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NOTHING
Rating:   
Canada. 2003.
Director Vincenzo Natali, Screenplay The Drews, Story Vincenzo Natali, David Hewlett & Andrew Miller, Producer Steven Hoban, Photography Derek Rogers, Music Michael Andrews, Visual Effects C.O.R.E. Digital Pictures (Supervisor Bret Culp), Animation Head Gear Animation (Animation Directors Steve Angel & Julian Grey), Practical Special Effects Performance Solutions (Supervisor John LaForet), Makeup Effects Paul Jones, Production Design Peter Cosco & Jasna Stefanovic. Production Company 49 Films/Nothing Inc.
Cast:
David Hewlett (David Robertson), Andrew Miller (Andrew Johnson), Marie-Josée Croze (Sara), Elana Shilling (Little Girl), Andrew Lowery (Crawford), Soo Garay (Little Girls Mother), Gordon Pinsent (Man in Suit)
Plot: David and Andrew have been friends since childhood and live together in Andrews house, which is located between two Toronto freeways. Life has not gone as either intended Davids plans to be a rock star having amounted to nothing through lack of talent, while Andrew suffers from anxiety to such an degree that he can no longer go out of the house. But then David suddenly announces that he is going to move in with his girlfriend Sara. However at work that day David is fired, accused of having embezzled $27,000. And when he goes to move in with Sara, he finds that she has only been using him the whole time so as to get his password to steal the money and that she has framed him to take the rap. At the same time, Andrew finds himself accused of kissing a young Girl Guide who came to the door. David returns to the house, just as the of them are informed by the city that the house is due for demolition at 3 pm. As 3 pm comes, the demolition people and police close in all at once but then just suddenly vanish. David and Andrew open the door to find that the house is now in a completely featureless white void. They try to explore their surroundings but discover there is nothing whichever way they go. They realize that they somehow managed to mutually cause the world to disappear because they were both hating it and wishing everything would go away. Later they find that they are able to cause anything they hate to disappear. Andrew uses this ability to banish unpleasant memories and reform his personality into something stronger. But when the two argue, the hating ability turns into a vicious battle.
Canadas Vincenzo Natali has emerged as one of the most promising genre talents of the last few years. Vincenzo Natali first appeared with Cube (1997), a fascinating conceptual puzzle box of a film that became an international festival and arthouse hit. Vincenzo Natali subsequently went on to make Cypher (2002), an equally fascinating film about brainwashing. It is possible that Vincenzo Natali may become one of the most talented independent genre voices of the new millennium time will tell.
Vincenzo Natali likes to make films that each come with conceptual physical limitations. Cube all took place on a single set, which was merely lit in different ways to suggest different rooms, while his earlier short film Elevated (1997) was a monster movie that took place entirely in an elevator. Natali goes one even further with Nothing which that takes place in a blank white void and comes entirely without any sets whatsoever (excepting that of a house). It may well be that Natali was inspired by George Lucass THX 1138 (1971), a film where the middle of the story similarly took place in a prison that consisted of a featureless and shadowless white-on-white void. That perhaps and the amusing Star Trek: The Next Generation episode Remember Me (1990) where Dr Crushers world suddenly starts disappearing.
Of course, a film that takes place in a void of nothing and has only two characters (apart from one or two minor characters that appear in the first few minutes) is rather limited in being able to tell a dramatic story. To his credit, Vincenzo Natali manages to do so and to create a story that is constantly fascinating and conceptually challenging. Certainly there are times Natali has had to employ various visual tricks cut-up frames, super wide-angles, shots from underneath the void and even a pie-cut frame just to add some variety to the rather monotonous visual scheme. On the other hand the visual sameness does lead to a number of quite hilarious sequences like the image of David Hewlett trying to sneak up on the presumed intruders in the house while attempting to keep to the ground and seek cover in an entirely featureless white void. The film manages to get far more out of the basic concept than one might think and there is quite a conceptual ingenuity to the scenes of the two exploring the void. The basic concept gets a quite rigorous workout and Nothing starts to get into some really fascinating territory during the last third when it gets to the two hating away things and then engaged in a war with one another.
Nothing is certainly a good deal lighter than Vincenzo Natalis two previous films. It has been construed as an offbeat slacker comedy of sorts. The opening, for instance, comes with a long preamble of title cards: The events portrayed in this motion picture are true/Once again, and it cannot be stressed enough, it is vitally important to understand that every single thing in this movie is true/Totally and completely true. There is an equal quirkiness to the depictions of the real world the Toronto skyline and the block of apartments where David Hewletts girlfriend lives are both photographic collages rather than real buildings. There are certainly times that you get the impression that Natali doesnt like his two central characters very much and the film often feels like a conte cruel arranged against them. But there is an undeniably likeable eccentricity. The last third or so features some quite demented images with the two squabbling and wishing at first objects and then bits of the house and then each others body parts away until the two of them are reduced to two disembodied heads bouncing around in the void. The ending with the two heads hopping off into nowhere followed by the turtle is quite delightful, although for those who watch all the way past the credits to the very end there is a baffling coda set ten years later where the two heads are still bouncing about, bearded and bedraggled, and then the void is suddenly invaded by a herd of elephant noises.
(Winner for Best Original Screenplay at this sites Best of 2003 Awards).
Copyright Richard Scheib 2005
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