Sucker Punch punches. Fuck. Starting over.
I keep my top five weaknesses to myselfâI handwrite too many duel invitations. But hereâs six and seven: my memory is vapor, and Iâve got a teensy humility problem. What do pride and amnesia have to do with Sucker Punch? Simple. To write these articles, I rewatch Sucker Punch each time.
It doesnât change.
Though my environment does. Iâm wasting natureâs fleeting gifts for Sucker Punch.
Spring is in golden bloom. Itâs Earthâs last embrace before killing us. The local skateparkâs layout almost makes sense, my neighbors are aspiring actresses, and my ass is inside watching Sucker Punch like it hides the grail. Because I canât remember Blonde Marionette no. 2âs name or Google it like an adult.
Right. I see why I forgot: Sweet Corn gets the lines of a Sucker Punch deuteragonist, and reads them like it. Thereâs nothing for an adult brain to retain. Watching Sweet Bean fight for her career is a foolâs choice.
Perfect. Iâm finally self-actualizing. Spring should be earned by directorâs cut. Once Iâve retained a single line of Sweet Tea dialogue, Iâll be strong enough to survive anything.
To recap, hereâs a diagram of reality.
An onion of misery. Not just quality: the toneâs between C-Span and LMG: Enter the Matchstickverse. I suspect the editor needed an all-Exxua diet.
New suckologists might assume the flashy layerâs a break. Not quite: emptiness hides more pain. Dehydration. Starvation. Ramping. I call this stretch of Sucker Punch The Desert. Forty minutes into the directorâs cut, the story stops. It lies flat like Bartleby in Shanghai, leaving us to find our own meaning. What do you think Sucker Punch should be about? A new Wall Street satire could be fun.
In The Desert, they fight zombie Germans. You feel nothing.
In The Desert, they fight a dragon. You feel nothing.
In The Desert, sex slaves dread death. Guess.
Three full premises, reduced to air. Iâve seen Emily Browning and Oscar Isaac elsewhere. They can act. They can say words and make you believe them. They could each, if desired, claim the highest honor in modern storytelling: pushing a shitcoin and fleeing to the Caymans. But some invisible, offscreen, Batman vs. Superman-making force holds them back.
In time, active pain returns. Until then, The Desert regurgitates Babydollâs plan, repeats Babydollâs daydream, and plays action scenes for pacifists. What keeps you awake? Thatâs personal. For some, hope. For me, Dan Campbellâs perfect coffee order. Per The Athletic, itâs about 1420 milligrams of ascension. I can finally see God. We have issues to resolve.
In defense of the pace, itâs a pretty complex plan:
Iâm not the type to care if that makes strategic sense. Just the type to drift every time you repeat it. Repeat it. Turn each step of starting a fire and screaming âATTICAâ into a two-year cutscene that canonically doesnât happen, matter, or not look like shit.
This time, Iâll talk about faces. Thereâs excess action onscreen, but none of it entertains or matters. So weâll start with acting. As Pirate Six in a sixth grade run of Peter Pan and Backflip Guy in multiple dance cults, Iâm well-qualified.
Humans canât save this script. It is, however, an amazing study in crisis responses. You learn how each lead acts in a bunker. Iâve prepared a simple chart to keep track. Iâm pretty sure they use this in theater school.
To start: our main blonde, Babydoll.
Sheâs Jesus, if your pastor wanted to fuck Jesus. Though they call Jesus a charisma fountain, and paint him with an eight-pack. Do Christians want to fuck Jesus? Is it heretical not to want to fuck Jesus? What does Aquinas say about the fuckability of Christ? Is this what the Conclave argues about?
Whether or not Jesus jackhammers the pious, Babydoll inspires actress Emily Browning. To take morphine. She floats through cryptic lines about freedom on 50 CCs of whatever keeps elephants from flipping their shit at the state fair. Her mindâs escaped something dark, like elephants not having load-bearing backs. Your dogâs better suited to carry people than an elephant. They are in torment.
She leads her school well.
The Desert zooms in on Sweet Tea, whoâs as trapped as I am. Sheâs the voice of reason, the most benighted role in spec-fic. Channeling Richard Dawkins on a dragonâs back is a disorder. Sweet Nâ Low doubts Babydollâs plan, since bullets hurt a bunch and Babydoll has the skills of a teenage Gogo dancer. Out of all the apostles, Sweet Baby Rayâs the one with too many pages and not enough insight.
Sour Peaâs also the backup point of sympathy/lust, in case youâre into adults. Her actress (Abbie Cornish) tries. She tries so much. If this geek pandering barrage works out, sheâll have a paid convention seat for the rest of her life.
Nope.
Also, in action scenes she kind of flops around.
Sweet Caroline tags along to protect her sister Rocket, the fifth dumbest nickname today. And doomed. Rocketâs the sacrificial lamb in a film where everyoneâs already born to suffer. Iâve never seen a more doomed character, and I have Victory Gundam on Blu-ray. A show Gundam fans found too depressing, compared to a shiny version of Johnny Got His Gun. Out of all the apostles, Rocketâs the one that got the others killed following Jesusâs plan to burn down Rome. I havenât read the Bible in a while.
Selling that arc falls to Jena Malone, who canât. She sends it and hits a rail face-first.
Then thereâs the Wise Man, courtesy of Scott Glenn. In an inspired intro to trench warfare, he says âTheyâre using steam power and clockworks to keep them moving. So you donât have to feel bad about killinâ em.â I donât think Scott understands those words. Neither do I, because the troops are less steampunk and more nothingpunk.
