We can handle the truth, already
Just when you think it's safe to trust the U.S. military again
(at least according to CNN, et. al.), here comes another movie
about corruption, subterfuge, and egomania run amok in the
Marines. Carl Franklin's High Crimes concerns Clair Kubik
(Ashley Judd), a self-assured, local-superstar San Francisco
lawyer who discovers, under the direst of personal
circumstances, that the Corps is a bastion of lunatics who are
committed first and foremost to covering their own asses, with
lethal force. Moreover, said lunatics believe with all their
hearts that we "can't handle" knowing about their undercover,
underhanded means of the defending the American Way. This
newsflash horrifies Claire, who apparently missed A Few Good
Men.
None of the smug, rancorous Marines in High Crimes makes
such a memorable assertion of their principles, or quite so
forcefully explain the myopic general public's need for their
services. But the film is evidently banking on its audience
getting the basic idea, in ways that poor Claire just never can.
Maybe she's just too close to it all.
So as to underscore her learning curve, she starts off rather
far away from it -- military culture, ethos, and rationales --
rather like most civilians. Or not. Claire is an exceptional
civilian, in every way. Not only is she a brilliant defense
attorney who gets her accused-rapist client a new trial by
outwitting the prosecutor, and appear so photogenically on tv to
boot, she also has a gorgeous home in Marin County, an expensive
SUV, and a pretty husband named Tom (Jim Caviezel), introduced
doing something in his workshop, meaning, I guess, that he's
creative or good with his hands or something. Claire and Tom
have the perfect relationship: they hold hands when they go
Christmas shopping, and take time out of their schedules to
"make a baby" when her self-test tells her she's ovulating,
after which speed-sex session, she jumps in the SUV, sets up her
day on her cell phone, then kicks butt at work; later that
evening, she plays pool with hubby and watches herself on tv at
the local bar, where everyone probably knows her name.
Claire's perfect existence is, of course, about to be shattered
by those folks who commit high crimes for a living. Tom is
suddenly arrested and charged with mass murder. Seems that his
real name is Ron Something-or-other, and he was once a
classified military operative whose squad was assigned to find a
guerilla leader in Las Colinas, a teeny village in El Salvador,
in 1988. Nine civilians were slaughtered, My Lai-style (the
movie is based on a novel, by Joseph Finder, characterized on
the film's website as "an expert on the CIA and international
politics"), and the brass is still looking for a Calley-style
scapegoat, 15 years later. Why, we'll never know. High
Crimes is most definitely not interested in logic, and it's
not exactly clear what it is interested in, except maybe broad
ideological concepts, or moral indictments. It also wants to set
up thrills, chills, and emotional climaxes, these hammered
repeatedly by Graeme Revell's intrusive score.
Any surprises, though, only come when the film totally loses its
mind (and sadly, that only happens a couple of times, briefly).
For the most part, the plot turns are wholly predictable. After
all, this is a movie starring Ashley Judd, whom someone has
determined is the ideal Flinty Woman in Danger; see, for the
most famous instance, Double Jeopardy. Moreover, it's an
Ashley Judd movie co-starring Morgan Freeman, again as the
stereotypically earnest and sexless mentor. To be fair, his
Charlie Grimes is slightly different than the world-weary
detective he played in Kiss the Girls: for one thing,
Charlie's a down-on-his-luck, recovering-alcoholic, dog-loving,
sneaky-smart attorney who's been drummed out of the Corps for
assaulting an officer (of course, he had his own admirable
reasons). And for another, he's got hair that stands up.
Claire meets Charlie because, quite preposterously, she decides
to defend Tom/Ron at the court martial (Tom/Ron keeps telling
her that she can't beat the system, which only fuels her desire
to do so; gee, do you think this will figure in one of the plot
turns?). She makes this decision when she sees that his
designated attorney is First Lt. Embry (Adam Scott), who has
never won a case and looks like he's 12. Claire decides that to
get the job done, she needs someone who has tangled legally with
the military before, and better, someone who's won against the
military. Charlie is that guy, but he comes with the usual
baggage, including anger at his old employers, a few leftover
enmities, no decent suit, and oh yes, that drinking thing (which
figures prominently in a couple of the predictable plot turns).
