Domino: 2 stars out of 4
I am a geek. One of the signifiers of my geek status is that I have
read a great deal of Comic Books. One of the characters in the Marvel
Universe happens to be a beautiful bounty hunter named Domino with an
amazing gift of 'luck.' I reveal this about myself because the first
thing I thought of when I heard about this movie called Domino was that
Marvel had made another movie.
That isn't the case. Domino is supposedly based, sort of, on the life
of Domino Harvey. A real person named Domino Harvey who was a beautiful
bounty hunter with what seems to be a certain amount of luck and pluck.
I only wonder if someone somewhere in Marvel Executive Universe had
heard of Domino Harvey and based a character, loosely, on her exploits.
No one, anywhere else that I have found, has said that, though.
What people have said is that there were large issues with Domino. A
great many of them felt that with the sort of real life they had to
draw from that something bigger, something better, could have been made
than what they saw. Far too many reviewers lamented that the movie's
plot could have just been better without specifically stating
particular instances.
But plotting aside, the majority is in agreement that the frantic
cutting, editing and hyper narration detract from the movie. At one
point the characters are on mescaline but rather than distort or
disorient the movie in relation to their own viewpoint, nothing really
changes, which leaves us wondering if they entire movie is viewed by
one on mescaline.
There is an intensity to the film that is attractive. You will never
know what to expect in action, relationship and plot. Things will
happen and then be undone; characters will say and do things completely
unexpectedly. And the audience is definitely kept on the edge of their
seats because of this. Domino is much like a rollercoaster. It's
enthusiastic and wrenching while you are on, definitely something
memorable; but once you have gotten off it's not quite the memory you
thought you were going to make.
The feeling of being let down is generally the thrust of many of the
reviews of Domino. And it is accurate to a point. Watching the movie
you don't just feel let down, you feel dropped on your head. You would
imagine that this movie would be about Domino Harvey's life, and it is
really about how Domino survived an armored car heist gone wrong. Not a
bad story, truth be told, but the commercials and previews for the
movie leave you expecting something different than what you see. And it
doesn't jive. Reviewers have gone on about crossed genres and mixed
styles, but to the average person at the theatre you're probably going
to only be concerned that the movie you thought was about Domino Harvey
is really about her small part in an armored car heist.
Which is why the movie doesn't work on many levels. Domino Harvey is
our focal point. We view the movie through her eyes, and literally
through her narration. The movie is decentralized from Domino Harvey as
she's only a minor player in the action. The creative team that put the
movie together felt the need to at least explain some background of
everyone else even remotely involved in the film. Many reviewers have
complained about the unnecessary explication and characterization
because we are fooled into thinking that this is a movie about Domino
Harvey, when it really is about, well I've already said that.
The only other thing that is lacking in reviews out there is a
commentary on the disregard the movie had for the FBI. The FBI was
everywhere, monitoring everyone. They lied when they needed to and
pushed people's buttons to get the reaction they were looking for. It
is my opinion that the FBI served as the foil for the movie's plot. And
when you go to see the movie keep an eye out for the motivation behind
the FBI's doings because were they actually constrained by the law, you
would imagine that the final and concluding scene wouldn't have gone
down at all unless they were looking for martial justification to have
a mafia boss get cut down in gunfire while taking out a white collar
criminal while several innocent people look on. I don't think that
balances out against the fun in the movie, but hey, maybe exploding and
flipping RVs balance that teeter totter.
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Kyle Gould is a University of Calgary Graduate in
English devoutly trying to make the 25,000 dollar piece of parchment
not just a glorified ink blot. Currently it would serve better as a
Rorschach test. Feel free to throw some ink his way at wkkgould@hotmail.com.