Part of my coverage of the 61st Chicago International Film Festival
DEAD MAN'S WIRE ***
IDEA: A fictionalized account of Tony Kiritsis's kidnapping of his mortgage broker, Richard Hall, in 1977 Indianapolis.
BLURB: You know social discontent is in the air when two movies, debuted within the same month, end with Gil Scott-Heron’s single “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised.” First it was PTA’s One Battle After Another, and here it is again, like an echoing mantra, in Gus Van Sant’s docudrama. The sense of déjà vu is apropos; not only is Dead Man’s Wire based on a documentary, the true story it recounts from nearly half a century ago is a version of something we’ve witnessed in varied forms over the intervening years. It’s that queasily familiar molotov cocktail of class grievance, violence, and the media circus, set off by people who end up in extreme situations because the system has seemingly given them no other choice. There is satisfying no-more-fucks-to-give fury in Bill Skarsgård’s nervy and garrulous (albeit curiously prettified) Tony Kiritsis, and Van Sant takes great care to show him as a polite, well-respected, and at times comically clumsy guy. Dead Man’s Wire recreates the events of his kidnapping of Richard Hall with a nod to news-media verisimilitude, often using crash zooms and freeze frames and craftily toggling between film and video formats, with the occasional insert of real historical news footage. Van Sant covers all sides in his portraiture, emphasizing a news media prone to sensationalism and reductive banalities, a legal system of questionable efficacy, and a financial world where callousness reigns (in the memorable form of a slothful, southern-fried Al Pacino). Significantly, the points of light are the two major Black characters: Colman Domingo’s radio DJ and Myha’la’s up-and-coming reporter, who exhibit actual human interest rather than procedural calculation. Dead Man’s Wire is tense and funny, if familiar to a fault, and it poses the important question: if the beleaguered worker with a gun is considered insane, what about the rich executive willing to ruin more lives than the worker ever could?