Still, it must be said that watching Freeman and Judd together
is a generally good thing: they are elegant and efficient
performers, not a glance or finger to the temple wasted, unless,
of course, you consider that they occur in the context of this
movie.
Once Claire and Charlie dig into their defense, they discover
(oh shocking!) some problems with Tom/Ron's story, which is
illustrated in grainy flashback "footage" inserts, showing
varying versions of what happened: either Tom/Ron kills
everyone, or the man he's accusing does it, this man being a
Latino officer with a portentous scar over his eye and permanent
sneer on his face, one Major Hernandez (Juan Carlos Hernandez).
Tom/Ron insists that his superiors are framing him, one being
Hernandez's immediate boss, Brig. General Marks (Bruce Davison,
who actually looks more sad than menacing).
Whenever Claire looks for "evidence," she finds herself facing
any number of scary guys and in any number of dreadful
situations (home invasion, car wreck, circling-camera revelation
scene, etc.). And still, she falls again and again for Tom/Ron's
recurring duplicity (I mean, even for a supposed Cipher Guy, his
layers of lies are head-spinning, and obvious). I suppose
she has her own admirable reasons, but they don't have
much to do with the reality the film offers. For example:
Tom/Ron wants so badly to preserve Claire's "trust" (after lying
to her for years) that he takes and passes a polygraph test,
even though it's inadmissible in the court martial. Minutes
later, the more dismal "truth" descends on Claire, when she
learns from a helpful, if baleful, nobody who sidles up to her
in the supermarket, that special ops guys are trained to "beat
the box." Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!
In order to lighten the mood a little, and provide yet another
damsel to be distressed, the film provides meticulous Claire
with a tarted-up sister, Jackie (Amanda Peet, who is
spectacularly, even unaccountably, bright in a very, very dull
part). She's been evicted from her apartment, and so arrives on
Claire's own re-located doorstep, near the Georgia Marine base
where Tom/Ron's incarcerated. Jackie wears dramatic eye makeup,
cute little knit tops and caps; and is not nearly so wealthy or
self-righteous as her sister (which the film translates as
"loose" and, eventually, nonjudgmental). She's a cute foil who
also provided girly support for Claire in the midst of all those
mens!
For Claire, the most significant of the mens is, of course,
Charlie (Tom/Ron is, from jump, merely the occasion for Claire's
journey of self-discovery, equally bland whether you understand
him as victim, villain, or straight-up psycho). Claire does
wonder, at one point, why Charlie has never left the base area,
a location where he has plainly been ill-served (when Claire
meets him, he's making a meager living defending local hookers
when they're picked up servicing the men on the base), but
really, it's clear that Charlie is in town to wait for her
arrival, this case, and his redemption.
It's in this relationship that the film's clearly well
intentioned race politics falls apart. On one level, Charlie is
one of those "colorblind" characters you've heard tell about (he
might have been played by any actor around Freeman's age, as he
makes no clear reference to the racism that might have affected
his career). But on another, this very construction (of
"colorblind" casting or writing) is troubling. It's one thing
for the movie to overlook the racism of its several scenarios,
for instance, the "historical" events in El Salvador, in which
the massacre is represented as the act of a deviant individual,
covered up by the institution, but not as a systemic and ongoing
problem.
And it's a similar thing for the movie to overlook its own
dicey representations of Latinos, either the snidely Hernandez
and the intimidating El Salvadoran fellow who appears out of
nowhere, to threaten and then offer crucial clues to the
slow-on-the-uptake Claire. But it's another thing to cut Charlie
out of these troubling moments and their resolutions. Really,
you'd like to imagine that, having survived the Marines
and the legal system, he's wilier than that.
4 April 2002