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- <text id=94TT1709>
- <title>
- Dec. 05, 1994: Cinema:Slice and Dice
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 05, 1994 50 for the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/CINEMA, Page 93
- Slice and Dice
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Professional is a violent mix of disparate elements
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Schickel
- </p>
- <p> Luc Besson is not an action director. He is a violence director,
- probably the best in the business right now. He discomfits a
- lot of people because he is always on the dangerous edge of
- aestheticizing psychopathically murderous behavior. It's a subject
- we prefer to see treated cartoonishly so that we can pretend
- our enjoyment of it is pure escapism.
- </p>
- <p> Besson has a curious fondness for lost girls making their way
- in a brutal world. In La Femme Nikita his heroine was a drugged-out,
- teenage murderess-drifter rescued from the guillotine by an
- intelligence agency and given a new life as an assassin. In
- The Professional, set in New York City, his subject is a 12-year-old
- named Mathilda (Natalie Portman), the only member of her family
- to survive a criminal massacre. She turns to a neighbor for
- succor. Leon (Jean Reno) is an inarticulate fellow. He drinks
- milk by the gallon, tenderly cares for a plant that is his only
- friend and likes old Gene Kelly movies. He is devoted to his
- work as a "cleaner," a Mob hit man of rare talent.
- </p>
- <p> The bonding of Mathilda and Leon may be among the strangest
- in the long, tiresome history of odd-couple movies. The sweetness
- that develops between them as they try to elude the rogue dea
- agent who orchestrated her family's death (a divinely psychotic
- Gary Oldman) is crazily dislocating, the more so since Besson's
- French vision of the New York underworld is so eerily unreal.
- His final shootout is masterly cinema--this is a Cuisinart
- of a movie, mixing familiar yet disparate ingredients, making
- something odd, possibly distasteful, undeniably arresting out
- of them.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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