Heâs there, but he isnât there. Scott reads less from a cue card, and more from memories of better days. Heâs completely zenned outâan admirable response to failure. Iâll try that if people donât like Civil War jokes.
Out of all the apostles, heâs the one rolling on ancient hallucinogens. Paul said some out of pocket shit, so that one.
Back in reality, escort wrangler Carla Gugino spends the whole movie doing the Molotov Cocktease voice.
Grim. Meanwhile, team jobber Blondie (Vanessa Hudgens) is the only brunette, and Snyder doesnât underline that joke. Itâs a fucking miracle. To celebrate, Vanessa shouts, bounces, and dies as requested. And sounds lost every time. Again, not her fault. The scriptâs neurotoxic. Blondieâs first line in The Desert laments the prostitutes that died before her.
Amber (Jamie Chung) is the only brunette, and SnyderâŚah. Shit. So much for small victories. Well, in Extraction Mode sheâs the team pilot. She delivers subaltern ditz lines with eyes that can see the reviews. Hi Amber! It happens. At least voicing Harley Quinnâs fun.
Then thereâs our virtuoso. The soul of the film. A performance that leaves it all on the table.
Bunnymech.
Not a single line of wooden dialogue. Actions with weight. A funny rabbit decal on a mech suit. In a sea of sludge, Bunnymech is acceptable. Amber flies it, so I promoted her from âGun in Mouth.â As for Bunnymech:
Donât say I donât engage. Youâre right, but I have cover and two degrees in semantics. Also: if youâre not a 8th dan weeaboo, youâll fucking hate Bunnymech. Anime poison reached my heart twenty years ago.
That said, Oscar Isaac goes for it. I donât think he even knows this movie sucks. Admirable, unless you value thinky brain stuff.
He dumps normal effort into a speech about knowing something is up with all this hypno-stripping. Including how, if Babydollâs virginity wasnât already reserved, heâd hand out a punitive rape. The competence makes the words worse.
That monologue is a relief, since it ends The Desert. We can finally feel again. Granted, itâs only suffering, but an upside goes here.
Overall,The Desert has endless problems, and watching makes you a cenobite. The core is Snyderâs sudden inability to focus. Thatâs not even a recurring problem of his. He can normally isolate one stupid element, and follow that idiocy from dumbass shot to shot. But he canât lock in on anything here.
Almost anything. Also: our heroes kill Smoughâs dragon baby. They slit its throat for powerups. In case you found something to root for.
How far in are we? Are the credits in sight?
No tears remain.
Iâve compared Sucker Punch to slick and uneven stories, and both seem too generous. This round, in honor of Babydoll, Iâll compare it to another lobotomized film. A ninja waif movie with a script written in red crayon. It even has a desert. But itâs still fun, the action crushes, and like most surgeries itâs better than Sucker Punch.
Enter The Shadow Strays.
More punching from the hero behind The Night Comes for Us (a top-flight The Raid knockoff in a world that needs The Raid knockoffs). Itâs a love letter to stabbing and breakup note to editing. Hereâs a diagram of reality in The Shadow Strays.
Whatâs a shadow stray? A cool-sounding title. And a ninja orphan. Batman would be a shadow stray, if he had the guts to kill. Though murder is bad in The Shadow Strays, except when itâs awesome, which is almost always. Just make sure you do it for free.
Youâre left to intuit that. The introâs more into murder. You might think the opening 20-minute Yakuza purge sets up a Yakuza plot, or subplot, or reference later in the film. Get it together. This is about slick gore, and establishing our heroine 13 as a meat sculptor.
No itâs not, she wipes out. Itâs about establishing 13âs ninja mom as better in every way. She hits the Yakuza with nearly a half-Kiryu in casualties.
In screenwriting, building your lead this way is called a âfirst draft.â
Still, itâs economical. Tension between junior assassin and mother hen only ends one way. One rant after Furies, and weâre already back at the family kumite. The Shadow Strays is a lean ride, clocking in atâŚ
See? Snyder and I arenât the only ones that never stop typing. The Shadow Strays struggles more than it needs to, like its parents think Ritalinâs black tar in a bottle. 13âs arc could be microfiction, but each beat of leaving the group treating her like a murder Roomba gets a half hour.
Itâs a bloated, meandering journey, featuring the slickest violence Iâve seen this spring. The Shadow Strays is more choreographed than written, the way that Sucker Punch is more jerked than shot. If you fear no lawyer you can fire up Premiere, hack off everything that bores you, and make the fan edit of the century.
For murder nerds, the violence has surprising range. Katana duels in the forest flank boxcutter fights in crack dens. And then they remember guns work. While ninja segments go full Hayabusa, scenes in the streets have a Raid grit to them. That division could easily mean something, but doesnât. Every kill in both modes is wild, so I rock with it.
The murder hallways have style for days. You can lean on that when the camera drifts from Babydollâs socks. And while the Teen Girl squad fails to escape Broadway, 13âs two weekâs notice ends in a dead governor. Thereâs a lot of movie after that, because the structure isnât. But it retains precise stabbing and corpse presentation. Artâs where you find it.
Besides, that Motherâs Day duel weâre crawling towards? It kicks so much ass none of my bitching matters. Iâm comfortable telling you to watch The Shadow Strays after shitting on it in every other paragraph, and this one. It fucking rocks. And sucks. But it rocks four times harder than it sucks, and thatâs beyond Babydollâs grasp.
The distinctionâs simple. The Shadow Strays kills and I have no idea what they were thinking. Sucker Punch kills me and I wish I didnât know what they were thinking. The next rewatch might end me.
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One reply on “Upsetting Day: Sucker Punch, Round Threeđ”
These rewatches have to keep going because I get an amazing new movie to check out every time.