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9/25/10
Falling Down (1993): Crazy Never Sleeps



Many of us might have a passing daydream that we could leave our car in traffic, demand that the fast food place serve breakfast after the cut off time, or call shenanigans a construction crew repairing a road that seems just fine. The average person will stay in their car, settle for an apple pie and just call it breakfast, and just find an alternate route around traffic all the while saving up their anger to take out on friends, wives, husbands or other relations like normal people do. ‘D-Fens’ Foster felt that the world had taken everything from him and it was time to take something back. When I watch the news and see some extremist, homegrown or foreign, taking lives to prove their point or moral stance, my thoughts instantly go back to the special insanity exhibited by Michael Douglas’ character.
While Falling Down also features an excellent performance by Robert Duvall as the cop spending his last day on the job following Foster’s bloody path, Duvall’s solid acting is quickly overshadowed by Douglas’ more inspired character and performance. In 1993, Falling Down served as a warning to a world that would see homegrown terrorism and radicals rise up in the next few years during events such as Waco, Ruby Ridge, and the Okalahoma City bombing. All of these groups were lead in some way by white American men who felt like their voice had gone unheard and had clearly also gone Kookoo for Cocoa Puffs. Today we live in a world where folks regularly show up at political rallies with a firearm in tow, and people like William Foster that sit in their homes absorbing a stream of politically television designed to feed the ostracized‘s paranoia. Falling Down should serve as more than just a reflection of the early nineties tensions. It is also a warning that there will always be a danger in society lurking as close as the next disturbed person that gets pushed too far.
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This is an amazing movie, and I don't think he's a hero at all, but I don't think he's totally bad either-there's probably a lot of "everyman/everywoman" out there who try to do a good job, try to do what's expected of them and live honorably--and get zilch in return. Had Douglas' character not been shown to be an abusive husband, the mssg of the movie would have been very different and he MIGHT have become a folk-hero. As it is though, he's a flawed, and genuinely disturbed(and frightening!)person. I love the ambiguity of this film and of all the characters-esp/ Duval, coping with retirement and his shrill, neurotic wife (the always excellent Teusday Weld). Great article.
ReplyDeleteFalling Down is one of my favorite films of all-time and D-Fens is one of my all-time favorite characters. Imho, he is the quintessential anti-hero. I'm not a strong supporter of remakes, but if there was ever a film that screamed "remake" due to its relevance in today's society and the economic crisis we are experiencing, it would be Falling Down. Great post, TL and the best i have read in a while.
ReplyDeleteI love Falling Down also, and while he does do some cheer worthy things, I agree with your thoughts on him not being a hero in any way. If anything, he just represent a part of us that is frustrated and wants to lash out every so often, but do to sanity, don't.
ReplyDeleteWhat's funny is if you look at it from the angle of, say, the employee that cannot serve breakfast after a certain time. In all my years in restaurant management and bar-tending, I have encountered many selfish assholes that think the world revolves around their wants. Not needs, wants. I look at him as the guy that represent the me-me-me brats that I, and many people that have worked in customer service, have wanted to lash out on.
In a way, he is made out to be the victim in that situation, which is really the opposite of how it is in real life, which 75% of the time the customer is always an asshole, as Randal would say!