|
Reviewed by Aaron Haynes
I'm
doing something for this review that may come off as
sacrilegious to how many people feel about RmP: I'm treating it
as if it were a finished film. Like many, the first time I
watched this I was completely blown away once again by Pikios's
ability to tell a story in the most visceral way possible,
though music and visuals alone, but a strange thing happened at
the end -- the final shot of the film actually wrapped up the
story. It's a crushingly dark way of looking at it, sure, but
there's a kind of poetic brilliance about the way it all ties
together, especially when you consider how Adrian's chapter in
the history of 3DMM ultimately ended. He may have intended to
end it on a good, happy note, but by thinking of RmP as
complete, your mind fills in the gaps as to the only possible
plot development that could happen after the last scene, and
this resonates through the entire film.
Being the most well-known big name 'team' in the community,
Redwampa and Pikios know each others' stuff inside-out. The
squirrels Pikios animates in this movie don't move exactly like
Redwampa's, but that's not the point -- this is a movie made
about Redwampa's characters with Adrian's style of directing.
The movie opens quietly and eerily, with a grandmother squirrel
talking to her grandchildren about the stars. As the camera
slowly zooms in on the faces of the eager children, it slowly
transitions into a captivating story about a creature who's not
quite a squirrel and not quite the Myth alien. There are shades
of Edward Scissorhands here, so I'm told, but this character is
not an outcast, and his struggle isn't to fit in, but to escape.
We are told that he is "Made to love, but trained to hate."
Looking at what's presented in this unfinished version, I don't
buy that for a second. Love seems to be the only thing on the
creature's mind, even with the long stretches of physical and
psychological torture he endures under the direction of his
captor/mentor (I really liked the effect of the words etched
into the walls of his room, blatant as they were). He climbs up
the rope of the body bag once used as a torture device for him
and escapes through a window; as his captor pursues him, the
chase brings him to the edge of a cliff, where he falls into the
river below and is saved by a squirrel rescue team that brings
him to their world.
From this point on, the construction of the squirrels is often
spotty and unfinished, but strangely this does nothing to hurt
the mood or inertia of the film. This is partly because of how
well animated the whole thing is -- in none of either Redwampa
or Pikios's earlier work have the character movements been this
expressive or this subtle. The way the main character guiltily
looks away, avoiding the gaze of his captor tells worlds about
his personality, especially when contrasted with a later scene
where he cautiously looks up with joy at his benevolent creator.
It's absolute magic. But the main reason the movie doesn't feel
unfinished is because it flows so beautifully from start to
finish. The direction and calculated detail of nearly every shot
in the film effectively carries the viewer over any cosmetic
bumps along the way. The music is well chosen and timed to the
action (even on XP, a platform the movie wasn't originally
designed for). The sheer splendor of the movie makes it feel
like nothing's missing.
As I mentioned earlier, considering the final scene as an ending
and not simply a cutoff where more stuff would go allows your
mind to fill in the gaps in the rest of the story. They aren't
happy thoughts, and suggest unrepairable damage and weakness to
the character we've learned to love over the course of the film.
It makes me think of alternate version of the N.U.T.S. universe,
where the squirrels don't fight back and the bad guy is able to
do whatever he wants. It's an extremely depressing thing to
think about, but no less poignant for that.
Footnote:
After doing some reading up on this film, it turns out the main
complaint seems to be about it's unoriginality. When I watched
it, I was concerned more with how well it was done, since the
themes of isolation, torture, and redemption have been re-used
to the point of it being just idiotic to accuse a film that uses
them of ripping off another. On the plot level, it may not have
an original bone in its body, but it's brilliant cinema
nonetheless.
Critical Score: 90/100.
Personal Score: 85/100.
|