The Car Man (TV Movie 2001) Poster

(2001 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
9/10
Ballet from Matthew Bourne as noir...sweaty, sexy and hopeless
Terrell-431 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Okay, so this is a ballet, not a black-and-white noir with Robert Mitchum or Burt Lancaster. And the title is, in my opinion, too clever for its own good. Yes, choreographer Matthew Bourne uses great chunks of Bizet's throbbing, tempestuous music, but the story has little to do with Carmen. The Car Man is based on The Postman Always Rings Twice. It's as horny, bloody, brutal and melodramatic as the Garfield-Turner movie or the book, and with an added erotic twist. In other words, it's a great noir story which has been turned into a great noir dance production.

When the tough drifter Luca (Alan Vincent) wanders into the mid-Western town of Harmony, population 375, he winds up at Dino's Diner and Garage. Dino (Scott Ambler) is an overweight, uncouth guy with a younger sex-pot of a wife, Lana (Saranne Curtin). She and her sister, Rita (Etta Murfitt) run the diner. Dino's mechanics in his garage are all small-town bullies and blusterers. They torment a young guy, Angelo (Will Kemp), with sexual innuendo; that Angelo is the boyfriend of Lana's sister makes no difference. He's not tough enough to stand up to them, and that makes him fair game. Luca quickly establishes who is the top guy and intervenes to stop the bullying of Angelo. And when Luca and Lana spot each other, we know nothing good is going to happen. Then Dino has to be away for a night. The two would-be lovers are just about to consummate their lust when Dino unexpectedly returns. Luca barely escapes with his shoes...and uses the opportunity to finish off things with Angelo. Luca is just as happy to use male or female as long he's the one in charge. It's not long before Luca and Lana are discovered...and Dino has his head smashed in by a heavy wrench, first swung by Lana and then, with Lana urging him on, by Luca. They set things up so that Angelo takes the fall. While they spend Dino's money drinking and gambling, Angelo is assaulted in prison, but escapes with a guard's gun. He and Luca and Lana are going to meet again in front of the garage. Luca may be having a crisis of conscience, maybe even Lana, too. Is it going to do them any good?

There are two things that make this ballet work. First, course, is Matthew Bourne's originality and choreography. The dance set pieces are vigorous and to the point, and when they need to show longing or lust, they do. Bourne often drives traditional ballet mavens up the wall. He is no traditionalist and he doesn't hesitate to use whatever dance styles do the job. He also loves to give traditional stories a twist, often but not always with an erotic element that has homo-erotic themes as well as hetero-erotic. When Luca and Lana first show their explicit lust for each other in front of the garage after Dino leaves, they are joined by the mechanics and their girlfriends. These are guys where "love" means their girl friends put out and then, afterwards, "Get me a beer." Bourne and his TV director Ross MacGibbon create a dark, hot dance where the sex is almost explicit in the cutting and becomes part of the dance. Toward the end there is a long duet between Luca and the bloody corpse of Dino which Lucas' conscience brought to the surface. The two dancers, Vincent and Ambler, create a stumbling, terrible vision of retribution on its way. Later, when Luca faces off with Angelo and meets his fate, there is a bloody, explicit kiss which really is shocking. The second thing that makes The Car Man work is the dancers. The women all look sexy and petulant. Lana has a figure that would make the real Lana Turner envious. Even more necessary for this ballet to work, Luca and the mechanics are genuinely tough-looking guys. They are highly skilled dancers but no one breaks the image, by either facial expression or movement, of being small-town, ignorant bullies. Scott Ambler, with a realistically padded stomach, plays Dino with as much acting skill as dancing skill. There also is no attempt to disguise unshaved underarms or hide the sweat the dancers generate dancing. The weather in Harmony is hot and humid. The place looks like it reeks of beer, sex and sweat. So do the dancers.

While Bourne created The Car Man as a theater piece, he and MacGibbon have shot and edited it to be a cinematic experience. Traditionalists who want a camera positioned in front of the stage and then switched to automatic pilot will be displeased. Quick cutting at times, close-ups of glances, camera angles that give us far more immediacy than a theater seat would, and a tour-de-force of cutting, camera smears and sound that create the illusion of cars racing, all add up to a dynamic viewing experience. It really works in terms of dramatic tension and movement, and it obviously is exactly what Matthew Bourne wanted.

So can a ballet be considered a noir? When it's based on The Postman Always Rings Twice it can, especially when its as sexy, brutal and hopeless as Bourne makes it.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Matthew Bourne, Bizet's Carmen and The Postman Always Rings Twice- a great match; sadly with bad camera work to accompany it
TheLittleSongbird2 November 2013
Ballet has always had a special place in my heart, since the age of 6. And Matthew Bourne is a very clever choreographer, bringing out his own style while respecting the story of the ballet itself and being a great storyteller. The Car Man will delight those who like his style. Sadly there is one big hindrance which is the camera work, which is rather slapdash in the quick cuts, too many close-ups that are not expansive enough, the want for better shots of the dancers and what they're dancing and also the want for the movement being not as excessively constant as it was. Everything else however is great. The production values match the passion and colour of the story and the Carmen music, not lavish but very appealing, kind of like West Side Story in noir-style. Bourne's choreography really shines, it is clever witty stuff while still looking very graceful and sexy at the same time. And the passion and energy that pulsates through Bizet's music is brought out in this choreography, the drama on stage and in the storytelling. The Car Man for music uses one of the all-time great French operatic masterpieces in Carmen, the music of course is fantastic and the orchestra play it with such verve, nuance and fire. The conducting is musical and has authority, the drama is allowed to resonate but the energy of the production is never lost. The dancing in impeccable and the performances strong. Will Kemp comes off best, he is a powerful dancer though capable of many elegant lines and acts and performs with a lot of expression, never coming off as clinical. To conclude, a very good production, often great, but one wishes that the camera work was better than it was. 8/10 Bethany Cox
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Hideous Film Cutting Devastates Electrifying Ballet
museumofdave1 April 2013
Someone should have given the film editor of this ballet a hearty dose of Ritalin before allowing him in the cutting room; far too much exciting modern dance has been sliced to smithereens by someone who has watched too many Warner Brothers cartoons! Matthew Bourne's exciting re-imagining of Bizet's familiar cat-among -the-pigeons opera transfers heroine Carmen to a Fantasy American Garage-Diner Combo, and a sexy drifter ambles into the wreckage and creates a steamy chaos, loving not only the wife of the boss, but the poor teased pretty boy that hangs around the diner--its an odd concept, but the dancing is a galvanizing mix of classical technique, modern dance and show hoofing, with a steamy atmosphere that surrounds an eclectic mix of lowlife types.

