Wednesday, July 31, 2013

The Purge - Movie Review



Imagine living in a society where murder is legal one night a year...

"The Purge" is what can happen in the United States (or anywhere) in the near future, if 'freedom' is taken to the extreme.  Violence and murder are legally sanctioned by law to promote peace and economic health.  Sounds crazy?  I thought so too, when the movie began.
 
But the idea is intriguing none the less.   If we humans are really inherently violent, and that releasing our murderous impulses do result in relative peace and prosperity for the rest of the year, would it be justifiable to hold a 'hunting season' for killing en masse?  We sanction it for wildlife... and war... This movie makes us confront our darkside.  Just how far are we (collectively and individually) willing to go?

The family enjoying a brief calm, before the storm
 
A dystopian horror story set in the home of a relatively average (2.5 kids) upper middle-class suburban family, "The Purge" took me by surprise.  The plot is fairly simple: the father, a successful home-security specialist, 'locks-down' his house like an impregnable fortress for the 'Night of Purging.'  Given how the character is introduced and how the neighbors were acting, you knew right from the start that there was going to be an attack on him and his family that same evening.  The only questioned that remained was how will this attack be perpetrated, given the built-in barricade and state the art security system he installed his house?

The 'fortress' like house in the movie
 
The answer... through the kids.  Without them there would be no story and no movie to speak of.  I happen to have two kids, one girl one boy, exactly like the family in the movie, with roughly the same ages.  I may just have identified with Ethan Hawke's character too closely, but it certainly gave me pause for thought on how I can better educate my own given the moral dilema his character (James Sandin) was faced with.

James Sandin contemplating the fate of his family
 
His daughter was the first chink in his armor.  A teenager going through puberty, she is bored and unwilling to go along with their usual family routine.  Aside from her already stereo-typical teen angst, she has also fallen in love with a boy her father flatly disapproves of.  The boyfriend sneaks in with a gun that same evening to confront her father about their love-- the proverbial 'snake in the nest' dilema.  At first, I thought that the movie was playing towards the 'hostage' scenario I have seen in so many other films, where the boyfriend (or captor) abuses his hosts, maybe even calling in a couple of his friends to join in the fun.  But I was mistaken, it was just an appetizer for things to come.

The pivotal character in the film

The real weak point in their security system is their younger son.  He turns out to be a precocious and highly intelligent kid, who never subscribed to the reality of 'the Purging.'  Astute in everything electronic to the point of successfully building his own security robot, he unlocks their security system to let in a homeless man being hounded by a mob outside of their house.  Of course it did occur to me to question why the boy's sense of morality only surfaced that particular evening, considering that he probably grew up knowing no other reality.  Oh well, nothing is perfect .

Preppies as killers

By harboring the fugitive, the family's fate hung in the balance.  A mob of murderous Preppies (they dress the part) demands the surrender of their intended victim or face destruction.  Prosperous and affluent, these killers are hunting people for fun and games-- their modified or codified version of 'the survival of the fittest.'  Faced with the moral dilema of having someone killed or be victimized themselves inside their own home, made each family member face their own shadows.

 
I do not want to spoil the movie for anyone, so I will not reveal anymore details that can spoil your viewing pleasure.  But I do highly recommend the movie to anyone who loves a good thriller.  The premise of the movie itself makes us confront our own values and moral opinions about murder and self-preservation.  Of course the story is skewed to conform to the filmmaker's own perspective on how the story should end.  But the underlying truth we encountered in the movie is more open ended.  Given the same exact dilema this family faced, anyone of us could have ended up on the other side of the fence.  The movie made me think about my own response if I ever encountered the same problem, and I am certain how I would have played my cards.  How about you?

Here is the official trailer of the film:


--All pictures are property of Universal Pictures