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Us

Jordan Peele’s Us seems shaped by everything from Haneke to Hitchcock, from Almodovar to John Carpenter to, indeed, Polanski. But it’s Peele’s own wry aesthetic and penchant for dialogue that’s at once realistic and off-beat that sets his second film apart. So often in the film, which opens today, what’s most impressive is not the scares, many of which are well orchestrated, but the in-between moments of a family eating fast food for dinner, or a boring car ride to a summer home that features memorable diagetic music (there’s some of that Haneke).

Much praise has already been collected by Peele for his careful craft — and the film is impressively put together — but, as in Get Out, what sells the scares is that Peele is such a studious observer of the banality of daily life.

After a spooky flashback cold-open, Us begins as Haneke’s Funny Games does, with a somewhat idealized but recognizably human family driving to a vacation home. Again, Peele, who also wrote the screenplay, excels at this sort of exposition, which in typical horror films is excruciating. We find the Wilsons at ease with one another. There are jokes and banter. But the spooky aura of the cold open hangs in the air. Where Get Out had a more straightforward relationship to form, Us is more observant of its characters faces, the camera seeming to study, even probe, them. It moves its angles slightly in between shots. Scenes shot in broad daylight seem to be imbued with the coldness of midnight.

The central conceit of Us is hinted at with prefatory text across a black screen at the beginning of the film. As the trailer revealed, a family is haunted by bizarro versions of themselves. Where these versions come from and what they want is at once intellectually stimulating and cockamamie if you mull it over for too long. Peele’s penchant for allegory is a gift and a curse. One wonders whether he received studio notes to the effect of “Explain this in dialogue.”

Indeed there are tense, highly memorable scenes that are freighted with long, verbal explanations of What’s Going On. Not a crime in itself (Hitchcock does this all over the place in Vertigo). But too many details in terms of the Hows and Whys just serve to thicken the sauce needlessly.

Story aside, the picture belongs to Lupita Nyong’o. Her character, Adelaide, walks through life haunted by a childhood trauma — a shopworn horror trope Peele twists into something legitimately interesting. Nyong’o is a screen acting ninja of body language. When Adelaide tells her husband, Gabe (Winston Duke), about the childhood event, Peele writes her a dramatic monologue that borders on the maudlin. But it’s Nyong’o’s posture that sells it. She hugs her own elbows as if to protect a body she isn’t quite sure is hers.

The scares and the blood and the gore Us has on offer is better than most horror submissions these days, which tend to linger on the violence in a cheap, juvenile way that doesn’t interest Peele. In Us, the manner in which the characters commit their violent acts actually reveals something about them. (What a concept.) Of course, most discussions of the film will center around the meaning of it all.

Unlike Peele’s first film, Us is more ambiguous in its thematic destinations. The ideas of doubles, doppelgangers, shadows, and mirrors have a deep mythos all their own and can be read in any direction you like. The cognitive bias programmed in us by Get Out  is to see the film as, on some level, about Race in America. Put a gun to my head and I’d say I read Peele’s film — which is at bottom about a permanent and exploited underclass who are out of sight and out of mind — as an allegory for the prison system. The inmates are exactly like you, only in red jumpsuits. 

Us — THREE STARS

Directed by Jordan Peele

Rated R

Universal Pictures

Blumhouse

Monkey Paw

116 min.

Black Panther

The era of the high-octane superhero movie has wrought a lot of artistically vacuous pomp and circumstance and a handful of worthwhile, clever films. Marvel’s Black Panther, which has been placed in the care of Ryan Coogler (Fruitvale Station, Creed), indeed marks something different from worthwhile and clever — it is asking socially relevant questions without preaching their answers. It’s also a high-budget, almost entirely black film about black people.

Coogler’s intricate script, co-written with Joe Robert Cole, begins in Oakland in 1992. Before the first scene, we’re thrust into a VFX-powered exposition dump that, unlike 2017’s Wonder Woman, is over fast. The basics: Wakanda is a central African nation that everyone thinks is tribal and third-world. In fact, their possession of a precious mineral called Vibranium has led to a hidden society more technologically advanced than any on Earth. Their king is known as the “Black Panther” and has superpowers. To preserve their way of life, the Wakandans have chosen to isolate themselves and not share their tech with the world. Again, we’re zipped through this exposition in about sixty seconds, a choice that felt rushed at first, but one wishes more superhero movies would respect our time in this way.

From there, Coogler and Cole present a delightfully convoluted (reminiscent of a Bond film in some respects) plot that sidesteps the usual high-spot nonsense that characterizes so many movies of this kind. There is not necessarily an action beat every ten minutes. And despite the voiceover exposition dump at the beginning, Coogler is skilled at delivering information visually in a manner rarely seen in Marvel films. (During a fast-paced heist scene, Coogler’s camera catches a glimpse of a villain, Michael B. Jordan, smooching one of his accomplices as they flee. The camera doesn’t linger on it or cut in for a close up to tell us our bad guy, Killmonger, is in love and has something to lose.) Although the pacing of Black Panther slows much too much at times, it is a comic book film that draws the viewer in precisely because it’s taking the time to do so. After the brief visit to 1992 Oakland, the significance of which comes into play later, we’re hunkered down with the Wakandans. How they live, how their tech works, how the king must accept challenges from other tribes — the film becomes maximalist as it celebrates its own details.

Chadwick Boseman plays the Black Panther. An actor of great poise, Boseman has the ability to shimmy between quiet dignity and a playful smile in a way that makes his performances seem singularly natural. (He has played Thurgood Marshall and James Brown in prior films.) But the villain is far more interesting than the king. Michael B. Jordan’s Killmonger, we come to learn, has the kind of life story that superheroes would envy. A special ops soldier, and now an international criminal and spy of sorts, Killmonger has a legitimate claim to the Wakandan throne as well as a legit personal beef with King T’Challa (Boseman). There is a modesty to Jordan as a performer that is endlessly appealing. Even as a bad guy, Jordan seems to do very little, making every blink have a substantial effect. Jordan in this way can be contrasted with Andy Serkis, who plays an eccentric one-armed villain in cahoots with Killmonger and seems to be having an illegal amount of fun doing it.

The Panther must claim his rightful throne while fending off challengers and trying to locate the stolen Vibranium. But the film takes its conflict in a more ideological form. Killmonger, a Wakandan who has grown up in the U.S. and been radicalized by racial injustice, wishes to use Wakandan Vibranium to arm “oppressed peoples around the world” to rise up against their oppressors. The Wakandan society has always prided itself on its way of life, not meddling in the affairs of outsiders, and not welcoming outsiders into its midst. T’Challa’s dilemma is not whether or not to fight the bad guys — being a superhero film, that’s an easy one — rather, it’s one of allegiance. What responsibility to the diaspora do the Wakandans have?

This is a theme that goes beyond the usual “With great power comes great responsibility” issue of the average Marvel story. Here we have a villain who not only has a point but makes an argument too strong to ignore. Killmonger is a hero himself, in a sense. The final battle, which includes giant rhinos and Martin Freeman remotely flying a Wakandan fighter plane, is as much an intellectual debate as it is a physical smash-’em-up.

Black Panther — THREE STARS

Directed by Ryan Coogler

Rated PG-13

Marvel Studios

134 min.