Jacob's Ladder (Adrian Lyne, 1990)
Posted: Fri Aug 22, 2008 1:42 pm
Caught up with this film again on TV the other night and was struck by how well it has held up over the years. It features one of Tim Robbins' most sympathetic performances (an actor I can take or leave depending on the roll) and easily Adrian Lyne's best film to date. I was struck again by the intensity of some of the chase scenes, like when Robbins' character is almost run over by a subway or when he's walking along a street and is chased by a car. There is a real, visceral vibe to these scenes that were very well done, I thought. I always remember the surgeon with no eyes really creeping me out and some of the other creatures being very effective. I believe these effects were all done practically.
I thought the film's post-script was interesting where it mentions that soldiers in Vietnam were subjected to the drug BZ (a form of LSD?) and I guess that's what caused Robbins' and his buddies to freak out and start shooting at each other in Vietnam. The obvious influence on this film seems to be an Occurrence at Owl Creek but I did some digging and the screenwriter has claimed that it was intended as a modern interpretation of Bardo Thodol, the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Scary to think that this guy wrote the screenplay for Ghost and this film. Oh well, take the good with the bad, I suppose.
Anybody else a fan of this film?
I thought the film's post-script was interesting where it mentions that soldiers in Vietnam were subjected to the drug BZ (a form of LSD?) and I guess that's what caused Robbins' and his buddies to freak out and start shooting at each other in Vietnam. The obvious influence on this film seems to be an Occurrence at Owl Creek but I did some digging and the screenwriter has claimed that it was intended as a modern interpretation of Bardo Thodol, the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Scary to think that this guy wrote the screenplay for Ghost and this film. Oh well, take the good with the bad, I suppose.
Anybody else a fan of this film?