The Ninth Configuration is a strange, genre bending piece of cinema that deserves a review.
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"I'm Stacy Keach damn it! Stop making fun of my costume!" |
When we think of sequels, we think of features following
in the footsteps of its predecessor, whether it be continuity of events, tone,
or approach altogether. It's when we
delve a little deeper into what truly constitutes a sequel to a great work that
the notion grows somewhat more indistinct.
While direct-sequels are often picking up where the prior work left off,
sometimes a sequel can follow a work in theory rather than being overtly
connected to it. For example, Warner
Brothers considers Exorcist II: The Heretic to be the true sequel to The
Exorcist in spite of the public and authorial rejection of the piece. William Friedkin, director of The Exorcist,
considers Cruising to be the spiritual sequel to The Exorcist. Finally and most importantly, the original
writer of The Exorcist, William Peter Blatty, considers his film
adaptation of his own novel, The Ninth Configuration.
Also
known in some territories as Twinkle Twinkle, “Killer” Kane, writer
William Peter Blatty's directorial debut is a genre-bending mixture of
absurdist comic satire and existential horror film. The film concerns a castle being used by the
US government as an insane asylum for the military. Among the castle's bizarre inhabitants is
Billy Cutshaw (Scott Wilson), a former astronaut who abandons a space
mission. Meanwhile Colonel Kane (Stacey
Keach) of the US Marine Corps arrives on the scene to assume responsibility for
the care of the patients, and may be insane himself. It's around the point Kane and Cutshaw engage
in theological conversations that the film shifts gears from being maniacally
crazed to unrelentingly dark. Cutshaw
takes the stance that mankind is born of amoral chance while Kane tries to
profess his faith in a caring and evolved God, and that pure human sacrifice is
exemplary of the goodness in man. It's
at a surreal and strangely terrifying bar fight with demonic bikers that both
men’s theories and beliefs will be put to the ultimate test.
Stacey
Keach is stellar as Colonel Kane, freely skirting between complacent calm and
unmitigated, screaming insanity. Equally
strong is Scott Wilson as a once headstrong man crippled from within by his own
fears. The supporting cast, notably in
the earlier half, are populated by a wild cast of characters including a truly
crazed Robert Loggia roaring out the castle windows. Look closely at the opening scene and you'll
spot Blatty in a cameo. Aside from the
casting of Jason Miller (Father Karras from The Exorcist) as a
particularly mad former Lieutenant, it's Cutshaw who serves as the direct link
to The Exorcist. For those who
recall Friedkin's film, an astronaut is approached by a 12 year old girl named
Regan who informs him he will die in space before urinating on the floor. While The Ninth Configuration doesn't
appear to have overt demonic possession taking place in its universe, it does
manage to conjure up theological fears.
Most notable (and serving as the DVD cover) is a striking image of an
astronaut on the moon coming upon Christ on the cross. Blatty seems to suggest the forces of evil
within our universe extend far beyond the stars. The biker gang fight itself moves away from
standard drunken bar brawls and closer towards the presence of a demonic cult.
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"Umm umm ummm......I just love the taste of urine." |

-Andrew Kotwicki