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Reviewed by Jon Barton
I
find myself in the mood for watching a piece of work clearly
illustrating the qualities of an auteur. This is how I approach
JP's short film, which easily stands alone sturdily. I've
admired the director's past work, Doom 2 being 2002's indefinite
gem. Having read reviews only partially praising JP's underrated
work I decided to sit down to some afternoon entertainment. What
I got was by no means dull or indeed disappointing. Clearly
where low scores have malnourished the film's reputation is the
direct product of feelings of departure on JP's part, and its
good to see he himself has addressed this in his director's
notes.
As a director, JP handles the narrative and directorial task as
seemingly fluidly as his Doom series, boasting top notch methods
and skills putting theoretical methods of filmmaking to good
use. Shots often tilted at angles the movement of which we never
see thanks to some very tangible editing techniques. The sound
editing accompanying the sequence in which Fr. Manhattan opens
the door on the 9mm reeks of effortless cool, the film following
suit by honouring degree rules and continuity guidelines. It's
surprising to see then that MF becomes somewhat entwined, not so
much in its own incompetence but rather an inability to
continue, reaching a point where it is unsure how to tell the
story without leaving gaping holes here and there. This isnt
JP's fault wholly, but sadly responsibility wasn't taken for the
stumble and ultimately the film suffers for the setback. Coupled
with its status as a short film means that it is difficult to
emphasise with the events. This is only heightened further by an
abundance of sideshow characters that were not entirely
necessary (Goro's cameo, while pleasant seemed only to detract
from the action).
Visually, MF stands tall with Doom, JP stamping his auteuristic
trademarks everywhere, consequently Manhattan Folds is proud of
minimalism, sparks flying from the impact of design. To
compliment this, MF is full of kinetic visual wit that is so
often dry and sharp, creating a sense of guilty humour and
gestic comedy that Ryan Rubinello's newsreader serves to
reinforce. Elements such as these are placed in a humble jigsaw
that makes the viewing experience compelling and distorting.
Sadly, pieces of the puzzle are missing in order to fully create
the details needed to complete the picture. There's a sense of
irony about the comparison considering many viewers had to think
hard to understand. With dedicated viewing MF comes together.
The vital problems remain because JP could have done more in his
power to speed up this thinking process. That said, the director
becomes entangled himself by the end of the film, and this is
depressingly apparent. And not even Ryans' biting narration can
save it thereon.
Manhattan Folds is a noble experiment, and I give credit to JP
for his flair and the panache with which this was pulled off. A
longer runtime and MF could have fell into ruin quickly, but JP
knows when and where to take his direction, even if he somberly
fails narrative-wise. A fan of Doom and JP will certainly be
interested. Those who hate over-reachers that demand strenuous
brain power should probably give it a miss.
6.5/10
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