This movie is brilliant. It's severely underrated, criminally misunderstood, and I believe, totally ahead of its time. In "Falling Down", Michael Douglas has brought to life one of the most believable, likeable, and disturbing antiheroes of all time. It's a poignant tale of the everyman finally getting sick of the various stupidities, banalities, and irritabilities (I'm coining that if it's not already a word) that plague our modern life. It's a film that, at the beginning is as hilarious as it is true, but as the film continues, it proceeds to become more real, more disturbing, but also more grounded in its message. It's ridiculous and insane, but it also cuts deep to the truths that all of us feel at times. I've seen a number of Joel Schumacher's films, but this is the only one I could imagine myself watching multiple times. It depicts the American dream better than most films out there. It shows the everyman's struggle to conquer what he believes is wrong. It gives us a person to root for who is idealistic and filled with bravado, but also a man who is seriously flawed. I really believe this picture was ahead of its time; it didn't get incredible reviews, but I'd argue it's Joel Schumacher's crowning achievement.
Falling Down
1993
Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller
Falling Down
1993
Action / Crime / Drama / Thriller
Plot summary
On the day of his daughter's (Joey Singer) birthday, William "D-Fens" Foster (Michael Douglas) is trying to get to his estranged ex-wife's (Barbara Hershey) house to see his daughter. He has a breakdown and leaves his car in a traffic jam in Los Angeles and decides to walk. Along the way he stops at a convenience store and tries to get some change for a phone call but the owner, Mister Lee (Michael Paul Chan),does not give him change. This destabilizes William who then breaks apart the shop with a baseball bat and goes to an isolated place to drink a coke. Two gangsters (Agustin Rodriguez & Eddie Frias) threaten him and he reacts by hitting them with the bat. D-FENS continues walking and stops at a phone booth. The gangsters hunt him down with their gang and shoot at him but crash their car. William goes nuts and takes their gym bag with weapons proceeding in his journey of rage against injustice. Meanwhile Sergeant Martin Prendergast (Robert Duvall),who is working on his last day before retirement, is following the wave of crimes and believes that the same man is responsible but the other detectives do not pay attention to him.
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Insanely Underrated
One of the best films of the decade
Joel Schumacher's satire of modern America is just as fresh now as when it first came out. This thriller packs a real punch, telling the story of anti-hero William Foster, who snaps one day while sitting in a traffic jam (echoing the early Stephen king novella ROADWORK) and proceeds to go on a rampage across L. A. It works as a general thriller, with plenty of humour and action set pieces (I enjoyed it when watching as a kid) but at its heart it's a dark, despairing look at the troubles facing today's society. Schumacher is gutsy enough to criticise the integration (or not) into society of non-Americans; gang culture; fast food establishments; customer service; the growth of Neo-Nazism in the US; the nuclear family; marriage breakdown and divorce; the rich/poor divide, and plenty more besides. Lashings of the blackest comedy imaginable abound and despite elements of sentimentality here and there, this remains a striking, powerful and original masterpiece.
It also helps that the film stars two actors playing at the top of their game. Michael Douglas has never been better in his subtle, stony-faced performance of a guy driven to the brink (and beyond); opposite him, playing an aged cop hot on his heels, is Robert Duvall. Duvall is one of those character actors never really given a chance to shine that often but shine he does here. The cop sub-plot could have been boring with somebody else in the role but Duvall gives this film its human heart and I think it's also his best turn. Still a great movie and one that seemingly becomes more potent and more realistic as time passes. The question you'll come away with afterwards is, undoubtedly...are you economically viable?
deliberately annoying movie
A driver (Michael Douglas) is stuck in a traffic jam. In frustration, he walks away from his car with license plate D-Fens. LAPD Robbery Detective Prendergast (Robert Duvall) starts his last day and helps push the car to the side. His wife (Tuesday Weld) is struggling with issues. D-Fens has a confrontation with convenience store owner Lee who gives a statement to Prendergast. D-Fens is mad and going home to see his kid. His ex-wife Beth (Barbara Hershey) has a restraining order against him.
Joel Schumacher has no subtlety in this movie and that's the point. This is the old white guy yelling at the black kids to stay off his lawn. Then he snaps and shots one of them. Everything is skewed to annoy the audience so that they can feel for D-Fens. Literally, everything character and everything situation is geared towards to utterly annoying. Prendergast is the opposite of D-Fens. He faces frustrations of his own but he handles it anyways. This is a deliberately annoying movie.