Theres so much thats so right in Oliver Stones dizzying new crime thriller that its impediments stick out like speed bumps. Youll know youve hit one when your vertiginous sense of WTF screeches to a manageable and much duller pace. Ill give you a hint, too: The slowdown usually occurs when the films three young leads occupy the screen on their lonesome. Though theyre competent, Taylor Kitsch, Blake Lively, and Aaron Johnson are hardly scintillating, and their performances pale in comparison to the spectacularly outrageous turns delivered by Benicio Del Toro, Salma Hayek, and John Travolta. Plus, the young threesome and their love triangle never convincingly seduce the audience. The characters are besotted with one another, but that bewitchment translates feebly to the viewer. And since all the action hinges on the primacy of this threesome, its as though a foundation layer of the movie has fallen out. Or as Hayeks Elena says in another context, Theres something wrong with your love story, baby.
Savages provides us with a glimpse into the Oliver Stone of yore the director of lurid, visceral, and menacing crime stories a facet of the filmmaker we havent seen much of since Natural Born Killers and U-Turn. The film is based on Don Winslows bestseller, and Winslow co-wrote the screenplay with Stone and Shane Salerno. Its the story of Chon (Kitsch) and Ben (Johnson), independent growers and sellers of the best marijuana around. Chon is an ex-Navy SEAL who brought back the seeds for the business from Afghanistan; Ben is the botanist who, in addition to growing pot with off-the-charts THC levels, is also a do-gooder who builds water wells in Africa and performs many other charitable deeds. O (Lively), short for her given name Ophelia, or maybe her orgasmic avatar, is the woman who loves them both and lives with them in hedonistic, copacetic bliss in a luxury home in Laguna Beach, Calif.
The Mexican drug wars follow their natural path north of the border in Savages when Chon and Bens operation becomes subject to takeover by a cartel helmed by Elena, a ruthless but not heartless leader in a Cleopatra wig, and her chief goon and henchman Lado (Del Toro), whose vicious depravity and loathsomeness are bottomless. O is kidnapped by Elenas minions and held as a bargaining tool. Travolta complicates things as a crooked DEA official whose hairline is receding as rapidly as his morals. Stone and cinematographer Daniel Mindel make the entire experience seem hallucinatory with their mixture of film and video imagery, saturated colors that sometimes turn to black and white, rewinds, and other optical tricks, as well as a conclusion that pulls the rug out from under the audience. Its volatile, nasty, hypnotic, gory, and irrestible. But then O opens her mouth to continue with her vacuous and omnisciently impossible voiceover narration, and the spell is broken. Then its just another day at Laguna Beach.
This article appears in July 6 • 2012.
