It’s difficult to enjoy a genre movie about government-sanctioned annual murder sprees when every three weeks or so our news is treated to another mass shooting or a real-life tragedy, but horror films and thrillers have occasionally been able to make poetic sense from of a senseless time. In this regard, writer/director James DeMonaco’s “The Purge: Anarchy” at least tries to contextualize his brand of schlock alongside easy metaphors and well-worn, occupy-era allegory.
While
last summer’s surprise horror-hit “The Purge” only hinted at its dystopian sci-fi
conceits, settling closer within the intimate, home-invader sub-genre, this
sequel opens up DeMonaco’s futuristic setting. Rather than being locked into
one location, we travel through the murderous streets, following a handful of
frightened survivors as they look for temporary refuge from the bloody holiday.
Pair number one consists of an inner-city mother and teenage daughter (Eva
Sanchez and Zoe Soul) whose apartment door is kicked in by their sexually
frustrated slumlord. After barely escaping his attack, they run into pair
number two, a young disgruntled couple (Zach Gilford and Kiele Sanchez) whose car dies
in the wrong side of town just before a city-wide alarm sets off the lawless free-for-all.
The only thing keeping these four alive is a stoic police Sergeant (Frank Grillo)
who’s on a path of vengeance, as he stalks the roads in his armored car.
It’s
clear that DeMonaco grew up on movies like John Carpenter’s “Escape from New
York” and Walter Hill’s “The Warriors” and tries to bring the same sense of
unflinching bleakness alongside a broad satire of our current social landscape.
But like other throwbacky horror directors such as Eli Roth and Rob Zombie,
DeMonaco’s films live and die within the borders of their pastiche. As a fan,
he can come up with an exploitation premise that sounds great as a one paragraph
synopsis on the back of a DVD. As a director, he seems to struggle when it
comes to telling an engaging story with characters you might care about.
Neither
Purge is particular memorable or entertaining, given their anarchic concepts,
and unlike the Carpenter film’s they endlessly reference, their dower tone
makes it uncomfortable to revel in the mindless popcorn violence. Likewise, the
ripped-from-the-headlines soapboxing about class wars and wealth disparity
lacks the depth or insight for the film to really work as a think-piece. Instead,
we are treated to a competent TV-level cast wandering around an aimless plot as
they jump from one scenario to another—some of which are mildly rousing, most of
which are poorly staged and severely devoid of the necessary filmic discipline
to garner adequate thrills.
At best,
“The Purge: Anarchy” is a fanboy wish
fulfillment that will make you nostalgic for Regan-era paranoia, at worst, it’s
a philosophically muddy piece of trash-cinema that juxtaposes awkwardly and flippantly
against the kinds of real-world terror and random acts of violence reported
nightly on CNN. Perhaps only time and distance can illuminate the appropriate
perspective to really understand what these movies are trying to say and what
they might be doing effectively. Regardless, in a contextual vacuum, they tease
more than they satisfy.
Grade: C-
Originally published in the Idaho State Journal/July-2014
Originally published in the Idaho State Journal/July-2014