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| SHAME
(director/writer: Steve McQueen; screenwriter: Abi
Morgan; cinematographer: Sean Bobbitt; editor: Joe
Walker; music: Harry Escott; cast: Michael Fassbender
(Brandon), Carey Milligan (Sissy),
Nicole Beharie (Marianne),
James Badge Dale (David Robinson); Runtime: 101; MPAA
Rating: NC-17; producers: Iain Canning/Emile Sherman;
Fox Searchlight; 2011-UK) "An intense and uncompromising drama that examines the sex life of a 30-something loner bachelor sex addict." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Black
British artist-turned-director
Steve McQueen ("Hunger") directs an intense and
uncompromising drama that examines the sex life of a
30-something loner
bachelor sex addict, Brandon (Michael Fassbender),
who lives in NYC in a hi-rise luxury apartment, has
a high-end job, and is handsome, dresses smartly and
is personable. What he lacks is a handle on his sex
life and is so bottled-up he can't make long-term
relationships with the opposite sex. Abi
Morgan co-writes the screenplay with McQueen,
that shows their protagonist is addicted to sex with
prostitutes and online porn, and to his detriment is
locked into that world. We will see that the filmmaker
doesn't care why the addiction, only about its
damaging consequences. Brandon
is annoyed when his suicidal extroverted tortured-soul
needy singer sister
Sissy (Carey Mulligan) crashes in his pad and with
nowhere to go the introverted Brandon reluctantly lets
her stay. Sissy tries to connect with her downcast
brother by telling him "We're not bad people," we just
come from a bad place." They were born in Ireland, but
raised in New Jersey. David (James Badge
Dale), Brandon's
loud-mouth family man cheating boss, forces his way to
accompany his employer catch Sissy sing in a downbeat
style, at a nightclub, Frank Sinatra's signature song
“New York, New
York” that tells if you can make it New York you can make it
anywhere. Afterwards the obnoxious boss takes the
vulnerable Sissy back to David's pad and bangs her,
which greatly upsets Brandon. We watch Brandon navigate
easily with prostitutes and then get a chance to watch
him fail as he goes out on a date with an eligible
girl. Marianne (Nicole
Beharie) is Brondon's sweet
black work colleague, whom he takes to a fancy
restaurant and finds when he takes her to bed on
date number two that he can't perform. The success of the film pivots on the determined sex freak performance by Michael Fassbender, who takes us into the head of a sex addict and lets us see that despite his outward politeness he's a cold bastard incapable of love or intimacy. But the narrative, despite its few dramatic jolts that gets our attention, offers too pat a psychological take on its subject even if the pic ends unresolved and encourages us to muse about him further on our own. The bold and graphic sexual film never recovers from keeping its protagonist as a case study film and by never letting him get up from being observed under the microscope. Nevertheless Fassbender makes for a good specimen choice, as he has the kind of magnetic screen presence that makes any picture he's in all the better. REVIEWED ON 11/27/2011 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |