ByTowne ByTowne Cinema
ByTowne Cinema
325 Rideau St. Ottawa K1N 5Y4
Info Line: (613) 789-FILM
ByTowne ByTowne Cinema
ByTowne Cinema
325 Rideau St. Ottawa K1N 5Y4
Info Line: (613) 789-FILM
No screenings currently scheduled.
Vincent Gallo is an actor not afraid of risks. Consider the challenge of making Jerzy Skolimowski’s Essential Killing, in a role for which he speaks not one word and must endure great physical hardship, much of it apparently real. Many another actor would glance at the screenplay and call for a taxi. That the film was worth doing was confirmed at this year’s Venice Film Festival, where he won the best actor award and Skolimowski won the Special Jury Prize.
In it, Gallo plays a Taliban terrorist fighter in Afghanistan. A terrified, exhausted man, who shakes so badly he can barely hold a rocket launcher as he kills three Americans who stumble upon him. One of the Americans is a battle-ready infantryman, and the other two seem to be dopeheads working for a contractor. Their rendezvous with destiny comes in a rock labyrinth opening from a valley floor.
The death scene is shielded from the view of helicopters circling overhead. The Talibanist (never named) is so frightened he runs away, making himself visible, and he’s quickly captured. Then follows a painful sequence where he’s interrogated and tortured. The sound track suggests he can’t hear the questions because of a ringing in his ears caused by an explosion. Whatever the reason, he doesn’t talk, and is subjected to waterboardings and beatings.
Despite the contemporary setting, Essential Killing makes little point of politics. Yes, the man is Taliban and yes, he’s tortured, but there are no speeches and precious little dialogue by anyone, let alone the Gallo character. It’s pure action, and then you’re free to find your own parallels.
Films of solo figures in a wilderness are daunting, especially for the figures, and I am reminded of two little-seen films, Joseph Losey’s Figures In The Landscape with Robert Shaw, and Cornel Wilde’s The Naked Prey. I doubted after seeing the Wilde film that a naked man could elude six skilled hunters on their one turf. After seeing Essential Killing, there isn’t a single event I particularly doubt, but it’s remarkable how many of them the man survives. He is moved to Poland for advanced questioning, but after a prisoner van overturns he escapes into a snowy landscape where he seems likely to freeze to death. We breathe easier after he doesn’t, but then he sticks his foot into a bear trap. The most effective elements in Gallo’s performance are his cries of pain and fear. Unlike the stoic heroes of most action films, who seem peculiarly pain-resistant, he is in terror and agony much of the time, and his resilience is the real subject of the film.
For Jerzy Skolimowski, this is his second film in two years, after Four Nights With Anna. Before that there was a fallow period of 17 years, during which he painted, wrote and acted. With Essential Killing, he comes closer than ever before to a pure, elemental story. At Venice he declined to spell out its parable, if any, and Vincent Gallo didn’t attend. But the two have worked well together here to survive what must have been a grueling production. It reminds us that man, like any animal, fights for life with all of his will, and will do whatever is, yes, essential.
– Roger Ebert, The Chicago Sun-Times
The ByTowne doesn't have a parking lot of its own, but denizens of downtown can usually find street parking close by fairly easily.
If you're not keen to troll for a parking space, or if you're running late, we recommend the parking garage at Loblaws. It's covered, heated and safe – and just half a block from the cinema. The best part: they charge just $2 flat rate after 6pm on weekdays, and only $3 all day on Saturdays & Sundays.
For more details, click here.
Tickets Now On Sale!
$17 at the ByTowne box office
$17 + $1 service charge
at CD Warehouse and Compact Music
(click here for more info)
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