Highly Overrated But Still Good
The movie's not perfect, but it sticks the landing of its message. It was engaging - thrilling at times - and I personally thought it was a great time.
View MoreThere is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
View MoreStrong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
View MoreBut the world isn't a perfect place and the only things ever swept by Clint Eastwood's follow-up to "Unforgiven" are these futile academic observations... the underrated masterpiece flies higher than that. And I'm beginning to detect patterns within 'Eastwoodian' characters. Antihero is too formulaic a term to encapsulate the levels of human depth they usually reveal. To put it in less fancy words, there's the idea that doing something bad doesn't make you bad, while never doing anything wrong doesn't make you a saint either. Maybe it's all about trying to be better or make the world, a better, if not perfect, place.And this is sweetly captured by the relationship between Butch, wonderfully played by Kevin Costner, and Philip (T.J. Lowther), a 8-year old boy, raised by a devout Jehovah's Witness mother. Philip will find more exhilaration and freedom as a hostage he never truly was than as a child he never truly was either. Butch offers Philip the kind of childhood he was deprived from... partly because of the very man who chases him, Texas Ranger Red Garnett, played by Clint Eastwood. Once again, the veteran actor masters the art of silence that speaks volumes. And more powerfully than revelations or action, we know the man from his reactions toward his travelling companions, a young criminologist with a more modern approach (Laura Dern) and a detestable trigger-happy sharpshooter (Bradley Whitford). Red doesn't act much in this film, maybe because some actions he ended up regretting suddenly resurfaced. The wounds of the past are the point of convergence of these two narratives.And it's noteworthy that the film is set in Texas in 1963 and often alludes to Kennedy's upcoming visit and the election year. This contextualization brings an odd feeling of impending doom, that the future's uncertainty can be more difficult to handle than the past's definitiveness. For instance, when Butch and his mentally unstable cellmate (Keith Szarabajka) escape from jail, a man is killed in the process. Eastwood keeps it off-screen, it's unlikely that Butch is the killer, but we don't need the empathy to work so early.It's possible that Butch isn't the killing type but in Eastwood's universe, certainty is one luxury we can't afford. Sometimes, it takes a hostage taker to set you free or a criminal to straighten you out, but sometimes, you just can't tell. What we see though is that Phillip is a fatherless kid and Butch an adult whose abusive father made him took the wrong path. We can all agree that childhood can shape one man's future for better or worse. We can't change the past but maybe this capability to 'regret' is the box that contains the raw diamond of humanity. But once again with Clint Eastwood, you can't tell what might happen. Child abuse is perhaps the one crime that Butch can't tolerate and in a heartbreaking scene where he finds out his host slaps his kid and treats him like dirt, a button was pushed and then he takes a decision that totally derails the journey. Screenwriter John Lee Hancock never paints a black and white morality, it portrays humanity as a world made of intricate interactions, where we owe a little bit of ourselves to persons of various degrees of goodness... a well-intentioned law enforcer affects a kid's life negatively, a criminal allows a boy to grow up nicely."A Perfect World" is one of these films that seem so simple yet so affecting, it follows a straightforward narrative, an escape, a chase but then a series of unpredictable steps, some comedic, some dramatic, turn the experience to something extraordinarily truthful to life. It reminded me of a film like "The Defiant Ones" where two fugitives depended on the kindness or the selfishness of people who crossed their paths and ultimately became better persons. "A Perfect World" is a good experience in the sense that the people in this film try to act for the better, to be better, or just preventing the worse. It's interesting that the film started with Halloween. "Trick or treat?" ask the kids, as if they summarized in one simple sentence the idea that you either treat a kid well or end up regretting it. Philip wasn't mistreated by not being allowed to play with his friends, but Butch gave him a loophole to the world and allowed him to widen his scope and realize that the world didn't revolve around the austere teachings of his mother, and the belief in a perfect hereafter.Now I won't spoil the film but the last line is perhaps the truest that could be ever said: "I don't know". Who knows anyway? Some persons just don't know and only act according to what they think is the right thing, like Red did with Butch, like Philip's mother, like several characters in Eastwood movies. Some of them actually know they do the wrong things and get their comeuppance or at least, an ultimate warning, maybe they're the closest to 'villains' in Eastwood's movies.But "A Perfect World" is too deep for its own good, having been ignored by the awards, especially Kevin Costner who proves that when being given the perfect role, he can act his way out. It is certainly his most brilliant performance, elevating him to an almost-equal to Eastwood. I'm not kidding, these men love America and embody levels of goodness that transcend the ways of the law. Both are somewhat losers but like a poet like Huston would have painted them, which means that in a perfect world, they would be winners.And if there's anything we learn from Clint Eastwood is that the world isn't perfect, but as his friend Morgan Freeman would say, quoting the writer, it's still worth fighting for... who knows? Eastwood might be the Hemingway of American Cinema, the last Mohican of a dying breed of artists.
View MoreThere are certain movies that leave you thinking about it. Many times. Scenes keep crossing your mind. This is one of those! The story begins and ends with the same shot. If the beginning makes you curious the ending leaves you heartbroken. And Irony. When the little boy, Phillip, has the best chance of running away, he decides to accompany Costner because he stole a Halloween costume. He finds those pleasures of life in the company of his kidnapper which in his mother's he never did. Costner himself, when rebuking young Cleve's father for assaulting the child, makes an enemy out of himself. His repugnance for child-beaters stands in stark contrast with his own methods. The duality hits you in the face. Something, Buzz is unable to withstand. Like all Eastwood movies this too is a slow paced drama. The director effectively communicates that not all criminals are born, some are created. There can be niches for love and affection in them too. Certain circumstances can make those reservoirs flow. Time and again, Clint Eastwood keeps coming up with a gem of a story. Don't go by the rating. This one is not to be missed.
View MoreI've watched this movie for the first time in 2017. Maybe the movie was great to watch in the 90s but nowadays it really doesn't make any sense. The relationship between Cosner and the kid just doesn't make any sense at all. There are also some scenes completely wrong like the mobile home driving alone for way too long or the kid braking the car just before hitting Cosner. Some scenes are unexplained like were 5 men and one women slept since there is not enough space to spend the night in the mobile home. I love Eastwood but this movie is a pure waste of time. And by the way, you can guess how it ends after 10 minutes so there's no point in watching it.
View MoreKevin Costner is a pretty likable guy. Even when he's an escaped convict who kidnaps a child. While Perfect World isn't a comedy, it's hardly a drama either. Costner kidnaps T.J. Lowther, and practically from the get-go, they act like bosom buddies. Only once does this kid ask to be taken back to his family, which I found a little confusing. He's been kidnapped by a gun-waving convict, and he bonds to him as a father figure. But, since the boy's father isn't in the picture, I guess that might be the point of the movie.Clint Eastwood (who also directs) is the cutie-pie cop trailing Costner, and Laura Dern is absolutely adorable as the federal agent assigned to help him. Her Southern accent is very charming, and they make a very cute on screen couple, whether or not romance enters the plot.No one's character is really developed or explained. Costner is obviously a bad guy, but he fathers this kid for no reason. Despite teaching the boy to steal, con, lie, and run from the police, he's supposed to share a special "aw shucks" bond with him? The kid interrupts Costner when he's about to get lucky, but instead of shooing him away or yelling at him, he says goodbye to the woman, gets back in the car with the kid, and tells the impressionable boy that he was in love with the woman (a waitress he only knew for five minutes). Is he trying to teach the boy good or bad things? I wasn't really sure. All in all, it's a pretty predictable movie, but it's not a terrible one.
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