A young man arrives in a snowy small town and seemingly without reason brutally kills an elderly couple in a house. The man, by the name of Drengen, is caught and brought to the high security area of a prison. There the young psychologist Lisbet does an experiment by giving the inmates pets. Among them Drengen, who gets a red furred cat. Another inmate gets jealous during yard exercise time and throws the cat over the fence. Surprisingly Drengen has bonded a lot with the cat and ends up killing the other inmate in anger. The cat is found again. But Lisbet has to abandon the experiment. Since it's the last time with the pets, Drengen gets the cat back to say good-bye. But he claims that it's not his cat. He's convinced that god is speaking to him through the cat and pushing him to commit suicide. Lisbet doesn't know what else to do but involving the priest Helen.
Drengen is totally withdrawn and there's nothing they can get out of him that makes much sense. Helen persuades a guard to lock her in with Drengen in his cell over night. In the night Drengen starts talking and things start to make sense when he begins to talk about his past. You've got to watch yourself to find out what he's telling. The original title of this Danish-Swedish movie by the way is I lossens time.
As you can see above, Drengen is a young man, who is not afraid to use brutal force. So this movie isn't a totally easy one. Apart from those two murders however, the movie impresses by being markedly calm and makes one wonder, even well after the closing credits are over, about topics like blame, forgiveness and belief.
By the way, the source material for this movie was a theatre play The Hour of the Lynx (original title: Lodjurets Timma) by the Swedish writer Per Olov Enquist and is a play for five people, which premiered in April 1988 in Stockholm. The premiere for the German version was in 1992 in Ingolstadt. In 1991 the Hessische Rundfunk (Hessian Broadcast) and Sachsen Radio (Saxony Radio) together produced a radio play version of the theatre play.
Showing posts with label prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prison. Show all posts
Sunday, 25 November 2018
Thursday, 31 May 2018
M&M: Murder In The First
The
movie from the year 1995 is based on true events. More later on just
how true those events really are.
The
plot begins in 1938. It tells the story of Henri Young (wonderfully
played by Kevin Bacon), who is imprisoned as a criminal in Alcatraz,
the famous prison on the island off San Francisco. The first 20
minutes are not necessarily easy to watch. Because Young is in
solitary confinement after an attempted escape and is treated
really badly, if not to say tortured. After several years in solitary
confinement he's released to the general population again. At lunch
time he meets another prisoner, Rufus 'Ray' McCain (David Michael
Sterling), who had been with Young at the attempted escape back then.
Young lunges at McCain with a spoon and eventually kills him, which
in return leads him back to solitary confinement again.
The
young attorney James Stamphill (Christian Slater) is supposed to
defend Young at court for the murder of McCain. The story is actually
told from his point of view. The case seams clear and nothing special
at first. But it takes Stamphill a while to get Young to open up and
in fact speak at all. The dialogue between the two, especially when Young is called a witness and forced against his explicit wish, to
answer questions, are wonderful dialogues with much fun and humour,
which speaks to me a lot personally. A beautiful interaction between
Kevin Bacon and Christian Slater.
After
Henri Young spent years in solitary confinement, it's hardly possible
to speak of resocialisation, and in the end not only Henri Young has
to explain himself at court, but also the guards and especially the
warden have to justify themselves.
In
the movie Henri Young is depicted as almost innocent, caught when he
stole 5 dollars to provide for himself and his sister and otherwise,
apart from the murder of the fellow prisoner, not a criminal. The
reality is a little different.
Henri
Young really existed. As well as the fellow prisoner Rufus McCain.
Together with others they did attempt to escape the prison. That much
is true. (Although according to wikipedia it was a year later than in
the movie, namely in 1939.) But Henri Young was far from innocent.
Even before he came to Alcatraz, the “real” Henri Young was a
convicted bank-robber, who in fact was known to be aggressive with
hostages. So there can be by far no talk of just stealing 5 dollars
to provide for himself and his sister and being caught.
The argumentation in the
movie is that it wasn't Henri Young, who was responsible for McCain's
death, but the detention conditions and prolonged isolation, was
really the argumentation of the defence. I won't anticipate the end
of the court case in the movie, but will say this much: that Henri
Young's life did not end the way Stamphill (Christian Slater) tells.
The truth is that Henri Young was transferred to another prison in
1948. Henri Young's wikipedia entry talks about him “jumping
parole” in 1972. Which means that he was allowed to leave the
prison for while and under certain conditions. But he never came back
from that release and his whereabouts to this day are listed as
“unknown”. Having been born June, 11th 1911, Henri
Young would be over 100 years old, if he is still alive today.
The movie is really good
and worth watching. Even though, as stated above, the first 20
minutes are not nice to watch. It's to be expected that a movie
“based on true events” is often told fairly freely. However I
find the very bold deviation quite frustrating. Especially since the
end tells something that is absolutely not the truth, namely that
Henri Young was in part responsible for Alcatraz being closed. The
truth is that Alcatraz was closed in 1963, which was a good 20 years
after Henri Young had spent time there. Also Alcatraz wasn't closed
because of dubious detention conditions and/or in the end no longer
allowed solitary confinement. There are many documentaries from 2000
or later about solitary confinement. Even though such detention
conditions are just as dubious as they are depicted in the movie back
then. By the way, it is just as wrongful depicted in the movie and
stressed several times that the purpose of Alcatraz was
resocialisation. In the German wikipedia-article there is the
following note (my own translation):
“Alcatraz had 2
purposes:
- Transfer of troublemakers from other prisons, to prevent escape, violence and suicide attempts.
- Transfer from prisoners, to send them back to another prison with better behaviour. There was never talk of resocialisation.” (Emphasis mine.)
By
the way, the reason to close Alcatraz, among others, was that the salt water affected the building
over the years and the maintenance and repair was simply
too costly and extensive. The reason was not at all the conduction of
the prison.
With this generally
good movie, I find it's a pity just how much the facts are twisted,
Henri Young's life as well as the history of Alcatraz. I personally
would have liked the note of Henri Young's disappearance without a
trace, most of all because it would have been closer to the truth and
in my opinion also more positive for Henri Young in the movie as
well. Maybe it wasn't heroic enough for the movie makers. Then again,
the real Henri Young was never a hero from the very beginning anyway.
Labels:
based on true story,
Christian Slater,
Gary Oldman,
history,
Kevin Bacon,
M&M,
movie,
prison
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