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As
a society, we like to watch. Otherwise we wouldn't be tuning
in by the millions to see Paris Hilton daintily prance out
of jail with a victim's look on her face. Otherwise summer
television wouldn't be made up largely of so-called reality
shows where a contrived sense of the world is created in the
name of lucrative riches for ordinary folks with Los Angeles
agents. Otherwise there wouldn't be thousands of websites
where you get a glimpse into another person's real world.
Sometimes, such as the case with LonelyGirl15, the reality
millions fell in love with turns out to be fake but we keep
watching anyway.
We
live in a time where media is at our fingertips. Technology
is cheap and it's everywhere, ready to catch our every move.
But like a movie, the way you put those clips you capture
together influences the way we construct our reality. That's
what D.J. Caruso explores in Disturbia, a thriller
that has some grand ideas and solid spots, but ultimately
falls into the trap of a gutless resolution.
After
getting three months house arrest for decking his teacher,
Kale (Shia LaBeouf) has a good sense of life in his suburban
neighbourhood. With nothing to do, he takes to watching his
neighbours through the lenses of his binoculars. On the one
side of the house is the hot new girl in town, Ashley (Sarah
Roemer), who has a dysfunctional family, likes to swim in
skimpy bikinis and read on the roof. On the other side of
the fence is the creepy mystery Mr. Turner (David Morse) who
captures rabbits and has a longhorn skull hanging in his garage.
After watching the news, Kale suspects Mr. Turner might be
a psycho serial killer with a thing for redheads. Then again,
it could be just one big Brady Bunch-esque misunderstanding.
Caruso
does a good job building up Kale's boredom early on, allowing
the potentially preposterousness that ensues to at least have
a foothold in the realm of both reality and fantasy. It's
at this point, with the story established, that the voyeuristic
commentary really comes into play. If we are watching something,
as opposed to experiencing it ourselves, we are creating a
reality. We use inference and sometimes miss context, thus
creating something new. It might be close to the truth; it
might not be. That's the new reality.
As
he's shown in Holes and Transformers, there's
no denying LaBeouf's dorky charm. He does a good job at playing
a geek at heart, but not going so far as to make him a nerd.
He still maintains a certain cool factor that makes you want
to experience the journey.
Towards
the end, Disturbia does unravel into something not
nearly as smart but that doesn't stop the first two acts from
being a slick little observation on the multiple levels of
reality that surround us today.
DVD
Features
The
film is shown in a nice enhanced widescreen format. The audio
comes through clearly with a Dolby 5.1 Surround EX track in
English and dubbed 5.1 tracks in French and Spanish. Optional
subtitles are also available in all three languages.
As
far as extras, there's a solid mix of fairly standard stuff.
On the commentary track there's director D.J. Caruso chatting
it up with stars Shia LaBeouf and Sarah Roemer over snacks,
drink and chicken. It's mostly back pats and making of bits
and isn't overly entertaining. There's four deleted scenes
totaling about five minutes and another minute's worth of
outtakes. "The Making of Disturbia" runs
almost 15 minutes and explores not only the typical behind-the-scenes
stuff but a little bit of the meaning behind it as well. Rounding
out the disc are a music video for This World Fair's "Don't
Make Me Wait", a pop-up trivia track, photo gallery theatrical
trailer and trailers for Stardust, Blades of Glory
and Next.
Buy
the DVD.
©Movie
Views; August 3, 2007
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