DVD Review: Brad Anderson’s The Machinist on Paramount Home Entertainment

Pity Christian Bale for having had to lose so much weight for so little.

The MachinistBrad Anderson’s atmospheric but shallow The Machinist comes with a powerful special effect: Christian Bale. For his role as an industrial machine worker who hasn’t slept in over a year, the actor allegedly dropped 60 pounds on a diet that consisted of one can of tuna and an apple a day. Shortly after meeting a kitchen-sink Morpheus (Michael Ironside) on his cigarette break, strange things begin to happen to Trevor Reznik (Bale): a Post-it note with an active game of hangman appears on his refrigerator; the child of a woman he’s after has an epileptic seizure on a carnival ride called—get this—Route 666; and then the refrigerator starts bleeding. What’s inside? Not much really. Drenched in washed-out noir shadows by Xavi Giménez (Intacto, Darkness) and scored by Roque Baños to within an inch of Bernard Hermann’s grave, The Machinist’s aesthetic is as sick as Bale’s concentration camp figure, but like his 2001 spooker Session 9 and the previous year’s Happy Accidents, Anderson’s latest similarly trades in karma but allows mood to trump emotion. The director has an uncanny ability to make it seem as if he doesn’t have a card up his sleeve: Assuming his audience will dismiss the film’s non-stop weirdness as a product of a sleep-deprived man’s imagination, Anderson is able to code an interesting Madonna/Whore Complex in Trevor’s relationship to an airport waitress (Aitana Sánchez-Gijón) and a local prostitute (Jennifer Jason Leigh). Sadly, it’s all smoke and mirrors. There’s only so long Anderson can downplay the rationale behind Trevor’s yearlong bout with insomnia, and by the time the last reel rolls around, the gimmicky Machinist reveals itself to be an elaborate joke. Somber and mysterious, Anderson’s film so successfully reduces tragedy to a punchline that the lead character ultimately exists less for himself and more for the gratification of the Memento fan club. The film may turn on a few light bulbs, but that doesn’t make it very bright.

Image/Sound

The Machinist is a very dark film and this DVD negotiates that darkness well: grain levels are pleasant and unobtrusive, shadows are atmospheric, and the delineation between the image’s various textures and hues is smooth and attractive. But Bale’s skin and bones are the stars of this show and this glorious transfer evokes the actor as a moving waxwork. The audio is more unassuming but shows its strength whenever the factory pistons kick into high gear and the dreamy score is heard.

Extras

According to Brad Anderson, his obligation to shoot The Machinist in Spain says something about America’s indie film industry, but that “something” is unclear and, no doubt, entirely in his head. His commentary track is, literally, serviceable-everything he says is in service of or revolves around the film’s final reveal, and as such will be of interest only to those who want to be walked through all the film’s narrative short cuts and secret corners. Rounding out the disc: eight deleted scenes, a handsome making-of featurette, and a bunch of theatrical trailers, but nothing on Bale’s hardcore diet for the film.

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Overall

Pity Christian Bale for having had to lose so much weight for so little.

Score: 
 Cast: Christian Bale, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Aitana Sánchez-Gijón, John Sharian, Michael Ironside, Larry Gilliard, Reg E. Cathey, Anna Massey, Matthew Romero  Director: Brad Anderson  Screenwriter: Scott Kosar  Distributor: Paramount Home Entertainment  Running Time: 101 min  Rating: R  Year: 2004  Release Date: June 7, 2005  Buy: Video, Soundtrack

Ed Gonzalez

Ed Gonzalez is the co-founder of Slant Magazine. A member of the New York Film Critics Circle, his writing has appeared in The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications.

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