Film Review
John Carpenter's second helping of teen horror, after his genre
defining
Halloween (1978), sees another
group of nauseating adolescents under threat, this time from a
psychopathic automobile. If you can swallow the film's unlikely
premise, that a car has a soul and can go about killing people, then
Christine can be considered a
respectable entry in a genre which has done far worse. It is
directed by Carpenter with his customary panache and subtle dark
humour, and sustained by some state of the art special effects and a
gripping (and very creepy) central performance from Keith Gordon, who
had previously distinguished himself in Brian De Palma's
Dressed to Kill (1980).
The problems only begin when you look under the bodywork and realise
that the storyline, what there is of it, makes no sense whatever.
The film's deficiencies - its implausible premise, lack of coherence
and underdeveloped secondary characters - all stem from Stephen King's
novel on which it is based. In his book, King at least makes an
attempt to explain how an inanimate lump of metal can become a
psychotic killing machine, by having it haunted by the spirit of its
dead owner. In adapting the novel for the film, screenwriter Bill
Phillips threw out the ghost idea and thereby created a narrative void
which the spectator has to fill for himself. Whilst most
cinemagoers are able to buy into the notion of a haunted house, a
haunted car which can magically repair itself after being smashed to
pieces is a somewhat more challenging proposition. (And if the
car can repair itself, why is it doing a good impression of a rust
bucket when Arnie comes across it in the first place?)
Whilst it is unlikely to be ranked along side Carpenter's best horror
films,
Christine is still a
compelling little shocker that holds our attention even if its central
story concept is pretty well lacking in the credibility
department. Like all good teen horror films, it serves as a wry
allegory on the traumas of coming of age. In common with other
notable slasher villains (such as Michael Myers and Freddy Krueger),
the psychopathic car is a symbol of adolescent sexual awakening,
something that is both terrifying and alluring, imbued with a seemingly
demonic power to possess and destroy. The film passes muster as an
escapist thriller, but the idea of a car that kills of its own
volition is really just too silly to be taken seriously. Or is
it...?
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Arnie Cunningham is a 17-year-old high school geek whose life is made
Hell at home by his straitlaced parents and at school by knife-wielding
bullies. His one friend is Dennis Guilder, a star in the school
football team. One
day, Arnie comes across a dilapidated red-and-white Cadillac, a 1958
Plymouth Fury, and feels impelled to buy it. Ignoring the
protestations of his parents, Arnie sets about refurbishing the wrecked
automobile and it is soon restored to its former glory. But,
named Christine by its former owner, the car has a dark history and it
soon becomes apparent that it is possessed by supernatural
forces. The first sign of this is Arnie's sudden character
transformation. No longer the shy, inoffensive
geek, he is now cocksure and impulsive, perhaps even dangerous.
This change does not impress Arnie's high school enemies, who decide to
smash Christine up one evening. Miraculously, the car repairs
itself and goes after its attackers, intent on a merciless revenge...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.