12 Years A Slave is somewhat like when Bob Dylan went electric. The term 'sold-out' is often spoken unfairly, but Steve McQueen, director of such raw, brutal films such as HUNGER and SHAME, has scaled back his most artistic qualities in favor of mass appeal in 12 Years A Slave. McQueen has shown starving, naked men beat and tortured in HUNGER. He showed the raw, emotional draining life of a sex addict in SHAME. Now, for 12 Years A Slave, when he has a story to unleash these raw emotional feats on a story most deserving of it, McQueen scales back. Whether it was for mass appeal, Academy Award recognition, or the Producer's demands, McQueen's new timid nature on 'Slave' robs a story that could have been as brutal and eye-opening as 'Schindler's List'. Instead, its actually pretty glossy and very safe.
I keep reading reviews at how this film is brutal to the point of being unable to view. There is one beating that is brutal, but nothing comes close to Schindler's List, The Passion Of The Christ, Saving Private Ryan, or even McQueen's first two films. '12 Years A Slave' could have taken the brutality of slavery and shown it more so than we've ever seen before and really been a history lesson at the brutality and evil of mankind's past. Instead, its just like any other oppression story. Quentin Tarantino did a much better job of showing the brutality of slavery in 'Django Unchained'. Its a testament to Tarantino as a director, that he was able to provide a real artistic statement about the subject in a somewhat comical live-action cartoon, because really that's all 'Django' is(which is perfectly amazing). McQueen, known for going balls to the wall, becomes more of an eunuch, losing his balls and delivering a very timid slave story, aside from two scenes. The film is a cookie-cutter award bait film. McQueen is a good director who got an incredible cast, so the film still survives, and even flourishes at moments, but its frustrating wondering what might have been.
'12 Years A Slave' tells the story of a black man, Solomon Northup, born free in the North during the 1800's. He is tricked, drugged, captured and taken to the south to be sold as a slave. The narrative follow Solomon and his agonizing journey from owner to owner, until finally being re-united with his family. Chiwetel Ejiofor gives a fantastic performance as Solomon, which really helps the film work in many ways. The screenplay is written to focus on the physical torment of Solomon, and as I said Mcqueen scaled back his agonizing brutality on screen, so the audience doesn't really feel Solomon's torment based on the script alone. Ejiofor's strong performance helps sell Solomon's torment to the audience, which is a huge key to the film, because little of the script was focused on the psychological torment of Solomon and the psychological aspects of his character. This could be said for the whole cast, who is wonderful. The cast really sells the film. Benedict Cumberbatch and Michael Fassbender standout as slave owners, the former being mor sympathetic to Solomon, the latter stepping straight out of hell. Fassbender is the greatest accomplishment in the film, giving us an incredible villain that works mostly due to Fassbender.
The screenplay doesn't build the characters very well. Luckily, as stated earlier, the actors save this. However, the screenplay has other issues. The biggest is it's episodic nature. The twelve years flows quickly without much explanation of timing and makes us feel like we're watching events that are somewhat relate-able instead of watching one story. Again, this is somewhat saved by a good director and a great cast which makes many of these events incredibly engaging. The events are not helped by an awful score, which never plays with the audience's emotions.
Despite all of this, the film still mainly works, even if it is much more generic than what's expected from McQueen. The film is pretty much a mountain range, who's lows aren't awful, but simply somewhat dull, but it's highs are outstanding and rather impressive. Ultimately, this comes down to the director Steve McQueen. He goes to his roots of raw, agonizing filmmaking in the film's climax and it works wonders. For whatever reason, he holds this back throughout the rest of the film. He takes a great cast and a weak script, and pieces together a solid film that has a few incredible moments, even if its potential was greatly missed. 8/10