mouton
08-09-2004, 08:54 PM
The village of "M. Night Shaymalan’s The Village" is surrounded by forestry, with clear distinctions in the form of bright, green flags denoting where the extremities of the village finish and the forest begins. This village’s inhabitants exist as a peaceful society focused on the quality of life instead of the quantifying of all goods and services. The village is governed by a panel of elders, each of which has lived through a traumatic loss at one point in their lives. In fact, these traumas are what originally led these idealists away from the increasingly violent and greedy towns in the first place. Realistically though, are the founders hopeful optimists or are they psychologically damaged individuals who shut down in the face of pain and consequently ran away to avoid having to deal with their sorrow?
The forest that surrounds the village is inhabited by “Those we don’t speak of,” a mysterious and enigmatic species that shares an unspoken arrangement with the inhabitants of the village; you don’t come into our forest and we won’t eat you alive. Considering they’re not supposed to be spoken of, the people in the village do an awful lot of speaking about them. With some exception, it seems at times they’re all they can speak of. Granted, how could you not? These villagers have been living in and surrounded by fear their whole lives.
The majority of the plot focuses around two particular villagers, Lucius Hunt and Ivy Walker (played quite charismatically by Joaquin Phoenix and welcome-celebrity-daughter-turned-actress Bryce Dallas Howard). These two are the most ambitious dreamers in the village and it is no surprise that they form a connection. It is the ever-growing size of this connection that forces the villagers to see past their walls; to understand or at least begin to understand that it is only when you face your fears that you experience great joy and growth.
Shaymalan has a reputation for messing with people’s minds and pulling a celluloid rabbit out of his hat at the last second. This might get the audiences into the theatres but it also makes the first two thirds of his films seem almost irrelevant to these audiences. And the expectations are so high at this point that it almost seems near impossible not to disappoint.
That being said, if you or someone you know went to see "The Village" with a similar frame of mind, go again! As a writer, I feel much empathy for Shaymalan as the first two thirds of this particular film are brimming with insight about the vulnerable nature of love, the controlling power of fear and the debilitating sorrow that can come when you mix the two. The walls around this village, originally established as a means of protection became walls that merely limited these villagers from realizing their potential. This film should not suffer the same fate as its characters.
The forest that surrounds the village is inhabited by “Those we don’t speak of,” a mysterious and enigmatic species that shares an unspoken arrangement with the inhabitants of the village; you don’t come into our forest and we won’t eat you alive. Considering they’re not supposed to be spoken of, the people in the village do an awful lot of speaking about them. With some exception, it seems at times they’re all they can speak of. Granted, how could you not? These villagers have been living in and surrounded by fear their whole lives.
The majority of the plot focuses around two particular villagers, Lucius Hunt and Ivy Walker (played quite charismatically by Joaquin Phoenix and welcome-celebrity-daughter-turned-actress Bryce Dallas Howard). These two are the most ambitious dreamers in the village and it is no surprise that they form a connection. It is the ever-growing size of this connection that forces the villagers to see past their walls; to understand or at least begin to understand that it is only when you face your fears that you experience great joy and growth.
Shaymalan has a reputation for messing with people’s minds and pulling a celluloid rabbit out of his hat at the last second. This might get the audiences into the theatres but it also makes the first two thirds of his films seem almost irrelevant to these audiences. And the expectations are so high at this point that it almost seems near impossible not to disappoint.
That being said, if you or someone you know went to see "The Village" with a similar frame of mind, go again! As a writer, I feel much empathy for Shaymalan as the first two thirds of this particular film are brimming with insight about the vulnerable nature of love, the controlling power of fear and the debilitating sorrow that can come when you mix the two. The walls around this village, originally established as a means of protection became walls that merely limited these villagers from realizing their potential. This film should not suffer the same fate as its characters.