META -- One Word of Truth -- Film Review: 'The Company of Men"

From: Tony Hollick (anduril@cix.compulink.co.uk)
Date: Sun Aug 24 1997 - 14:36:37 MDT


             ------------------- * * * * * ---------------

<quote>

The Seattle Times, Today's Top Stories: http://www.seatimes.com

Director's vicious story gets him in hot water

Entertainment News

Copyright 1997 The Seattle Times Company

Friday, Aug. 22, 1997

by John Hartl

Seattle Times movie reviewer

     Chad, the evil white-collar executive Aaron Eckhart plays in Neil
     LaBute's "In the Company of Men," is so willfully destructive he hopes
     his latest victim will reach for sleeping pills once he's through with
     her.

     In the opening scenes, Chad and his pushover pal Howard (Matt Malloy)
     set out to seduce Christine (Stacy Edwards), a deaf office worker. Their
     goal: to simultaneously dump her and avenge themselves on women in
     general.

     When LaBute and Eckhart attended the premiere of the movie at the
     Sundance Film Festival last January, they weren't prepared for the
     on-the-street reaction afterwards. Although it received a Sundance
     filmmaker's trophy in the drama category, some accused the film itself
     of being misogynistic and cruel.

     "Women would come up to Aaron and say, `I hate you,' " said LaBute when
     he brought the movie to the Seattle International Film Festival in May
     (it opens for a regular run here today). "Of course he'd remind them
     that `Yyou don't hate me, you hate the character.' "

      LaBute thinks one reason Chad is so despised is that the story line
      doesn't provide an obvious punishment for him or tie everything up
      neatly.

     "That's when you've signed your death warrant," said LaBute, who
     welcomes controversy. "Polarizing opinion is no worry to me. There's no
     right or wrong answer to a film. My most feared responses are `That was
     interesting' or `That was different.' "

     LaBute set out to create a yin-yang relationship between the handsome,
     aggressive Chad and the unassertive Howard, who goes along with the plan
     but eventually wants out. As the story gradually shifts to Christine's
     point of view, their scheming looks increasingly obsessive and pathetic.

     "For drama's sake you create types of a sort," said LaBute. "Chad is the
     poster boy for the one side you're trying to distill. People are a
     little taken aback by him; they're hoping he's actually fallen for her.
     They don't know what a viper he is; they don't understand his need for
     control.

     "The way they begin it, it's almost a lark. You want him to be a better
     guy than he is. And Chad has an advantage: The beautiful people get a
     little more rope in life."

     Eckhart is an old college friend who has appeared in several of LaBute's
     plays as well as the upcoming Kevin Kline movie, "In and Out." LaBute
     cast him because he could make the character ambiguous sexually and
     otherwise, suggesting "15 reasons for what he's done."

     He thinks Chad is "not unlike a serial killer. He has to take things
     closer and closer to the edge, asking `How's that feel?' He has to know
     how the pain feels, and he's going to take this too far at some point.
     There's a synapse there that isn't firing emotionally."

     At the same time, he feels a kinship with the character.

     "Chad is in me, he's in everybody, I think. I've met people as bad as
     Chad, though they had none of the charm."

     LaBute believes that reluctant identification with the charismatic Chad
     could be a reason for the angry response, although initially he doubted
     that the script would have that kind of appeal. He shot it in less than
     two weeks on a tiny budget.

     "I didn't know there'd be an audience for it," said Labute, though he
     did guess it when Sundance called to talk about showing it. "Then you
     know you have a topic for discussion."

     He sees the script as an outgrowth of his stage work: "Betrayal is a
     subject I keep returning to in my plays, which tend to be a little
     darker in spirit than most."

     LaBute, a 34-year-old Mormon who met Eckhart at Brigham Young
     University, spent his formative years in the Northwest.

     Born in Detroit, he was a child when his parents moved to Spokane, where
     he spent the next 15 years. He once worked at the city's best-known art
     house, the Magic Lantern theater, visiting Seattle to see foreign films
     that never crossed the mountains. He was a movie buff even as a child.

     "I have to credit my mother for that," said LaBute. "She's always been a
     voracious reader and film watcher. The first thing I can remember is
     waking up in the middle of `Gone With the Wind' at the Dishman theater
     in Spokane. The red was so overwhelming."

     After high school, LaBute attended three universities, enrolled in the
     graduate dramatic writing program at New York University, wrote several
     plays ("Lepers," "A Gaggle of Saints") and moved to Fort Wayne, Ind.,
     where he lives with his wife and two children.

     "I always created quickly," he said. "Money (for film production) was
     what I didn't have. With theater you could work much more rapidly."

     Eventually he was able to raise enough to shoot "In the Company of Men,"
     which is essentially a three-character story designed around a
     minimalist budget.

     "Casting was done with literally just three phone calls," he said.
     "Aaron always wanted to do something with me, Stacy had done a play of
     mine, and Matt I knew. I knew they had theater training, and I knew we
     had only 11 days."

     Abandoning the vogue for MTV-style cutting, LaBute's movie consists
     mostly of long takes that allow the actors to develop more sustained
     performances.

     "They knew there was no way to cheat," said LaBute. "I'm a big hater of
     establishing shots and inserts. Editing is a lie anyway. And I'm a big
     fan of actors and what they can do. I can sit and watch two people talk
     forever as long as the talk is good."

             ------------------- * * * * * ---------------

   | Anduril@cix.compulink.co.uk * http://www.agora.demon.co.uk |
- <*> --------------------------* * * *-------------------------- <*> -
   | Rainbow Bridge Foundation * * * Centre for Liberal Studies |
- <*> --------------------------* * * *-------------------------- <*> -
   | 4 Grayling House, Canford Rd: * Bristol BS9 3NU Tel: 9501894 |

             ------------------- * * * * * ---------------



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:44:46 MST