Guilty Pleasures: Southland Tales

By Samuel Hoelker

November 18, 2010

Everyone wants a sofa by the sea.

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Is this poor writing? I don’t believe so; I think it’s fascinating. Kelly has created such a strange world that can’t really be shown in one film (or even the three graphic novels that precede it chronologically), and he gets from point A to point B any damn way he wants. Although I’ve seen it multiple times, and was too flabbergasted the first time I saw it, I think that Southland Tales’s layers can be deciphered on one viewing, without the aid of the Internet. One will just have to not be distracted by all of the crazy, awesome, or hilarious (usually all three) minor aspects of the film.

Hell, one of the funniest moments of the film is when a police car’s window rolls down and we see a cop…played by Jon Lovitz! Moments like that are what make Southland Tales great, although they can take the audience out of the film just long enough to lose their grasp on the situation. If you miss a beat of Southland Tales, it’s hard to find your place again. That’s why I think Southland Tales works great as a multiple-viewing film: you’re too busy noticing the kid from Thumbsucker shooting a bazooka on top of an ice cream truck to truly grasp everything that’s occurring, yet you’re intrigued enough to want to see everything you missed. That’s how I experienced Southland Tales, at least.

Kelly’s really talented at directing actors, as well. Just about all of the acting is one note short of campy, which is about in line with the rest of the film. Does Kelly want us to think that The Rock’s delivery is stilted and strange, or is it actually how The Rock acts? Is Senator Bobby Frost’s speech so much like Bush’s for a deeper reason? Is the line “We’re taking the ATM machine with us to Mexico” supposed to be funny? The acting is so strangely done that it’s almost unsettling.




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The acting, though, fits perfectly in the world that Kelly has created. It’s 2008 and the election’s only swing state is California (which seems quite odd, but as I’ve stated earlier, Richard Kelly does what Richard Kelly wants). A few years prior, there were terrorist attacks in El Paso and Abilene, TX, leading to incredibly strict security measures in the US (Visas are required for interstate travel). In addition, Baron von Westphalen (Wallace Shawn!) has created a new kind of energy called “Fluid Karma,” which is self-sustaining, as well as some sort of drug. The tone with which this is all dealt is borderline-deathly serious with a tinge of self-mockery, which fits the film well; the confusion with the tone mirrors the confusion within the film.

Any writing about Southland Tales has to mention the musical number in the middle of the film. In my anticipation leading up to its 2007 release, I obsessively checked the IMDb page, whose synopsis only mentioned that it was a musical during an Independence Day weekend heatwave starring The Rock. Would The Rock be singing? Would there be picnicking during the songs? I can’t say I was disappointed, though, when I found out that the only musical number was Justin Timberlake lip-synching The Killers’s “All These Things That I’ve Done” in an abandoned arcade. What does it mean? Only Richard Kelly knows. The best conclusion I could draw from it is vaguely anti-war, which the film is overall (Kelly has said that he thinks that soldiers are pimps [the good kind]).

When Southland Tales was shown at Cannes, everyone hated it and Kelly had to cut about 20 minutes off. Assuming that the Cannes version was overall similar to the theatrically released version, I’m surprised that anyone would want it cut. Kelly creates a strangely awesome world in Southland Tales whose confusion is its main draw. Its layers may not always make sense, but its ambition is so high that it’s pretty hard not to be fully engaged with it.

I’m proud to love Southland Tales.


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