This is clearly not a concept for everyone, and unfortunately, the rapid cross-cutting utilized in the first twenty minutes makes for an uncomfortable watching experience--it is crass work with no eye for the dancers or the mood--but once the story and the dancers take over, the editor seems to mellow out a bit and you can actually see some dancing. As one of his rules for being photographed for film at RKO, Fred Astaire required that all his dancing be covered full-figure, from head to toe, as it was, after all, his dancing that people had come to see. Matthew Bourne should so specify so that dynamic performances such as The Car Man are not chopped to smithereens. High marks for the performance, very low marks for the editing make for an average rating.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Pulls you in and never lets go...
the_monkeys_raincoat31 August 2002
Matthew Bourne has become my new hero...having swept me off my feet with his all male "Swan Lake" and then with his tantalizing and provocative draw on Carmen, "The Car Man". I didn't even like ballet or musicals until a friend introduced me to all those heady Swans. But even moreso, I was completely captivated by the sweaty, steamy peek into "Harmony, USA" where "The Car Man" unfolds. Though all cast members were superb, Will Kemp literally took my breath away. His portrayal of Angelo was so exquisitely danced I felt I had crawled into his skin. He was/is brilliant not only as a dancer but an actor as well. (His first film 'Mindhunters' comes out early next year). Though it is dance theatre - so to speak - and some may not be comfortable at first with no dialogue, Will alone is so compelling as he evolves from a quiet, sexually confused, timid, sweet soul to a ... well I won't spoil it. But the transformation is so powerful you want to watch it over and over. It also makes me wish I lived in London to be able to see Bourne, Kemp and all the loyal 'Bourne' crew of dancers more frequently.
16 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A fantastic show
mail-559 April 2011
Well what can I say. Having seen Matthew Bourne's Dorian Gray, Swan Lake, and Cinderella I was wondering what to make of this.

He did not disappoint. A fantastic Matthew Bourne interpretation. Admittedly, the music is Bizet's Carmen, the story is The Postman Always rings twice. The result is fantastic.

If you've ever seen traditional ballet, you'll hate it. If you've ever seen Matthew Bourne ballet, you'll get it, and love it. How can such detail be instilled through music and dance without words - but it is.

My only criticism is the filming - I have seen all the other ballets on stage, and they didn't require closeups or back stage elements, and they benefited from audience reaction. Why did Channel 4 decide to give us such a dry, intrusive view of this show.

I am waiting with baited breath for a filmed version of Dorian Gray to be available. To my mind, his best production yet.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Words dont say it all
thegretelclub18 February 2002
The Car Man was brilliant. It used the music from the classic opera Carmen, which worked well in the modern setting of this drama. It conveyed the story through movement rather than words, which I thought was extremely well done and comprehendible. The story is about a guy who comes to town and quickly becomes the object of a lot of attention. He's a heartthrob to the ladies and a hero to the men. He gets involved with someone's wife and a young gay man. When the husband is killed by his wife the gay man is framed and goes to prison, where he gets raped etc. However the wife and main guy run off together and, due to his relationship with the gay guy, guilt sets in and he goes a bit crazy. This was really good if you like the theatre and stuff like that.
7 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
I don't get it...
mtarshis31 July 2006
After seeing Bourne's Swan Lake, I was intrigued, yet not enthralled to see Car Man- as I love Bizet's Carmen. Although I wasn't expecting opera, and I do appreciate artistic interpretation, I was hoping to get at least some excitement over the dancing as dance was the vehicle for the message. In the interview on the DVD, Bourne seems to be proud that Vincent doesn't look like a dance. Well, there's a reason for that- he's not. He dances like a ballet school drop out that was given a chance for a lead in a off-off-off production. I find Bourne's choreography clumsy and somewhat over the ability of the dancers he casts. It's as if he can't find (or won't pay) high caliber, better qualified dancers to do the parts.

As for the interpretation, has anyone seen his rendition of Swan Lake? -clearing throat- um, same plot... Half clad boys, boy gets girl, boy gets boy, boy gets killed. -yawn- Been there...

I'm not a dancer, but I've attended enough ballet, jazz dance, interpretive dance, opera, symphony and theater to know quality when I see it. I think Bourne could have a masterpiece if he brought in more talent to handle what he's trying to convey. I applaud Bourne for working out of the box, but he falls flat in execution. Needs work
0 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed