FILM
MOVIE REVIEW
Ezra Miller is worse than Damien in We Need to Talk About Kevin. [Photo: Oscilloscope Laboratories]
We Need to Talk About Kevin *½
by Ed Gonzalez on December 4, 2011 Jump to Comments (11) or Add Your Own
What we really need to talk about is the fraudulence of Lynne Ramsay's overripe collage of bright colors, smug pop music, and flimsy characterizations. The acclaimed Scottish filmmaker's first film since 2002's Morvern Callar, We Need to Talk About Kevin is all fatuous mood, a purposefully fragmented evocation of a woman's fraught state of mind. Ramsay both sets the film's incoherent tone and states her stale feminist agenda immediately with a shot of Eva (Tilda Swinton) being hoisted by a throng of tomato-doused revelers at Buñol's El Tomatino festival. Just as there's no sense of this artfully photographed vision as memory or fantasy, Eva's unmistakably Christ-like pose makes clear who the victim is in this story about a troubled mother-son relationship.
First, though, let us talk about Gus Van Sant's Béla Tarr-biting Elephant, how its fussily minimalist aggrandizement of the Columbine massacre has informed the way other films, both good (Denis Villeneuve's Polytechnique) and bad (Antonio Campos's Afterschool), regard high school tragedy. Like Martha Marcy May Marlene, Sean Durkin's spawn of Afterschool, this particular breed of sociopath porn prides itself on abstracting meaning out of the meaningful; almost none of them are concerned with contemplating the void from which they all seem to echo out of. But We Need to Talk About Kevin is the worst for the way it spikes Elephant's fashionable nihilism with Alan Ball's puerile flair for sensationalism.
Something close to Miranda July's worst nightmare, We Need to Talk About Kevin presents the horror of Eva's relationship to her sociopathic son, from pamper-wearing infancy to mopey, obliques-blaring teenagehood, out of sequence. Ramsay freely collages incidents from this mother and son's past and present, with the color and shape of Tilda Swinton's hair about the only thing rooting us in a particular time and place. If one wanted to be kind, the purpose of this fractured storytelling is to leave the audience feeling as unmoored as the film's protagonist, who endures the relentless and inexplicable cruelty of her monstrous offspring with the tenacity of Christ on the cross. But if one wanted to be right, the purpose of Ramsay's hodgepodge approach is to distract us from the flimsiness of a story that suggests a snide art-house take on The Omen.
I haven't read the novel by Lionel Shriver on which the film is based, but in a recent article for Slate, the author speaks of pregnancy, to Eva, as "an infestation," and her world travels as a means for the character to assert her superiority over others. From this we may glean that Eva possibly did travel to Buñol at one time, that the cartographic wallpaper inside one of the rooms in her luxe manse, like the job she takes in the present day at a travel agency, expresses her search for worldliness, but we shouldn't have to look to the book to help us make sense of the film. Because We Need to Talk About Kevin fails to articulate Eva's desire to travel, it means nothing that the walls in her favorite room are covered in rare maps instead of, say, pink elephants when the malicious Kevin charges into his mother's study with a paint-loaded squirt gun in hand.
Here and there you grasp a glimmer of a point to the litany of horrors Eva is forced to endure, from Kevin, well past the age that he should be using diapers, deliberately craps himself after his mother has wiped his bum, to his feigning, as a teenager (played by Afterschool star Ezra Miller), interest in mother-son QT, which begins pleasantly enough at a miniature golf course before leading to a combative dinner he purposefully enters into on a full stomach. In Swinton's face you sometimes sense the nature of Eva's almost existential torment, her wondering whether she deserves this abuse or not, whether motherhood means enduring so much pain, and when she flips Kevin the bird, how she wishes she didn't have to any more. Her choice to persevere despite Kevin's behavior at least explains why she allows herself to be humiliated by the family of the victims of a high school massacre committed by Kevin, the nature of which the audience pieces together from the shards of exposition Ramsay sprinkles throughout the film. Eva never gives up on her sociopathic offspring, and as such takes responsibility for his actions.
But Ramsay works on a more artificial, affected page than her star, such as cutesily transitioning between past and present (shades of Martha Marcy May Marlene abound), noxiously complementing Eva's crisis whenever possible with cringingly on-the-nose pop tunes (whereas the use music throughout Polytechnique eerily hints at the characters' troubles and desires, here it cartoonishly bolds what's already obvious), and condescendingly painting Eva's coworkers at the travel agency she goes to work at in strokes so broad it would make the writers of The Office, an intentional comedy, blush. The film's trite sensory cues persistently undermine the nuance of Swinton's handiwork.
