topic, but because of the way it addressed it. Other people may disagree.
No: the reason I disliked Crash was not because it addressed a difficult topic, but because of the way it addressed a difficult topic. My mom would dislike it simply because it addresses a difficult topic, in fact, she'd avoid it for that reason, but not me.
Ok. Thanks for explaining. I can see your point.
Just read this review. I think this quote:
"From Crash you get the impression that there's no one in L.A. decent enough to learn from Haggis's string of interlocking cautionary lessons."
is one of the best I've read or heard about the movie. 'Crash' is kind of a paradox. A movie that wants to teach us something while at the same time seeming to deny us the ability to learn it. I couldn't put my finger on exactly what it was I disliked about the movie (beyond what many have been pointing out about it being contrived and over-the-top), but much of this review, and in particular the quote above, hits the nail on the head for me. Thanks.
Thanks for the comment, Eileene. Sometimes it seems as if well-meaning people like Haggis are actually nostalgic for the bad old days before the Civil Rights Movement had produced the changes that clear-sighted people see all around, from the local supermarket to the President's Cabinet. I guess their nostalgia is based in a longing for an era when they imagine they'd feel no uncertainty about having right on their side. To me, celebrating the Civil Rights Movement is entirely bound up with celebrating its success in transforming the way we live. "Serious" Hollywood is on the same wavelength as the news media that equate news with bad news and think that good news is not news at all.
You will all enjoy the movie much more if you see the "message" as a mere vehicle for the structure, rather than the much more typical situation of the structure being a vehicle for the message. My interest in racism or diversity is very limited, but I found it a thrilling experience in film. Regardless of the intent of Paul Haggis, it's really a Rubik's cube.
Thanks for the comment, Stewart. I agree, and that was why I ended the review talking about Haggis's moviemaking, which is way above the quality of his writing. In my review, the bad news was the content, the good news was his style. All the same, why couldn't both be of equal quality? You don't have to choose between the style and content with Martin Scorsese at his best (i.e., Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Last Temptation of Christ).
There's another cool film coming out in the Fall '06 called 'The Genius Club' which should really having people talking.
Anyone hear of it?














Thanks for giving away House of Sand and Fog without a spoiler alert.