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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Chapter 27 (J.P. Schaefer)
As the second “story of how John Lennon
died” film to come out in the last six months
(the other being “The Killing of John Lennon”
in December of 2007), this one speeds through
the story much quicker but I felt like someone
had spiked my popcorn with valium. And I'm still
trying to understand why we need to keep seeing
this tragic story instead of just embracing the
time we had Lennon on this earth.
Most already know that Mark David Chapman was
a nut job, but in “Chapter 27,” Jared
Leto who plays Chapman and the script
show the real life character in an even more psychotic
role than in the other ’07 film.
We learn a few tidbits, like the urban tale surrounding
the Dakota, from the location of it build site
in 1883 that gave it its name (since it was surrounded
by nothing but farmland at the time, people felt
it was as if they were living in the Dakota Territory
in the Midwest), to the belief that all who lived
there had some leanings toward satanic cults.
This is most likely the remnants left from the
Roman Polanski flick, “Rosemary’s
Baby,” which was filmed there. But a six-degrees-of-separation
epiphany comes to Chapman during the film: Polanski
directed Rosemary’s Baby, and Polanski's
wife, Sharon Tate was killed by the Manson family,
who told his followers that the Beatle’s
White Album song "Helter Skelter" was
a coded prophecy of an apocalyptic war. Insert
the theme to Twilight Zone here. Or not.
Again, we could have found this out by a quick
Google search and would have been on our way five
minutes later.
I can’t say that this is Leto’s best
role to date. But after taking on a whopping 70
lbs. for the role you get to see what he’ll
look like when he’s 10 years older and overweight.
I rarely quote other critics, but this one from
Slate.com made me laugh, “Leto looks like
he's eaten his 30 Seconds to Mars bandmates.”
Copying the internal dialogue formula in “The
Killing of John Lennon,” the viewer gets
to hear a few poignant thoughts along the way.
“Everyone needs something, to find something.
Everyone is cracked; broken. You have to find
something to fix you; to give you what you need.
To take you away and make you whole.”
One interesting part in the film is when Chapman
leaves the run down no-tell/motel for better accommodations,
specifically the Sheraton where he would put his
killing plan together. For just a moment, while
he’s taken aback by a ranting and raving
man on the street yelling at no one, that he’s
the sane one in the scenario.
But it isn’t long before he’s ranting
just as furiously, but at himself, having and
internal and external argument on whether he will
ultimately pull the trigger or go back home. Who’s
to say if Chapman didn’t get another opportunity
to see Lennon that night, what might have happened,
or not happened. And at this point, that’s
irrelevant. And so is this film.
It’s ironic that Leto’s lines at
the beginning of the film include Chapman’s
distain for movie stars, seeing them as nothing
more than phonies, since one would expect Chapman
to feel the same about the person playing his
character. Leto is always acting, even when he’s
on stage with his band. Yes, he always strives
to separate the two and never wants to discuss
his movie roles when he’s being interviewed
about his music. But it’s easier for the
interviewer then him to cut the strings. It’s
when he’s on stage that he becomes the movie
star phony, and when he’s playing someone
else in front of the camera he comes off to be
more authentic. In this case, he should have stuck
to his phony, hand-over-the-mouth disguise, role
of rock superstar.
www.chapter27themovie.com/ch27v2/
-Kim Owens, April 24, 2008
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