Newsnight Review discussed Kevin Spacey in Alan Parker's The Life of David Gale.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review)
MARK LAWSON:
Paul Morley, he is trying to do at least two
things here - a kind of thriller and a moral
debate film. Does he succeed?
PAUL MORLEY:
He fails in both, to such an extent that I am
going to announce it's the worst film ever
made. It annoys me so much. It makes me
realise how I only like Kevin Spacey in a
film where he limps. It's a bit like the Julie
Roberts melodrama - it's like that all the
way through. Parker used appalling
cliches. A train stops a car achieving its
target, for example. When Kate Winslet,
who I believe is Madonna - she looks so
much like her - when she's going to
possibly save Spacey's life. What lets her
down is her car overheating. Parker flags
that at the beginning of the movie. It
doesn't seem to be a movie against the
death penalty, but a big, grand warning
never to hire an American rental car. Alan
Parker is an absolute hero for going out
and promoting this with a straight face.
LAWSON:
Jeanette Winterson, he is trying to do
something difficult here, possibly brave
some would say. He is supposedly making
a film about the death penalty. Three-
quarters of Americans supposedly believe
in it.
JEANETTE WINTERSON:
Half the Americans believe in the devil as
well, so it's pretty nerve-wracking. It's
leaden. It feels more like a documentary
than a fast-moving thriller. I have a big
problem, which is that there are four girls
and four boys in this. The boys are all
heroes. The unconscious
message about women is very disturbing,
whereas the men came off extremely well.
EKOW ESHUN:
It's a cynical film. It purports to be about
the death penalty, against the death
penalty. But when you think of good
movies about it, something like Dead Man
Walking, that's made with conviction. All
the things you are talking about here are
put in as commercial gestures. There is a
tension here. An attempt to create a
message movie, and also to create a
commercial thriller. The tension is entirely
unresolved, because all of it, as the film
progresses, is more and more like a thriller.
It abandoned the high ground and morality
fairly fast and turns into a conventional,
generic, quite cynical, ugly film. I found
that depressing.
MORLEY:
A hangover from when George Clooney
was involved in it and they were tailoring
it for that. It was wonderful when Spacey
was menacing in small parts, but he is now
almost making a dramatic equivalent of
Robin Williams in his choices.
WINTERSON:
It fishes down the middle between what it
wants to say and how it achieves it, and the
two sides don't synthesise at all.
LAWSON:
Some people said it's a film against the
death penalty. Without giving away the ending, it's
so preposterous that I suppose someone
like George Bush would say, "If someone
did something like that, it proves the
system is wrong," but they would never do
that.
MORLEY:
This is what makes me so angry. It's so
badly cocked up, you are left livid, it fails
on every level. As an entertainment, on all
levels.
ESHUN:
It uses the death penalty for commercial
ends. Ultimately, it's about entertainment,
not really about a message. It doesn't have
anything to say.