American ugly
"I'm something of a rarity. I shoot the dead." Maguire (Jude
Law) is only partly right. A freelance photographer scrounging
for work during the Depression, he specializes in images of
corpses, and, rather ingeniously, secures his employment by
murdering his own subjects. But in Road to Perdition,
Maguire is only one of several professional killers, men who
repeatedly loom in low angle shots, pursuing their victims
relentlessly in sinister shadows and driving rain, all the while
trying to figure out their familial relations. In fact,
Maguire's most singular aspect is his lack of a traumatizing
father-son relationship. That, and his ratty hair.
By contrast, Maguire's latest assignment, Irish mafia hitman
Michael Sullivan (Tom Hanks), has plenty of trauma and plenty of
hair. The anti-heroic protagonist of Sam Mendes' latest
dysfunctional family saga, Sullivan initially appears possessed
of a pleasantly upper middle-class existence, ensconced in a
large, elegant home with his quietly supportive (and quickly
dispatched) wife Annie (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and two young
sons, Michael Jr. (Tyler Hoechlin) and Peter (Liam Aiken). The
family's routine is established via stock nostalgia imagery:
kids in knickers, mom in the kitchen, low angle shots, slightly
gray lighting. The kids ride their bikes home from school and
dutifully do their homework. Mom makes dinner. Dad arrives. No
one says much.
Sullivan is introduced by way of Michael Jr.'s perspective, in
a poignant, affecting scene. Sent to fetch his father for
dinner, Michael pauses in the hallway outside his parents'
bedroom, watching his father through the narrow frame: the
camera moves closer to approximate Michael's focus: dad is
removing his keys and change from his pockets, laying them
carefully on the bed. And then, he removes his gun. He never
turns to see his son. Cut back to Michael's face, partly
shadowed, partly alarmed, wholly intrigued, a fleeting image
that makes completely clear the child's complex mix of fear and
love for his father.
It's one of many ominous images in the film inspired by its
source, Max Allen Collins and Richard Piers Rayner's 1998
graphic novel, a suitably gloomy evocation of murder as
corporate business, something that Sullivan does during working
hours in order to provide for his family, to whom he appears
intimidating and mysterious. Though Michael knows enough not to
ask what his father does for a living -- namely, kill people for
Chicago boss John Rooney (Paul Newman) -- he's also curious
enough to check it out for himself. The film's major and ongoing
trauma begins one stormy night, when Michael stows away in the
back of his dad's car.
Thunder crashes. It happens that Sullivan and Rooney's
obviously troubled blood-son Connor (Daniel Craig) are out on a
job, and they end up murdering several men, Tommy guns blazing.
Michael sees the whole thing, having slipped out of the car so
that he can peer under a doorway. He's also seen, of course. And
though Sullivan assures Connor that the kid's okay and won't
tell, Connor, who is paranoid and mean on a good day, takes it
all very badly. In fact, he takes it as an excuse to get back at
Sullivan, whom he has forever seen as a rival for his own
father's affection and trust. And in this case, his paranoia has
been justified -- though the elder Rooney has a "thing" about
family, he does sincerely love Sullivan, preferring his loyal,
efficient, and appropriately mournful adoptive son to his whiny,
inept, and conveniently villainous blood relative.
Rooney drops by to pat the boy on his head, and it's clear that
nothing will be all right. Whatever familial equilibrium the
Sullivans and the Rooneys have pretended to share all these
years is now destroyed. And so, Sullivan and Michael go on the
run, which means that Road to Perdition's father-son
romance begins in earnest. The film is deeply invested in this
theme, and if you've seen any of the many interviews with Hanks
or Newman or both, you'll know that they've been asked
repeatedly about their own fathers, their own sons, and their
own views on the whole family "thing." While it's surely an
interesting theme, it's also one that's received a lot of
attention over the past few hundred years. And so, the story
here won't be very surprising.
Michael's voice-over structures David Self's script, so you
know from the beginning that his 6 weeks on the road with dad
during the winter of 1931 will be life-changing, and that he
will come to admire the man he has until then barely known.
Emulating the Lone Ranger stories Michael loves to read
under his blanket with a flashlight, their adventure entails a
series of lessons: his father teaches him to shoot, to drive, to
keep watch. They embark on a series of Midwestern bank
robberies, as Sullivan seeks to hit the Chicago mob where it
hurts, conveyed in a nifty montage that looks like a graphic
novel in motion, the camera panning over robbery
scenes-like-panels, as the pair rack up the loot.
The film's well-founded reverence for its source -- manifested
in its artful darkness (repeated shots of rainy nights, bodies
rising and falling in silhouette), and precise composition (a
scene toward the end, where a brightly lit beach house becomes a
backdrop for blood, everywhere) -- makes for a magnificent look.
Shot by Conrad L. Hall, the film's perfectly grim surface evokes
eons of pain, as well as a highly stylized contemporary
sensibility, not so much cynical as skeptical and self-aware.
Such sheer beauty almost makes up for the film's tired plot
(Eastwood and Costner's A Perfect World comes to mind),
in which a boy sees his father (figure) redeemed by good
intentions, if not acts, exactly. Michael's becoming-a-man story
is, finally, less classic than contrived; he doesn't witness
most of his dad's shadowy brutality, and when you see it, the
thugs and gangsters are so easily identifiable as such that the
moral dilemma that's supposed to emerge never does: instead, you
see Tom Hanks shooting the bad guys.
Perhaps appropriately, Road to Perdition's most
complicated, unsympathetic, and compelling character is the
skuzzy hitman-photographer Maguire. Not in the novel, Maguire is
Self's creation, a perverse, po-mo commentary on all that's laid
out before you -- the conventions, the legends, the gorgeous
images, the sociopolitical allusions. For Maguire, killing is a
business and an art, and his attention to detail aligns him --
creepily, if you think about it -- with the film's own
meticulous aesthetic. Introduced as he's photographing a
not-quite-dead subject (listed in the credits as "Living
Corpse," and played by someone named, so evocatively, Monte),
Maguire looks annoyed that he has to finish the job to get his
shot, smothering the guy, who's already quite bloody, thanks,
with a big butcher knife stuck in his chest.
Maguire takes pride in his vocation, but he's too sinister and
self-loving to see much else. His first encounter with Sullivan
has them conversing across separate diner booths, mirroring one
another in their dark topcoats and hats (Sullivan's is a
standard fedora; Maguire's a natty bowler). As yet unaware that
Maguire is hired to kill him, Sullivan asks about his camera,
which Maguire is deftly loading with film: "Is that your
profession or your pleasure?" Maguire smiles, winds his film
ferociously, then clunks the instrument on the table before him:
"Both I guess. To be paid to do what you love, ain't that the
dream?" Sullivan and Rooney, and even Connor, see themselves as
engaged in serious, family business. It's strangely gratifying
that Maguire has less grand delusions.
12 July 2002