Sunday, 10 February 2008

zodiac



Zodiac

Zodiac didn't fare so well at the box office, which is too bad. It's a

thoughtful, beautifully crafted film about a police detective' and, in

particular, a cartoonist turned writer's obsessive quest to identify

the Zodiac killer. The murders, committed in the 60s remain unsolved,

although the movie has a thesis about the killer's identity. That's

because the movie uses the works of the cartoonist turned writer

Robert Graysmith, played by Jake Gyllenhaal, as important source

material. Don't click through if you want to maintain the suspense.

The movie isn't a serial killer movie, there is in fact only brief

moments of violence or even action. The movie is much more about the

search for information by Graysmith and police detective David Toschi,

supposedly the model for Dirty Harry. This is probably what kept

people away. What makes it much more interesting is the slow

deterioration of the reporters and police involved in the case. The

failure to solve it destroys much of their lives.

Aside from the character studies the period detail that David Fincher

applies is fantastic. In an opening shot of San Francisco, the skyline

has been altered to remove buildings constructed since 1968 and the

Embarcadero Freeway is digitally added. Even backdrops of key scenes

were digitally altered to make them as they were.

Emphasizing the long, drawn out impact of the obsession, Fincher shows

the TransAmerica tower under construction as means of time moving and

he also uses musical cues to the passage of time. You know Graysmith

has been on the path for awhile when Baker Street is playing.

I have one complaint. There is a good deal of argument out there

against the thesis that Graysmith lays out, but the film doesn't

address these arguments. It is only a movie of course, and it does not

explicitly say this person is the killer, although it effectively does

so. In so doing though, it helps extend Graysmith's obsession to the

viewer. As soon as I finished the movie, I read the Wikipedia entry

and read about the many theories.


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