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Reviewed by Aaron Haynes
Exaggerated
voices, sneering insults, violently angry replies, homoerotic
situations, and lots and lots and lots of penis jokes. I'm not
talking about Generations, by the way -- no, this is something
anyone who's followed the ongoing feud between Ramza and
Doughboy and Thomas Bown should be way too familiar with seeing.
The corpses of effort that could have been put to much greater
use litter the New Releases forum: The Poony Toons shorts,
Killing Ramza Brave, the fake 3DMMers United Magazine
issue....it even partly inspired a new series of spoof movies by
Pogo that capitalized on the Bown/Doughboy/Ramza movie and board
battles (and on occasion actually has interesting and relevant
things to say about them). This has since dissipated quite a
bit, but a formal cease-fire wasn't ever declared. Enter
Generations, written by Ramza and directed by Jalal Ansari. The
direction balances on that precarious "average" category, the
dialogue is often obvious and unsubtle, the jokes, while
relevant to the subject matter, are crude and sophomoric, and at
times the cheesiness of it all threatens to overwhelm you -- but
when you get right down to it, Generations, if a bit awkward, is
a heartfelt, genuine gesture to let bygones be bygones and form
something far more constructive to a creative community:
friendship.
First and foremost, huge, huge congrats to Jalal. The direction
here far exceeded my expectations; he's come a hell of a long
way since Death and Guns. It's never less than competent, with
well-made scenery (the stars during Ne'Zul's cameo are
phenomenal), good if conventional two-shots during conversation
scenes, and some surprisingly great camerawork and angles where
its needed. In the Bown/Ramza/Doughboy saga, Generations trumps
all in terms of direction, standing well above what we'd
consider the norm for joke/hate movies. The enormity of what
Ramza is trying to do and the history associated with a movie
like this often come dangerously close to pushing Jalal into the
background, but when you consider how everything comes together
in the film and consistently stays relevant to what's happened
in the past, remember that Jalal is orchestrating everything.
We begin with something not unlike the opening to Killing Ramza
Brave in terms of story. Bown, Doughboy, and several other
3DMMers are in a (not so) crowded theater watching Ramza's
latest movie. B&D are killed onscreen and the words "Replay 2"
come up. The tone of the movie is set right off the bat; when
even Ramza is aware that an insult war has gone on for a
ridiculously long time, something's gotta be done. Bown and
Doughboy leave the theater not itching to get revenge, but
visibly frustrated that this grudge between them and Ramza won't
die. The logistics of the world they inhabit come into play in a
sequence involving the loss of control of their bodies and many
giant dicks, but rather than being played entirely for 'laughs',
it establishes a sort of continuity with all of the other hate
movies. KRB Revival marks the first time the characters Bown and
Doughboy represent themselves and the character Ramza uses to
represent himself actually meet each other (since no one ever
portrays the target in a hate movie on equal terms with their
own character), and Generations goes one better by constructing
a world that manages to intelligently comment on the nature of
hate movies. The rules are set when Bown remarks that they have
to be careful because Ramza is writing, and therefore painful
things involving dicks are just a personal insult away.
Generations took a lot of guts for Ramza to make. It would have
been much more effective two months ago and beyond, but in terms
of the effort and creative control a film like this takes, the
gesture isn't late. What unfolds is a heartfelt (if unsubtle and
a bit corny) examination of the long, ongoing flamewar, written
by Ramza but from Tom and Matt's perspective. It's easy to miss
the sheer impact of what this means, and a few lines of dialogue
made several runs through my brain before the enormity of what
it meant that Ramza actually wrote them finally hit. There's a
more obvious world-weary, apologetic tone to the movie, but
several zingers are quite easy to miss: When Bown and Doughboy
genuinely try to figure out the "one person who could talk to
Ramza without being insulted", that's Ramza, as the writer,
admitting in a comical way that he's often unfair to people. And
then, in a heightened form of self-parody, an army of giant
dicks chases the two of them down the street, reminding us that
we're in a world created by Ramza that he only has marginal
control over.
Technically, it either lacks polish or has that kind of rough
polish where the quality in each aspect of the film is competent
but rarely excels. Jalal still does have a ways to go to attain
fluid character animation (Doughboy is right that his turns and
falls and whatnot happen too jerkily and don't feel real). And
to be perfectly honest, Ramza sounds almost comatose. It's
occasionally very difficult to hear him, and when it is he seems
to have very little energy. We've heard him act in various
movies before (GITS comes to mind), but here, playing himself,
there's a weird kind of expectation built up for him to be
violently explosive that he doesn't go far at all. This seems
even stranger when you realize that Ramza used exaggerated
voices for Bown and Doughboy (although that was admittedly so
they wouldn't read the script ahead of time, which I think they
did anyway). But the idea is consistent, I guess: they did
establish that this was one of Ramza's movies earlier on, so out
of necessity it isn't going to be impartial. The musical score
is one of his better ones, but the main theme is overused a bit,
starting up at areas where it really isn't necessary, and the
repetition makes it feel really sappy when it needs to be more
effective. But the slips in quality wouldn't be problematic if
we weren't genuinely interested in what's being communicated
here, and as a whole the film succeeds.
The climax of the film teeters just on the edge of being too
ridiculous to take seriously in any way. The confrontation
between Ramza and Bown is a neat idea, but some lines make it
hard to understand exactly what Ramza as the writer was going
for. And I suppose you could interpret the way the giant dicks
-- you know what, forget it, there's no way to word this
sentence that would make it not completely retarded. Let's just
say that the end of the film might be a subtle commentary on the
conventions of hate movies destroying your presence, creatively,
from your films. Or it may just be Ramza's character being
attacked by a bunch of giant dicks. Either way, the movie seems
to understand that giant dicks = bad, and the final punchline of
this sequence disarms the weirdness of it all by being even MORE
weird.
There's a humble, almost subdued quality about Generations; it
can be compared to KRB Revival in that the two represent the
optimistic and pessimistic viewpoints on how the feud should
finally be put to rest, but also in that KRB Revival is loud and
exaggerated and Generations communicates its point at a quiet,
on-the-surface level, with any exaggerations making sense in the
context of its hate movie roots. The cheese is easily forgivable
when you consider the gesture Ramza is trying to make here;
attacking its minor stumbles in tone or quality would be a cheap
shot in my opinion. It's not the most perfect, amazing,
mind-blowing version of itself possible, but it has to be one of
the most honest.
Critical Score: 70/100.
Personal Score: 90/100.
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