Caine Unable

Catholics are bad, Nazis are bad . . . and so is Michael Caine's movie.

The Statement Shaker Square Cinemas
Michael Caine and Charlotte Rampling play an aging - Nazi and his ex.
Michael Caine and Charlotte Rampling play an aging Nazi and his ex.
"Michael Caine is a revelation!" declares the Jeffrey Lyons quote appearing on ads for The Statement. Lyons is right, but not in the way you might expect. Indeed, Caine's performance here is revelatory -- who knew he could be this boring?

Insufferable, yes -- Oscar aside, his mangled "American" accent in The Cider House Rules drove me out of the theater halfway through. But has he ever been this coma-inducing? Even Jaws: The Revenge was kind of lively.

Caine's character in this movie is a retired French Nazi named Pierre Brossard, but he doesn't try the accent thing again. It's kind of a no-win situation, though. Caine talking like Clouseau would be laughable, but the flashback sequence that kicks things off -- in which a young, SS-gear-clad man with Caine's voice intones in perfect Cockney, "Get your pants down! C'mon, get your pricks out!" to a bunch of Jewish prisoners -- risks risibility big-time. Still, laughing at the movie would be an emotional response, and such a thing is difficult to muster.

Based on a popular suspense novel by Brian Moore, which in turn was based on the true story of a war criminal named Paul Touvier, The Statement would seem on paper to be a winner. Make any movie that involves the Holocaust in some way, put Michael Caine in it, and you're guaranteed some of that elusive "Oscar buzz," if only for the few fleeting moments before anyone actually sees the thing. (Indeed, The Statement was shut out by the Academy.) Director Norman Jewison caught a brief taste of that a few years back with The Hurricane, then became mired in controversy over plot details that may have been exaggerated for the sake of drama. This may explain why such drama is conspicuously lacking this time around.

Watching the film, one imagines South Park's guidance counselor, Mr. Mackey, standing over one's shoulder going, "Nazis are bad, m'kay? They killed Jews, m'kay? And French people are worse, because if they're not Nazis, they're socialists, m'kay? M'kay -- oh, and Catholics are bad too." Yes, the pope's religion comes in for a cinematic bashing one more time. Not to say that it's necessarily undeserved in some cases, but if you want an engrossing movie about the church's role in ignoring the Holocaust, Costa-Gavras's Amen, released in 2003 and now available on DVD, has more profound things to say on the subject. Amen, however, is a historical film, while The Statement implies that in the present day, high-ranking officials in the French Catholic church may still be helping war criminals to hide out.

Brossard certainly seems to reside mainly in monasteries, where he periodically has minor heart attacks and prays to crucifixes. But of late, he realizes that he's being followed. Unbeknownst to him, the "statement" of the title is a typed note to be placed upon his dead body, explaining that he's been executed for war crimes that the church tried to cover up -- but we don't know who specifically is planning to off Brossard prior to leaving the note.

Meanwhile, in legal circles, Brossard is being pursued by a judge (Tilda Swinton) and a colonel (Jeremy Northam), both of whom have French names (Annemarie Livi and Roux, respectively) and English accents. Brossard was pardoned years ago, but a new "crimes against humanity" law has just been passed, and Livi hopes to use it to catch Brossard and use him to flush out higher-ranking ex-Nazis in the government, like whoever it was that pardoned Brossard in the first place.

There's a nice little bit of business when Brossard first discovers a would-be assassin -- Caine has referred to it in interviews as the world's slowest chase -- but from then on, we're left to follow the movements of the none-too-lively Brossard, as he prays (hypocritically), seizes up, takes pills, and moves on. Only when we cut back to the non-dimensional Swinton and Northam do we realize that the elderly fugitive does hold vague interest by comparison. We get a brief spark of hope when Brossard looks up his ex-wife and she turns out to be Charlotte Rampling, but mostly the star of Swimming Pool just glowers (admittedly very well) as her ex tells her, "Do as you're told, and you'll be happy." Then he kicks their dog. You know -- otherwise, we'd never figure out he's a bad guy.

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