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La télé en a fait des stars.
Mickey et Mallory Knox, un jeune couple, décident de s’embarquer dans une virée sanglante, tuant les gens qu’ils rencontrent sur leur route, eux qui ont été victimes de mauvais traitements de la part de leurs parents respectifs. Leur déchéance à travers les États-Unis est détaillée dans les médias.
Avis de la communauté (10)
It has a very unique style. I feel exhausted after watching this. The editing was almost too much. So much was going on. The cinematography was great. I never felt comfortable. Woody Harrelson and Juliette Lewis were the perfect mass murdering couple. Robert Downey Jr. was great at playing the tv anchor.
"Innocent? Who's innocent Wayne?...it's just murder man. Everyone does it, all God's creatures ...in one form or another...I know a lotta people deserve to die... Everybody got somethin' in their past, some guilt, some sin, some awful secret thing...I think people who deserve to die are those people who are not living in the first place. I think there's a lotta people walkin' round right now who are aiready dead and need to be put outta their misery. The wolf don't know why he's a wolf, and a deer don't know why he's a deer...God just made it that way..." That's wisdom right there!
So daring film for its time. Talking about hard hitting issues such as society's desensitization to violence and the unavoidable role that media has played in it. Spectacle of the violence and the violent ones brings the views, the clicks, the attention, the money, but only if it's framed right. This surrealist masterpiece takes us out of that comfort zone from which we could consume violence safely, it shows us the glimpses of its true cost, that consequences of violence are secondary to the consumer, shows us that the lines between the reality and the media produced spectacles don't exist, and that the media universe has entirely blended in with its once object of reporting. The scene where the journalist starts killing himself is so full of symbolism; it should be absolutely clear that media aren't just a neutral observers and messengers, they create what we perceive as reality. Watching this film I couldn't help but think about Jean Baudrillard's theory of hyperreal, of the real that's more real that reality itself, and of his essential "The Gulf war didn't take place". War propaganda and highly organised media hype gushing for war, especially in the USA, are topics that are unfortunately becoming increasingly more relevant today, and the mainstream media's role, the CNN, Fox, MSNBC, NYT, WP, of being almost more blood-thirsty than fricking Pentagon generals is the phenomenon which must not be overlooked.
Needle drops and gratuitously jarring edits. A bit all over the place.
I know a lot of people see this as a masterpiece, but for me it’s just a mess. Way too chaotic in its style and heavy-handed in its tone. I get the provocative intent, but it never really pulled me in. Honestly, I wouldn’t call it a cult classic—not for me, at least.