So, we understand that Eva must have lost her fortune in the wake to her son's trial for murder, but how she and her husband Franklin (John C. Reilly) were able to afford their expensive digs back in the day is, like much in the film, deliberately and frustratingly left to our imaginations, particularly the nature of Kevin's psychotic behavior. But that's the point here, for Ramsay wants to leave us, like Eva herself at the end of this malicious film, asking why. Though Ramsay feigns philosophical profundity by suggesting, like some teenage connoisseur of Camus, that there's no rationale for Kevin's actions, that one isn't necessary, the truth is that director doesn't quite have the patience, humanity, and sensitivity to actually articulate a reason.
- Director(s): Lynne Ramsay
- Screenplay: Rory Kinnear, Lynne Ramsay
- Cast: Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller, Siobhan Fallon, Ursula Parker, Jasper Newell, Ashley Gerasimovich, Erin Maya Darke, Lauren Fox, Rock Duer
- Distributor: Oscilloscope Pictures
- Runtime: 112 min.
- Rating: R
- Year: 2011
Comments
- David Ehrenstein on December 4, 2011, 12:51 PM
-
You're just terrified of the prospect that there may be no reason. LIVE WITH IT!!!
- TimParker on December 5, 2011, 09:24 AM
-
Do you like anything that gets the smallest amount of buzz? Or does everything that gets attention from others automatically have to be flawed—and flawed in a way only you can see? The good movies are of course the ones that you discover yourself, the ones that you have the market on. God forbid you agree with too many other critics.
You make me hate reading movie reviews.
- Tomeire on December 6, 2011, 06:18 AM
-
It's only a review, expressing Mr. Gonzalez's opinion which is as valid (or invalid) as the rest of our opinions. If you liked the movie, a review slating it shouldn't make a difference. Likewise if you disliked it. Own your own opinions.
- snarpo on December 6, 2011, 06:04 PM
-
Relax, Ed, he's not worth it.
- TimParker on December 9, 2011, 09:45 AM
-
Ed, I apologize for my attack. I was clearly in a bad mood and taking it out on you. I also had a knee-jerk reaction to a negative review. I had also read your review of Shame, another film I have been rooting for. Of course everyone, especially critics are entitled to their own opinions. I hope to continue to come to this site and read the thoughtful reviews. I can certainly learn something. I didn't mean to attack your work (though I admit selfishly I would love to see you review positively a movie I like).
- Dani Boudreau on December 11, 2011, 08:13 AM
-
A reviewer should be careful while watching a film. One shouldn't miss a large promotional poster in a bookstore window with the words "Legendary Traveler" above the image of our protag/antag. I'm fairly certain that travel agents rarely receive such acclaim.
We Need to Talk is quite simple to decipher if you evaluate it as a piece of art. Tilda is a mother who wasn't prepared to raise a child. Perhaps a first time mother and perhaps ill-prepared in general due to her temperament. Her child, like some, is difficult to deal with at first. The rest is a self-perpetuating mess. To contend that the golf outing was pleasant sits irreconcilably with actually viewing the scene and Swinton's aloofness/coldness.
The perspective of the movie, in my view, is not traditional and will be difficult for most to accept— "progressive" society blames the mother, "conservative" society blames the child, the "progressive" viewer blames the mother, the "conservative" viewer blames the child, the "progressive" viewer blames the father, etc.
The blame is on the blame.
- heter7870 on January 19, 2012, 09:17 PM
-
I don't know if you bring the hammer down on buzz generating films more than non buzz generating films, but you do bring it down a lot. It must be a burden, always being the smartest guy in the room.
- Bruttenholm on January 24, 2012, 04:06 PM
-
I'm just glad some people are calling BS on this one. Maybe if Ramsey had a better understanding of genre and fully committed to making a horror movie (Rosemary's Baby 3?) it could've worked? She wouldn't even have had to turn in her indie cred (see Trouble Every Day). I kept feeling that Swinton's performance was being suffocated by all the artiness. The music was too on-the-nose, and being beat over the head with that RED motif made me want to jump out of my skin. Am I the only one who felt six steps ahead of the characters? (The guinea pig, the bow and arrow, the eyepatch, etc.) I agree with Humanick that this was a miserable experience. And I got the feeling the director had no desire to articulate a reason for anything in the film - the story was simply the frame on which to hang her most indulgent filmic techniques.
Add Your Own
Most Popular
- The 25 Best Horror Films of the Aughts
- The 25 Best Films of 2011
- Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace
- This Means War
- Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance
- The Vow
- Bullhead
- The Secret World of Arrietty
- Safe House
- Michael



