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The Machinist Movie Review: By Adam Mast, ZBoneMan.com
The
Machinist features a bravura performance by Christian Bale,
and anyone who has doubts about this guy's acting ability
won't after they walk out of this picture. If anything,
The Machinist further proves that Christopher Nolan and
Warner Brothers were smart in their decision to cast Bale
as Bruce Wayne in Batman Begins.
The
Machinst features Bale as Trevor Reznik (sounds a little
like Trent Reznor, doesn't it), a paranoid man with a painful
past. This past causes insomnia and severe weight loss,
and what's more, Reznik has a difficult time functioning
around other people, and due to his enormous fatigue, he
becomes a risk at work (he's an industrial machinist). The
only individuals he seems to connect with are a sweet natured
call girl (a terrific Jennifer Jason Leigh) and a single
waitress (Aitana Sanchez-Gijon) who lives alone with her
young son. As the film progresses, Reznik's condition continues
to deteriorate, and before long the film assumes a dreamlike
state so that we the audience begin to question what is
really happening.

The
Machinist was directed by Brad Anderson (Happy Accidents,
Next Stop Wonderland), and the movie is stunning to look
at. The tone is picture perfect. I wouldn't necessarily
call it creepy, but it is sort of like watching a dream
on film with it's shades of blue and abrupt transition shots.
As a
mystery, The Machinist fails miserably. Inside the first
half hour, I knew what was going on and was irritated that
Anderson would take this sort of approach to the material.
The whole "twist" ending thing has been done to
death, and if anything, it offsets what this film is really
about--it sells it short.
As a
story about guilt and redemption, The Machinist succeeds
in showing how some people deal with certain issues. In
the case of Trevor Reznik, his body more or less shuts down,
and he doesn't quite know how to deal with things in a rational
way. It takes time, and it is the human story that is most
satisfying here.
Without
question, Bale is the glue that holds this picture together.
This is a horrifying, devastating transformation. From the
first moment we witness Bale standing in front of a mirror
with his shirt off, it is clear that this is a man with
major emotional problems. Bale reportedly lost nearly seventy
pounds for this role, and he is so unbelievably sickly in
this movie, that I thought he might keel over and die at
any given second. He is literally skin and bones, and just
the sight of his physical appearance was enough to make
me turn my head. But not only is this an unnerving phyiscal
transformation, it is also one of great psychological depth.
There are moments when Reznik rambles incohrently trying
to figure out how to deal with his situation, and I really
bought into it every step of the way. This is an award worthy
performance, and I haven't been this affected by Bale since
his young turn in Steven Spielberg's underrated Empire of
the Sun.
If Anderson
would have ditched the mystery aspect of the plot and just
focused on Reznik's problems directly, The Machinist would
have had a much bigger impact on me. The added element of
the obvious twist seemes like an all to predictabe device.
Still, the brilliant Bale and the expert cinematography
make the movie worth watching.
Grade: B-
Adam Mast, ZBoneMan.com
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